The whitest paint is here – and it’s the coolest. Literally.

Written by purdue.edu

Xiulin Ruan, a Purdue University professor of mechanical engineering, holds up his lab’s sample of the whitest paint on record. (Purdue University/Jared Pike)

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — In an effort to curb global warming, Purdue University engineers have created the whitest paint yet. Coating buildings with this paint may one day cool them off enough to reduce the need for air conditioning, the researchers say.

Continue Reading 6 Comments

Wearable Sensors that Detect Gas Leaks

Written by postech.ac

Gas accidents such as toxic gas leakage in factories, carbon monoxide leakage of boilers, or toxic gas suffocation during manhole cleaning continue to claim lives and cause injuries. Developing a sensor that can quickly detect toxic gases or biochemicals is still an important issue in public health, environmental monitoring, and military sectors.

Continue Reading 1 Comment

Blood Clot Symptoms and Treatment For Vaccine Victims

Written by healthline.com

As fear about blood clots from COVID vaccines grows here we offer some general information about what to look for.

Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is a blood clot of a cerebral vein in the brain. This vein is responsible for draining blood from the brain. If blood collects in this vein, it will begin to leak into brain tissues and cause a hemorrhage or severe brain swelling.

Continue Reading No Comments

The Coming Modern Grand Solar Minimum

Written by americanthinker.com

Image: University of Georgia

I wrote last week about the coming Grand Solar Minimum, something that will have much more impact on the environment than anything we puny humans can do. It generated a lot of interest from all sides, so it’s time to delve deeper into what we can expect. Starting with the hype: During the last grand solar minimum (GSM), the Maunder Minimum of 1645 to 1715, glaciers advanced, rivers froze, sea ice expanded — in short, the Little Ice Age. Is another one is almost upon us?

Continue Reading 6 Comments

Cyanide is everywhere

Written by Jack Dini

Image: Chemistry World

Cyanide scares a lot of people and it is more ubiquitous in our everyday lives than most people realize. Cyanide is a very useful compound in today’s economies. Approximately 1.1 million metric tons of hydrogen cyanide are produced annually worldwide.

Continue Reading 2 Comments

Why I Regret Buying An Electric Car

Written by Climate Change Dispatch

Image: d’Oliviera & Associates

I bought an electric car and wish I hadn’t. It seemed a good idea at the time, albeit a costly way of proclaiming my environmental virtuousness.  The car cost €44,000 ($53,000), less a €6,000 ($7,200) subsidy courtesy of French taxpayers, the overwhelming majority poorer than me. Fellow villagers are driving those 20-year-old diesel vans that look like garden sheds on wheels.

Continue Reading 9 Comments

Bill Gates Dystopian Vision of the Future of Food

Written by off-guardian.org

Image: Forbes

We are currently seeing an acceleration of the corporate consolidation of the entire global agrifood chain. The high-tech/data conglomerates, including Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and Google, have joined traditional agribusiness giants, such as Corteva, Bayer, Cargill and Syngenta, in a quest to impose a certain type of agriculture and food production on the world.

Continue Reading 12 Comments

How Rockefeller Snuffed Out Natural Cures & Created Big Pharma

Written by Jared James

In case you weren’t aware, John D. Rockefeller essentially eliminated natural cures to spawn what we know today as Big Pharma. You can watch this concise and powerful video about it below.  You can also read more about it here.

So, hopefully this wakes you up to why Big Pharma is the way it is today. It has been growing more and more over the past 100 years.

Continue Reading 2 Comments

Quantum Astronomy Could Create very large optical Telescopes

Written by scientificamerican.com

Image: Juan Carlos Muñoz-Mateos/ESO

Composed of four 8.2-meter telescopes that can act as one, the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope in northern Chile [pictured above] is the world’s premier astronomical facility for optical interferometry. New approaches from the quantum world, however, could allow astronomers to make far larger and more capable optical interferometers.

Continue Reading No Comments