
I’m not exactly sure what parents would be willingly signing their children up to be ‘testers’ for a COVID vaccine study, but apparently 6,750 kids in the U.S. and Canada will be part of the testing for a child COVID vaccine.
Written by theconservativetreehouse.com

I’m not exactly sure what parents would be willingly signing their children up to be ‘testers’ for a COVID vaccine study, but apparently 6,750 kids in the U.S. and Canada will be part of the testing for a child COVID vaccine.
Written by israelnationalnews.com

A front-page article appeared in the FranceSoir newspaper about findings on the Nakim website regarding what some experts are calling “the high mortality caused by the vaccine.” The paper interviews Aix-Marseille University Faculty of Medicine Emerging Infectious and Tropical Diseases Unit’s Dr. Hervé Seligmann and engineer Haim Yativ about their research and data analysis.
Written by wakingtimes.com

A group of prominent scientists and doctors want the European Medicines Agency (EMA) to answer “urgent” safety questions about the three COVID-19 vaccines authorised for use in the EU, or withdraw the vaccines’ authorisation.
Written by prepareforchange.net

Catherine Austin Fitts , president of Solari, Inc., publisher of the Solari Report, and managing member of Solari Investment Advisory Services, LLC., has created a Family Financial Disclosure Form for COVID-19 Injections — also known as the “Sane Person’s Guidebook.” Below we have reposted the form. We will include a link to the website for your convenience at the end of the post.
Written by nih.gov

In his recent interview for the Guardian[1], Craig Venter is elaborating about a household appliance for the future, the Digital Biological Converter (DBC). The current prototype, which can produce DNA, is a box attached to a computer that receives DNA sequences over the internet to synthesize DNA; in future, it will be able to do the same for viruses, proteins and living cells.
Written by nypost.com

Image: Facebook
Prosecutors in Italy have launched a manslaughter investigation after a music teacher there died hours after getting the controversial AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine. Sandro Tognatti, 57, got jabbed in his hometown of Biella on Saturday afternoon and went to bed that night with a high fever, his wife, Simona Riussi, told Italian media. She called an ambulance the next morning but the clarinetist could not be saved, she said.
Written by crtxnews.com

Written by Andy Rowlands

The Blaisen glacier in Norway. Image: Lee Brown
On March 15th, Sky News carried an article on its’ website entitled ‘Melting glaciers could be accelerating climate change by causing more carbon emissions, say researchers’. It boldly asserts that ‘The process has been measured in six mountain ranges across the world – Austria, Ecuador, France, New Zealand, Norway and the US.’
Written by zerohedge.com

According to a special notice issued by China’s National Meteorological Center, one of the worst sandstorms in a decade is wreaking havoc across 12 provinces in the northern part of China on Monday.
Written by cnet.com
Written by theregister.com

Image: NASA
The most massive chunk of junk yet was just ejected from the International Space Station – though, don’t worry, the 2.9-ton crate containing old batteries shouldn’t be too much of a nuisance. It is expected to harmlessly burn up in Earth’s atmosphere two to four years from now.
Written by technocracy.news

I don’t have unlimited rights with respect to you. How do I know this? Since the signing of the US Constitution and its Amendments, and the Enlightenment generally, but more so since Emancipation, the Women’s Voting Rights Act, and the US Civil Rights Movement, the most widely accepted understanding of human rights is that they pertain to the equality, autonomy, dignity, freedom from bondage or oppression and the exercise of self-determination that contemporary people generally acknowledge as self-evident and inherent to each human being.
Written by geology.com

Image: Wikipedia
The Arctic Ocean has played a minor role in world history. Ice cover severely hinders navigation; the area is remote; there is almost no infrastructure; winters are dark and very cold; summer days are short and foggy. These challenges make the Arctic Ocean a hostile and difficult area.
Written by beforeitsnews.com

The Archean Maniitsoq structure in Greenland. Image: University of Waterloo
Several years after scientists discovered what was considered the oldest crater a meteorite made on the planet, another team found it’s actually the result of normal geological processes.
During fieldwork at the Archean Maniitsoq structure in Greenland, an international team of scientists led by the University of Waterloo’s Chris Yakymchuk found the features of this region are inconsistent with an impact crater. In 2012, a different team identified it as the remnant of a three-billion-year-old meteorite crater.
Written by beforeitsnews.com

Jekan Thanga. Image: UA
An ambitious project aims to preserve humankind – and animal-kind, plant-kind and fungi-kind – in the event of a global crisis. University of Arizona researcher Jekan Thanga is taking scientific inspiration from an unlikely source: the biblical tale of Noah’s Ark.
Written by conservativewoman.co.uk

This article was written by ‘a frontline NHS consultant’.
I HAVE just logged on to enter a patient with a fatal flare-up of malignant melanoma (originally diagnosed and surgically excised in 2014) manifesting as a suspected stroke with unilateral arm paralysis at the end of February, exactly one month after the patient’s first dose of the AstraZeneca coronavirus jab. This is the sixth Yellow Card report I have made in a month.