Dogs can smell human stress, and a new study reveals the scent may trigger a similar emotional effect in dogs, prompting them to make ‘pessimistic’ decisions.
Dogs Can Smell Our Stress, And It Affects Them Deeply
Written by Russell Mclendon
Written by Russell Mclendon
Dogs can smell human stress, and a new study reveals the scent may trigger a similar emotional effect in dogs, prompting them to make ‘pessimistic’ decisions.
Written by Brenda Baletti, Ph.D.
A major investigation by Canadian researchers into excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic found that patterns of excess death globally could not be explained by a pandemic respiratory virus, The Defender reported last week.
Written by Suzzane Burdick, Ph. D
A South Korean peer-reviewed study found statistically significant increases in the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment in people who received a COVID-19 vaccine — particularly mRNA vaccines — within three months of post-vaccination.
Written by Meryl Dorey
I know you don’t need to be reminded, but it wasn’t those who oppose mandated forced injection with untested, unsafe and ineffective genetic modification devices who:
Written by Dr. Sam Bailey
Written by Jamie Blackett
Fears that a Labour “super-majority” might turn our parliamentary democracy into a parliamentary dictatorship are fast being realized
Written by Mandi Risko
In a massive loss for the nationally coordinated climate litigation campaign, a Maryland state judge dismissed the City of Baltimore’s lawsuit against energy companies last week
Written by Clare Watson
Uncontrollable yet predictable, obvious yet inexplicable, blushing can be agony when we’re made to feel mortified, ashamed, or simply self-conscious
Written by Bryce Dyer
On the face of it, competitive distance running appears not to have changed much since the Olympic Games were revived in 1896
Written by Vijay Jayaraj
Though touted as next generation energy sources, solar and wind technologies have been shoe-horned into electricity grids only through government fiat and subsidies
Written by Anonymous IT Reporter
I was waiting for it and I wasn’t disappointed – the Daily Sceptic article linking the CrowdStrike debacle to CBDCs.
Written by Julie Burchill
In theory, people being more political sounds great. Less dreary conversations about the weather and the ‘footie’, and more watercoolers surrounded by colleagues fizzing with enthusiasm about democracy and its pleasures. [emphasis, links added]
Written by Suzzane Burdick, Ph. D
The International Commission on the Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields (ICBE-EMF) called for the retraction of a new World Health Organization (WHO) study, alleging the authors of the WHO study reached the wrong conclusion about possible health impacts of wireless radiation.
Written by John Michael-Dumais
A case study from Japan has documented the first known biopsy-proven instance of inflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy (iDCM) .
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki
The notion that there exists a single, ideal climatic state for humans is overly simplistic and fails to account for the diversity of environmental conditions that humans have adapted to over millennia.
Written by Robert Kogon
The German mRNA company BioNTech, owner and legal manufacturer of what is more commonly known as the “Pfizer” COVID-19 vaccine, has fallen on hard times