
In the hallowed halls of medicine and science, where lives hang in the balance and truth should reign supreme, confirmation bias lurks as an insidious predator, ready to devour objectivity and spit out catastrophe
Written by Ian Brighthope

In the hallowed halls of medicine and science, where lives hang in the balance and truth should reign supreme, confirmation bias lurks as an insidious predator, ready to devour objectivity and spit out catastrophe
Written by Sayer Ji

For decades, an aspirin a day was virtually synonymous with heart attack prevention. This tiny pill was lauded as a near-miraculous shield against cardiovascular disease — a “wonder drug” taken by millions in hopes of an easy insurance policy
Written by Hart

An earlier HART article described how, throughout the covid event, health care professionals (doctors, nurses, psychologists, behavioural scientists) habitually behaved in ways that were at odds with their ethical codes
Written by Paul Homewood

I’m beginning to think Ambrose Evans-Pritchard has serious cognitive issues
Written by Dr Robert Malone MD, MS

In 23 August 2025, award-winning science journalist Robert Whitaker, founder of the evidence-based Mad in America website, published a very important article
Written by William M Briggs

We’ve all seen those videos in which hersterical (there is no misspelling) chubby women rant at their cellphone cameras in cars
Written by Chris Morrison

The UK Met Office takes great pride in its public-domain historic station database where 37 selected sites provide average temperature data going back many decades
Written by David Turver

A subscriber got in touch and asked how the recently announced strike prices for ‘renewables’ auction Allocation Round 7 (AR7) compared to the costs assumed in the Clean Power 2030 (CP2030) plan prepared by the National Energy System Operator (NESO) in the autumn of last year
Written by Dr Raphael Lataster

Many of you enjoyed the first of my three-part metacritique of six influential studies on the COVID-19 vaccines, with it somehow being added to the US Senate’s official record
Written by Independent Medical Alliance and Jenna McCarthy

Modern science has sent men to the moon and mapped the human genome, yet it still trembles at the mention of cancer
Written by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH

A groundbreaking new peer-reviewed study has just been published in EXCLI Journal
Written by Tess Lawrie, MBBCh, PhD

Yesterday, I watched a compelling presentation by Graham Hancock on the subject of ancient apocalypses and the resistance he’s faced from the mainstream academic establishment
Written by Sayer Ji

What if a common, affordable spice worked as well or better than antidepressants for mood disorders and anxiety–minus the dangerous side effects? Emerging research on saffron challenges pharmaceutical dominance over psychiatry
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

According to its publishers, a dataset called EM-DAT, which stands for Emergency Events Database so it’s not even an acronym, lists “data on the occurrence and impacts of over 26,000 mass disasters worldwide from 1900 to the present day.”
Written by John Leake

The Vaccine Cult was born in the 18th Century and its potency grew during the 19th century, when living conditions for most people were unspeakably impoverished, malnourished, squalid, and incomparable to our living conditions today
Written by Sayer Ji

The pistol shrimp’s claw doesn’t just snap — it tears a hole in reality itself. When this tiny crustacean fires its biological cannon, it produces a shock wave reaching 218 decibels (louder than a gunshot) and a flash of heat exceeding 5,000 K, nearly matching the surface of the Sun