
A few weeks ago, I was standing in the cobbled lane that runs between Norwich Cathedral and its exquisite 14th-century gatehouse when I heard a man yelling.
Written by Louise Perry

A few weeks ago, I was standing in the cobbled lane that runs between Norwich Cathedral and its exquisite 14th-century gatehouse when I heard a man yelling.
Written by Rebecca Weisser

Recently, a Brisbane GP decided to find out, putting droplets of vaccine and the blood of vaccinated patients under a dark-field microscope.
Written by Maggie Harrison

Researchers have found that the universe is expanding at an entirely different rate than previously thought, a groundbreaking discovery that could undermine our current understanding of the cosmos.
Written by Dr Peter McCullough

Of all the great tension both doctors and patients have faced in the COVID-19 crisis is the lack of assurances on long-term safety of COVID-19 vaccines.
Written by Stacy Liberatore

More than two dozen beautifully preserved bronze statues fashioned 2,000 years ago have been pulled from ancient thermal baths in Tuscany, Italy in a new discovery that ‘will rewrite history’ about the transition from the Etruscan civilization to the Roman Empire.
Written by John Dee

Excess all cause death in heavily vaccinated nations is making global headlines. In this mini-series I derive a measure for excess COVID death.
Written by Dr Klaus L E Kaiser

The world is fretting over “too high” natural gas (NG) and crude oil (CO) prices, especially those that are already sold at discounts to the prevailing “Brent” and “West Texas” CO benchmark prices, commodities that are sold in large volumes by Russia.
Written by Claes Johnson

Ludwig Prandtl is named Father of Modern Fluid Mechanics motivated by his boundary layer theory with a no-slip boundary condition as key element, which has dominated fluid mechanics since the 1920s.
Written by astronomyspace

In the beginning, there was … well, maybe there was no beginning.
Written by Andy Shaw

‘Crisis? What crisis?’ went the Sun’s famous headline, capturing Jim Callaghan’s complacency during the 1979 ‘Winter of Discontent.’
Written by Joel Smalley

This tide is turning slower than the Evergreen but at least it’s only going one way.
Written by Climate Change Dispatch

We doubt there’s a policy crazier or more likely to lose an election than making skint voters pay billions in climate change “reparations”
Written by The Pipeline

One of the first columns I wrote for The Pipeline almost three years ago employed the metaphor of the irresistible force meeting the immovable object to forecast the likely consequences of Green politics.
Written by Arian Marie

Whether it exists or not, Planet Nine continues to lurk in the proverbial shadows. Now, the scientific community has a new line of investigation into the elusive space object.
Written by Claes Johnson

Students in schools and universities suffer from cognitive dissonance by being exposed to contradictory information.
Written by Ron Barmby

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau passed a motion in June 2019 declaring a National Climate Emergency in support of the 2015 Paris Agreement commitments.