
Retracted COVID-19 Articles: Significantly More Cited than Others
Written by Peter A. Mccullough, MD, MPH
Written by Peter A. Mccullough, MD, MPH

Written by Allen Gindler

Over the past hundred years, evolutionary socialism has slowly but steadily taken root in the fabric of American society.
Written by John leake

Over the last couple of years, many readers have urged me to focus my investigative reporting on the role of U.S.
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki

The recent ruling by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) that Switzerland has failed to protect its citizens from the impacts of climate change by not sufficiently curbing its carbon emissions has raised considerable debate.
Written by C.J. Strachan

LinkedIn was once a great idea, a global network for business professionals.
Written by Chris Morrison
Written by Robert Kogon

As discussed in my last article, BioNTech, the German owner and legal manufacturer of what is more commonly called the ‘Pfizer’ COVID-19 vaccine, was determined to be not just the drug’s legal manufacturer but, at least in Europe.
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki

The article recounts the personal experiences of the author with changing weather patterns during the holiday seasons, contrasting memories of frigid winters with recent milder temperatures.
Written by John Leake

Though it’s still too early to make any firm declarations, I’m increasingly concerned that the Bio-Pharmaceutical Complex—closely tied with the Davos crowd that advocates the general reduction of animal protein in the human diet—may have found the dread “Disease X” it’s been warning about.
Written by Mike Stone
“In order to verify and determine the presence of a virus, and following the most fundamental rules of scientific reasoning, the virus needs to be isolated and displayed in its pure form in order to rule out that cellular genetic sequences are misinterpreted as components of a virus.”
-Ex-Virologist Dr. Stefan Lanka
Written by Tessa Koumoundouros

Turning off a gene early in mouse development led researchers to end up with an accidental six-legged embryonic mammal.
Written by David Smart
Promising cancer drugs that are fast-tracked through approvals don’t always work as hoped.
Written by Dr. David Mcgrogan

Readers may well have heard the news that, yesterday (April 9th 2024), the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) issued its rulings in the conjoined ‘climate change’cases of Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz and Others v Switzerland, Carême v France, and Duarte Agostinho and Others v. Portugal and 32 Others.
Written by Irina Slav

When the European Union approved its Green Deal, it was done to much fanfare and sparkles
Written by Chris Morrison

The United Nations established the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change in 1988 and in 1995 the first Climate Change Conference of Parties (COP1) was held in Berlin. [emphasis, links added]
Written by Maryam Henein

In Part 1, we asked the question: What are the scientists at CERN really looking for? The information seems fantastical or even apocalyptic, but is it conspiratorial?