Micah Siegel is the youngest guest ever to appear on my podcast. As I type this, he is 12 years old.
Micah Siegel is 12 and explains why school is state propaganda
Written by Jerm Warfare
Written by Jerm Warfare
Micah Siegel is the youngest guest ever to appear on my podcast. As I type this, he is 12 years old.
Written by Decision Junction
In this article, we explore groundbreaking developments in detecting and eliminating harmful spike proteins, particularly those associated with mRNA vaccines
Written by Andy Corbley
Four years ago, someone came across an extraordinary find—a juvenile rhino from the Pleistocene ‘mummified’ in the Siberian permafrost
Written by Lianne Kolirin
Archaeologists in Denmark have unearthed more than 50 “exceptionally well preserved” skeletons in a large Viking-era burial ground in the east of the country
Written by Dr. Sam Bailey, Dr. Mark Bailey, Cristine Massey Fois
In early 2020, the Canadian biostatistician Christine Massey realised that something was wrong with the COVID-19 story.
Written by Climate Change Dispatch
It’s often how the green racket works: Conjure up some ‘green’ energy-producing pie-in-the-sky project, no matter how unfeasible it may be, propose it to technically illiterate bureaucrats – who permit and fund it with little hesitation – build it, and, after realizing it won’t ever work, abandon it and let the next generation deal with the mess
Written by John Leake
A friend just sent me the following image
Written by Carey Gillam
Today I’m happy to share the results of months of reporting I’ve been doing in collaboration with the non-profit Netherlands-based newsroom Lighthouse Reports.
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki
As I watched the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene, the homes submerged, lives upended, and entire communities left in disarray, my heart went out to those facing unimaginable loss.
Written by Freya Barnes
A Labour-run council is being hauled into court by its own residents over a ‘flawed’ low traffic neighbourhood (LTN) plan which was forced through despite a majority opposition from locals
Written by Ben Turner
Yoshua Bengio played a crucial role in the development of the machine-learning systems we see today. Now, he says that they could pose an existential risk to humanity
Written by Joe Bastardi
The Impact “Scoreboard” so far has us at a record tying amount of hurricanes that have hit the US thru September 4th.
Written by Dr David Bell and Dr Thi Thuy Van Dinh
The UN Secretariat held its Summit of the Future at its headquarters in New York this week, on September 22nd-23rd
Written by Darren Orf
With the James Webb Space Telescope in orbit at the L2 Lagrange point, roughly 1 million miles from Earth, humanity’s view of the universe now extends some 13.5 billion years into the past
Written by Maarten Blaauw, Ilya Usokin & Tim Heaton
In September 1859, the same year that Darwin published On the Origin of Species, telegraph systems across Europe and North America stopped working and started sparking, leading to fires in some cases
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D
Children’s Health Defense (CHD) is hosting a new initiative, The Covid Index, a volunteer-run directory of scientific resources on COVID-19, ranging from peer-reviewed journal papers to whistleblower accounts.