
The dictionary (Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary) defines evaporation as #1 “to pass off in vapor or in invisible minute particles”
Written by Herb Rose

The dictionary (Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary) defines evaporation as #1 “to pass off in vapor or in invisible minute particles”
Written by Martin Neil and Norman Fenton

Before we go into vaccine case control studies the bias issue at hand is pretty easy to understand and it might surprise you to learn that you have probably already encountered it in everyday life, from dating and when forming friendships
Written by George Bunn

A woman has won a “landmark” case against a council arguing she was kept awake by streetlights
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

The late great P.J. O’Rourke once wrote, in The Atlantic in April 2002, that: “Beyond a certain point complexity is fraud…. when someone creates a system in which you can’t tell whether or not you’re being fooled, you’re being fooled.”
Written by Marc Cheong & Wonsun Shin

When it comes to our experience of the internet, “the times, they are a-changin’“, as Bob Dylan would say
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

The latest, greatest exercise in absurd climate-modeling hubris is the frankly preposterous project to create “Digital Twins of the Earth” inside the models, to overcome their hopelessly limited power to simulate the actual climate by, um, PR or something
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki

Scientific American’s recent endorsement of Kamala Harris brought me back to Nature’s endorsement of Joe Biden in 2020, both of which signal a stark departure from the traditionally apolitical stance science journals have historically taken
Written by Dr. Joseph Mercola

What if the masterminds behind your favorite snacks aren’t food scientists but tobacco executives?
Written by Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D.

ACAM2000, a vaccine approved last month by the FDA for monkeypox, comes with a list of “serious complications,” including myocarditis, death and fetal death
Written by Ronald Stein and Oliver Hemmers

Delivery of affordable, abundant, reliable electricity to customers is very important to modern quality of life. Achieving this is threatened by a vulnerable grid and the intermittency of wind and solar electricity generation methods
Written by The Financial Times

BP has put its onshore wind business in the US, estimated to be worth $2bn, up for sale as it trims its ‘renewables’ business and sells off underperforming assets
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

A member of the New Zealand Parliament called on the country’s Covid commission to stop ignoring the voices of people injured by the vaccines, as other critics accused the commission of “not looking for the truth.”
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

In interviews this month with CNBC and CNET, Bill Gates said we “should have free speech” but not “if you’re causing people not to take vaccines.”
Written by Caryn Lipson

During the eight years from 2016, when MAiD (medical assistance in dying) was legalized in Canada, through 2023, over sixty-thousand people were killed by doctors
Written by Bjorn Lomborg

The international body’s latest climate claims are more about inflammatory language than actual data
Written by Phillip Altman

In my opinion, the following updated US Florida State guidance should be provided as proper informed consent by every doctor to any patient seeking advice on COVID-19 boosters