The history of New Year’s resolutions was recently summarized by Sarah Pruitt:
New Data on Exercise and Weight Loss for the New Year
Written by Peter A. Mccullough, MD, MPH
Written by Peter A. Mccullough, MD, MPH
The history of New Year’s resolutions was recently summarized by Sarah Pruitt:
Written by Will Jones
School science lessons could be made less “Western” with “no more heroes” in Labour’s “woke” overhaul of the school curriculum
Written by Tan Yigitcanlar
In 2017, the city of Rotterdam in the Netherlands deployed an artificial intelligence (AI) system to determine how likely welfare recipients were to commit fraud.
Written by Kenneth Richard
New remote sensing research (Gutiérrez-Hernández and García, 2025) uses robust statistical methods to eliminate false positives and spurious correlations in establishing vegetation trends in the satellite era
Written by Peter A. Mccullough, MD, MPH
We have heard alot about the safety of drinking water and contaminants such as fluoride, aluminum, and lead, but not much on the issue of industrial waste in the form of microplastics
Written by Carly Cassella
Earlier this year, scientists stumbled upon a potential new treatment for hereditary-patterned baldness, the most common cause of hair loss in both men and women worldwide
Written by BBC
An author believes he has discovered a previously unknown battle involving a famous lost Roman legion
Written by George Citroner
Americans are dying from cold weather at more than twice the rate they did two decades ago
Written by John Leake
When Dr. Peter McCullough, Nicholas Hulscher, and I investigated reports of what is being represented to the public as a new clade of H5N1 bird flu.
Written by Chris Morrison
The UK Met Office claims to have a continuous record of temperatures at Stornoway Airport going back to 1873, 64 years before the airport was built
Written by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH
Last week, the study titled Effects of Microplastic Exposure on Human Digestive, Reproductive, and Respiratory Health: A Rapid Systematic Review by Chartres et al was published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology:
Written by Mihai Andrei
Humans are the smartest creatures on the planet and we’re by far the best at solving all sorts of cognitive tasks. Or are we?
Written by BBC
From the end of the Roman occupation through the Anglo-Saxon and Viking invasions – a new way of testing DNA in ancient bones could force a rethink of key moments in Britain’s early history, say researchers
Written by The Daily Mail
It’s been nearly 200 years since a global cold snap led to widespread crop failures and devastating famines
Written by Welcome The Eagle
Gayle Means died of stage 4 pancreatic cancer just weeks after receiving the diagnosis. Although Ms. Gayle was not jabbed with a covid jab, Uncle Jack eludes to the possibility of her turbo cancer as still being vaccine related?
Written by Roger Pielke Jr.
Hurricanes are the poster child of climate politics, but evidence and research have not always conformed to the narrative