
Germans stopped counting long ago, but the rest of the world still might be interested in what Europe’s largest economy is paying to accomplish its transition to net-zero ‘carbon’ emissions
Written by WSJ Editorial Board

Germans stopped counting long ago, but the rest of the world still might be interested in what Europe’s largest economy is paying to accomplish its transition to net-zero ‘carbon’ emissions
Written by Amie Dahnke

New research on sudden unexplained childhood death (SUDC) suggests the heartbreaking phenomenon that killed 2,900 children under the age of 4 in 2021 in the United States may be a result of seizures.
Written by Isabella Rayner

Written by Marina Zhang

Some vaccinated and COVID-infected people are reportedly being diagnosed with a new type of disease called VEXAS syndrome—an autoinflammatory disease discovered in 2020.
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

“Our team became aware of the possibility of false positive HIV tests (all but HIV PCR) in individuals vaccinated against Sars-CoV-2 when a laboratory technician attempted suicide.
Written by Robert Backer

We often think of medicine passively these days. You get the treatment—pills, shots, procedures—and it fixes you up. No personal investment needed. Like a car wash, you simply show up and ride the conveyor belt, emerging shiny and clean.
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

The Spanish Influenza pandemic was over with in two years 1918-1919. There was an insignificant attempt at mass vaccination and largely the outbreak ran its course affecting one third of the world’s population.
Written by Meryl Nass

Nearly 17,000 people in the U.S. and five other countries “may have died” early in the pandemic because they used hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) to treat COVID-19, according to a paper published in the February 2024 issue of Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy.
Written by Grace Piercy

Birmingham could be banning cars from city centre roads they are not already banned from in a major overhaul of its ‘road safety’ strategy
Written by Jingduan Yang

The kidneys are intricately designed to play a crucial role in eliminating waste, excess fluids, and toxins produced within the body. However, despite their meticulous design, kidneys are fragile. People with conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, and autoimmune diseases in particular are highly susceptible to kidney damage.
Written by Vital Signs

Written by Facts Matter

Written by Marina Zhang

Apart from potentially preventing a particular disease, vaccines may cause persistent nonspecific effects that can affect a person’s lifetime survival.
Written by Naveen Athrappully

Biopharma corporation GSK (formerly GlaxoSmithKline) will cease the manufacture and sale of two extremely popular branded asthma inhalers beginning next year in favor of producing generic versions, triggering concerns about insurance coverage and product access.
Written by Welcome to the Eagle

What happens when we dump & pump out the info and start analyzing the data with no data modeling or no preparation?
Written by Meryl Nass

The following is a transcript of Archbishop Vigano addressing COVID ethics with medical doctors.