Tesla is really in a bad way lately, with reports of shrinking demand for its cars in the U.S. market similarly dragging down the automaker’s market share, and a stock price that’s struggled to stay afloat so far this year.
Germany’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic was based on political objectives, and the government implemented countermeasures that often contradicted scientific evidence and the opinion of the government’s own scientists.
Many experts have said the COVID-19 pandemic was an opportunity to improve personal health in order to better survive SARS-CoV-2 and its outcomes. But is that actually the case?
Social media went a little bonkers last week when an interview of Texas Children’s Hospital’s Dr. Peter Hotez began circulating with the Big Pharma insider calling for the United Nations and NATO to deploy security forces against “anti-vaxxers” in the United States.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine in 2006 progressing to Gardasil 9, a 9-valent vaccine, for use in children as young as 9 years old in December 2014.
An important difference between climate science and the normal kind is that in climate science, failed predictions don’t diminish people’s faith in a theory.
According to the usual suspects, Monday July 22 was the “hottest day ever on Earth”, smash-o-shattering the previous record for blistering death heat set on Sunday July 21.
Athletes are ditching Paris’s Olympic village for greener pastures after being forced to deal with “vegan-friendly” food, cardboard beds, no air conditioning, cramped rooms, and long commutes to their competitions. [emphasis, links added]
Okay, my excuse is it was cold and raining here on England’s Sunshine Coast which is disappointing considering this will shortly be the warmest summer ever.
There is currently a raging discussion going on in German-speaking new and social media about whether the leaked final redactions of the minutes of the Robert Koch Institute’s COVID-19 crisis group are in fact forgeries.
Tempur-Pedic is selling a “smart” bed that collects and monitors personal sleeping habit data — including heart rate and breath rate — via sensors that connect to the person’s Wi-Fi and smartphone.