
A significant proportion of people paid to train AI models may be themselves outsourcing that work to AI, a new study has found.
Written by Rhiannon Williams

A significant proportion of people paid to train AI models may be themselves outsourcing that work to AI, a new study has found.
Written by John Leake

I first heard about the American expat playwright in Berlin; C.J. Hopkins, in November 2020, when someone sent me a link to his essay The Germans Are Back!
Written by Dr Peter McCullough MD, MPH

The majority of my patients in practice have indicated they are not going to take another COVID-19 vaccine. But is my clinic a skewed sample?
Written by Michelle Starr

The early Universe was a wild time. In the first 2 billion years following the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago, star formation positively roiled, and galaxies flared to life in the darkness, collided, and grew.
Written by Norman Fenton

The idea that a particularly unusual sequence of deaths cannot happen by coincidence has been used by both sides of the covid narrative as explanations for their respective positions.
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

I recently had a patient who had salivary gland problems after vaccination and when I looked in her mouth I saw unusual lesions at the orifice of the parotid duct. I wondered if there were any solutions.
Written by Science Alert

Done with putting up with abdominal cramping for more than a week, a 37 year old woman from the French island of Réunion east of Madagascar visited a hospital emergency department, only to discover she was – in fact – pregnant.
Written by Science Alert

Over the last decade, several case studies have reported that people with multiple sclerosis (MS) who started antiretroviral therapy for HIV (to keep the virus in check) subsequently found that their MS symptoms had either disappeared completely or the disease progression had slowed considerably.
Written by Sharyl Attkisson

In today’s perverted information and medical environment, you can count on at least one thing: any data that shows concerns with Covid vaccination, or any vaccination, is likely to somehow be twisted into a recommendation that more people get vaccinated.
Written by Meryl Nass MD

Historians of the future, flash-frying peccary testicles and mesquite pods over their campfires, will wonder at how the archetypal Shining City on a Hill of America’s storied yesteryear got transformed into the roach motel that our country has become on the threshold of 2024.
Written by Meryl Nass MD

Conservation easements may not be what you thought; Eminent Domain plays a role, as do “ecosystem services” and new, voodoo accounting methods.
Written by Bob Unruh

A retiree in North Carolina has a constitutional right to speak about math, in public, according to a ruling from a federal judge, Richard Myers.
Written by Greg Reese

Rudolf Steiner, whose teachings led to anthroposophical medicine, biodynamic farming, and the Waldorf school, said that the heart is a seven-sided regular form that sits in an imaginary box in the chest.
Written by Science Alert

More than half a billion people worldwide are affected by type 2 diabetes, and yet researchers still don’t know what’s behind the condition’s breakdown in insulin functionality.
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

Rare illnesses which are mild should not be the target for mass vaccination. Because so few people get the problem, and in the case of respiratory syncytial virus, the illness is so mild and easily treatable with albuterol and budesonide nebulizers, it is hard to make the case for mass vaccination with a novel mRNA platform.
Written by Science Alert

The ferocious Scythians, according to the ancient Greek historian Herodotus, were a terrifying and bloodthirsty lot.