
If you build a wind farm near the Orkneys, how do you think that electricity is going to get to England where it will be used?
Written by Paul Homewood

If you build a wind farm near the Orkneys, how do you think that electricity is going to get to England where it will be used?
Written by Andy Rowlands

Two days ago, the Canadian journalist Mark Steyn reported the court sanction against Mann was upheld by the Superior Court of the Distract of Columbia
Written by Kenneth Richard

Across the globe, vermetid gastropods (shelled snails, or mollusks) are a “critical paleo-sea level indicator” for ancient coastline reconstructions (Angulo et al., 2026). [links added]
Written by Mark Lewis

Earth’s climate cycles are ancient—the global warming agenda isn’t
Written by Children's Health Defense

Federal agencies and Congress are pushing major policy changes that will allow industry to place cell towers and antennas virtually anywhere in America — including near homes and schools, on neighborhood playgrounds, and in front of your church. All with no informed consent, no safety oversight, and an industry shielded from liability
Written by Dr. Saeed Qureshi, Ph.D.

Upcoming book raises an unsettling question: what if the very foundations of modern medicine were not grounded in true science?
Written by The Truth About Cancer

The evidence is in, it proves we were right all along. From massive, secret court payouts for vaxx injuries to health authorities quietly changing their rules, every warning we issued has materialized
Written by Dr. Joseph Mercola

When most people think about threats to gut health, antibiotics usually top the list. These can wipe out beneficial bacteria along with harmful ones
Written by Mary Talley Bowden MD

The pandemic exposed deep fissures in America’s legal framework for protecting individual rights in biomedical research
Written by Paul Homewood

Two of Britain’s oldest nuclear power plants could be kept running for an extra two years because of an acute electricity shortage in the UK.
Written by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH
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A recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) analysis suggests something surprising: coffee may “cancel out” the increased mortality risk seen in sedentary individuals that sit for long periods of time
Written by Saeed Qureshi. Ph.D.

Discussions about the non-existence of viruses, the validity of viral testing, and the scientific basis of vaccines often trigger hostile and dismissive reactions
Written by A Midwestern Doctor

I feel one of the biggest issues in modern medicine is that it’s become so disconnected that patients often can’t form a meaningful therapeutic relationship with their physician
Written by Peter Clack

CO₂ is the unsung hero of life on Earth, powering the entire food web through photosynthesis and playing a foundational role from the planet’s earliest days
Written by Vijay Jayaraj

The house of cards built on computer models and manipulated emotions is collapsing under the weight of a stubborn, inconvenient reality. The “climate emergency” exists only in the frantic press releases of a movement that knows it’s time is up
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki

For decades, the climate crisis narrative has rested on a single, emotionally powerful claim that “As the planet warms, extreme weather will become more frequent and more intense.”