Its generic pharmaceutical name is Pregabalin. Although you may know it by one of its brand names: there’s Alzain, Axalid and Lyrica
Is A UK Anxiety Drug Causing Overdoses Through Addiction?
Written by Derek Knauss
Written by Derek Knauss
Its generic pharmaceutical name is Pregabalin. Although you may know it by one of its brand names: there’s Alzain, Axalid and Lyrica
Written by Dr. Peter and Ginger Breggin
Four days after German chemist Dr. Andreas Noack released his final video on graphene hydroxide, he was seized by a sudden unexplained attack that caused paralysis, weakness, profound disorientation (like he was drunk), and collapse with loss of breathing
Written by The Global Warming Policy Forum
A wide-ranging review of official science advice examines serious failings in the way scientific advice is being delivered to governments and proposes radical reforms to improve it
Written by Pierre Gosselin
Unusual cold weather is currently affecting almost the entire planet, and Arctic sea ice is growing
Written by Andy Rowlands
Last Tuesday, that bastion of accurate reporting; The Guardian, told us the planet has almost reached the ‘heating’ that will cause our own extinction
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki
The ongoing debate and investigation into the causes and impacts of global warming bring to the forefront the significance of understanding Earth’s climatic past to forecast its future
Written by Phillip Altman
Until now there has been a massive effort to suppress voices arguing against the Australian Government’s pandemic policies and the so-called COVID-19 ‘vaccines’
Written by Danielle Summer
Teachers working inside Brockton High School, the largest school in Massachusetts, US, have said that they are overwhelmed by the escalation of violent incidents by students
Written by Shuchita Jha
A tenth of India’s petrol is now biofuel, which is blended with ethanol, a by-product of sugarcane. But that’s a crop hungry for water, in a country facing drought, and on land that might be better used for food grain
Written by Robert Bridge
World Obesity Day was marked this week and, with over a billion people afflicted worldwide, obesity is now considered more dangerous to global health than hunger. The numbers are staggering
Written by Stephen Heins
Work has started on the clearing of up to 120,000 trees in the central German ‘fairy tale’ forest of Reinhardswald, but the payment is the partial destruction of the 1,000 year-old ancient wood itself
Written by Tott News
For over six decades in Australia, the study of clouds, rain and the atmosphere has been largely hidden from the public, as a secretive network of government agencies and private business interests continue to manipulate the weather around us to their personal benefit
Written by Mike McRae
An ingredient once commonly used in citrus-flavored sodas to keep the tangy taste mixed thoroughly through the beverage could finally be banned for good across the US
Written by Carly Cassella
The humble bumblebee is proof that brain size isn’t everything
Written by Kerry Jackson
Does anyone in the California Capitol subscribe to the Washington Post? Maybe someone on the governor’s staff, or an aide to an influential legislator?
Written by Ken Girardin
State lawmakers voted for major cuts in ‘greenhouse gas’ emissions and massive buildouts of wind turbines, solar panels, power lines, and batteries by 2030 without knowing how it would work, let alone what it would cost