Written by Tore A. Gulbrandsen , Martin Neil , and Norman Fenton
Ever since the novel vaccine products were released under Emergency Use Authorization (EUA), Pfizer and all the world’s news organisations (brought to you by Pfizer™) have been kind enough to inform us that the products are both safe and effective
I received a great question on the previous YouTube video about the lapse rate which offers an excellent entry into the question as to whether heat can be trapped
Following on from our last post on the Lucy Letby Trial here, this will be a short post, but in reading around baby G I was left with the suggestion of a couple of ‘coincidences’… and I don’t like coincidences
I was greeted this morning by a Tweet reminding me of the pure vitriol, contempt, and threats of reprisal for the “unvaccinated” those who made the wise choice of declining Covid vaccination
The vaccine advocates claim that people have been dying suddenly throughout history and it’s nothing unusual. But they aren’t telling you that nearly all the “died suddenly” were Covid vaccinated
The ‘Pandemic Treaty’ that would give the World Health Organisation total control over world health policies, is not due to be signed until May 2024. Yet the WHO’s website claims it has those powers NOW
This is not about whether there is such a thing as a literal social contract. The phrase has always been a metaphor, and an imprecise one since it was first invoked by Enlightenment-era thinkers trying to sort through a rationale for collective practice of some sort
Officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as some doctors, say that fewer pregnant women are getting influenza and other vaccines this year.
Scientists once considered sleep to be like a shade getting drawn over a window between the brain and the outside world: when the shade is closed, the brain stops reacting to outside stimuli.
At the turn of the last century, a prolific inventor registered patents for a revolutionary energy device designed to convert natural cosmic energy into electricity. Nikola Tesla was born in Serbia in 1956 and emigrated to the U. S. in 1884. There, he started out working for fellow inventor Thomas Edison, and before long, Tesla established his own companies and labs where he developed the prototypes for technologies still in service today. Among these are the AC induction motor and transformer, early X-ray technology and a steam-powered oscillator. During his lifetime, the inventor registered more than 700 patents for his cutting-edge concepts.