
Oatly, the Swedish oat-milk darling once hailed as the future of ‘ethical capitalism’, has finally said the quiet part out loud.
Written by Lee Taylor

Oatly, the Swedish oat-milk darling once hailed as the future of ‘ethical capitalism’, has finally said the quiet part out loud.
Written by James Alexander

It has recently become the fashion to kick Cold-War liberalism in the shins. Samuel Moyn, an influential Yale professor, is making an entire career out of this. And one also has Quinn Slobodian, who energetically blames neo-liberals for the revival of fascism.
Written by Steve Ramirez

In this adapted excerpt from “How to Change a Memory,” author and neuroscientist Steve Ramirez recounts the events that led him and his colleagues to discover memories could be artificially controlled in rodents by zapping their brains with lasers
Written by William M Briggs

Dartmouth President Sian Leah Beilock reacted to the Trump Administration’s Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education by saying the university would accept no new grant money, that professors would be returning what monies they now had, that the university would accept no federal funds of any kind, that they would ban its students from accepting student loans (all are backed by the federal government), they would refuse all federal and state favors, tax breaks, and any and all other special considerations. Just kidding!
Written by Andy Rowlands

Here’s another scare story about ‘horrid bugs’ and viral contagion, As regular readers of PSI will know, many more doctors, scientists and researchers are questioning the virus theory narrative, which they argue, could merely be the body’s natural and regular detox process. Read and make up your own mind
Written by climatedepot.com

Marc Morano of climatedepot.com is joining a self-declared ‘Unofficial U.S. Delegation’ as the The UN climate summit, COP30, kicks off next week in Belém, Brazil — from November 10-21 — deep in the Amazon rainforest.
Written by climatediscussionnexus.com

Many people involved in the climate debate do not seem to understand how big the planet is, how slowly inexorable ocean currents and other geological phenomena are or, well, scale generally.
Written by Elizabeth Howell

The James Webb and Very Large telescopes spotted a free-floating planet accreting material at a record rate, displaying behavior similar to how stars form. Scientists aren’t clear as to why.
Written by Chris Morrison

The next two weeks of COP30 will see three favourite climate scares relentlessly broadcast to promote the fast-fading hard-Left Net Zero fantasy.
Written by Kenneth Richard

According to a new study, Greenland temperature stations indicate an abrupt 2.9°C warming trend from 1922 to 1932 (10 years) that was nearly identical to the 3.1°C warming trend from 1993 to 2007 (14 years). [emphasis, links added]
Written by Dr Peter McCullough MD, MPH

If you are a man, could your declining testosterone levels be the cause of a subtle loss of energy, strength, and vitality?
Written by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH
Written by A Midwestern Doctor

The billions spent on amyloid Alzheimer’s research have only produced three drugs, all of which offer minuscule benefits and severe side effects.
Written by Madeline Halpert and Christal Hayes

Nobel Prize-winning American scientist James Watson, one of the co-discoverers of the structure of DNA, has died aged 97.
Written by William M Briggs

Research Shows headlines are generated from papers by academics, and these all have explicit or tacit claims of cause, all purporting to explain some set of observations (whether gathered in history, the world, or by experiment). To explain is to state or to tacitly point to a cause.
Written by Paul Homewood

Just in time for COP30 – what a coincidence!