
AI emissions are set to outpace the airline industry, raising doubts about the feasibility of ‘net zero’ goals
Written by Yahoo News

AI emissions are set to outpace the airline industry, raising doubts about the feasibility of ‘net zero’ goals
Written by The Defender Staff

The Defender’s Children’s Health NewsWatch delivers the latest headlines related to children’s health and well-being, including the toxic effects of vaccines, drugs, chemicals, heavy metals, electromagnetic radiation and other toxins and the emotional risks associated with excessive use of social media and other online activities
Written by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH

A new JAMA Cardiology study by McBride et al confirms what emergency physicians in King County, WA, have long hoped: survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has steadily improved for two decades
Written by The World Council for Health

There have been renewed calls for parents to have their children vaccinated against measles, following an outbreak in Liverpool, UK
Written by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH

A groundbreaking study published in PNAS titled, Brighter nights and darker days predict higher mortality risk: A prospective analysis of personal light exposure in >88,000 individuals, has provided the strongest evidence to date that how much light we are exposed to—both during the day and night—directly impacts our lifespan
Written by Need To Know Publications

5G has been rolled out extremely fast without any pre-testing for long-term health effects. (They were even rolling out 5G during the ‘lockdown’ of the fake pandemic five years ago.)
Written by Aaron Brown

As the Earth gets warmer, there’s one species that supposedly will really benefit. “Climate Change is amazing,” reported National Geographic. “If you’re a rat.”
Written by Vijay Jayaraj

Supplying 80 percent of the world’s primary energy, coal, oil and natural gas make up the lifeblood of modern civilization. Yet, there continue to be calls for abandonment of these necessary fuels
Written by Noah Carl

In his famous book The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith noted that “it is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner” but rather “from their regard to their own interest”
Written by James Alexander

In the good old days when London Calling marked the week even more than the publication of the Spectator or the Beano, I heard our general editor, Toby Young, use the phrase ‘jot and tittle’
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

On the subject of ‘attribution’ non-science, we routinely receives messages like “Climate Change Tripled Heat Deaths in European Heatwave” which sound as though someone has a pile of facts not a web of speculation
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

Rep. Thomas Massie on Tuesday introduced legislation to repeal the “sweeping” liability shield that exempts COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers from responsibility for serious injuries or death caused by their products
Written by John Leake

On July 15, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee held a hearing for the vaccine injured and their family members
Written by Andrew Montford

In some ways I pity Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart, who, on the latest edition of their The Rest is Politics podcast, have put themselves through an hour of ‘net zero’ word soup from the new Climate Change Committee CEO Emma Pinchbeck
Written by Kevin Adjei-Darko

The Netherlands is rationing electricity as its overloaded power grid buckles under the pressure of rapid electrification and ambitious climate goals
Written by Gareth Roberts

Pre-tax profits for vehicle leasing company Lex Autolease have plummeted by more than £400 million, according to newly-filed accounts