
Want to fight global warming? Start rationing as Britain did in World War 2! At least, that’s the idea that “one of Britain’s oldest and most influential newspapers” is promoting
Written by Joseph Vazquez

Want to fight global warming? Start rationing as Britain did in World War 2! At least, that’s the idea that “one of Britain’s oldest and most influential newspapers” is promoting
Written by John Dee

Yesterday I hastily scribbled some initial notes on a peculiar finding. Before I got stuck into analysing the file of files I though I’d better check a few things, starting with comparison to the first release of this data on 6 Jul 2022.
Written by Frankie Stockes

The Lee County GOP is standing for the ‘preservation of the human race’ in calling on Ron DeSantis to ban the highly-lethal Covid-19 jab, which has been identified as a bioweapon
Written by Duggan Flanakin

In “The Wonderful Tar Baby Story,” Uncle Remus told about the one time Brer Fox outsmarted Brer Rabbit
Written by Linnea Lueken

A recent post by Canada’s The Globe and Mail discusses the difficulties electric vehicle (EVs) drivers have experienced in extremely cold weather
Written by John Dee

The Office for National Statistics released the long-awaited deaths by vaccination status data three days ago
Written by John O'Sullivan

We have two great guests this weekend for no-holds-barred live news talk on TNT Radio’s Sky Dragon Slaying show. Join us between 6pm to 8pm (New York time) on Saturday 25th February 2023.
Written by Leonardo Vinti

An Oopart (out of place artifact) is a term applied to dozens of prehistoric objects found in various places around the world that, given their level of technology, are completely at odds with their determined age based on physical, chemical, and/or geological evidence.
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

The sophisticated American consumer has grown accustomed to the gold-standard for drug and health products—the prospective randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (RCT).
Written by Dr Benny Peiser

The UK government is today announcing that it will force British households to pay an additional charge on their energy bills to reduce the costs of Net Zero for some 300 energy-intensive industrial users
Written by Aaron Siri

Clinical trials are supposed to be statistical comparisons. They are designed to compare the outcomes in the group receiving a novel product with the outcomes in the group receiving a placebo. The resulting statistics are then used to decide if the product is safe and effective.
Written by Thomas Catenacci

A coalition of 30 mayors representing communities along the New Jersey coast is calling on federal lawmakers and officials to implement a moratorium on offshore wind development in response to a spate of whale deaths
Written by Colleen Huber

In many countries, births dropped sharply nine months after peak COVID vaccine uptake. Let’s look at how this happens. And will these populations recover?
Written by Joseph Mercola

Are farmers’ claims about their chicken feed being altered correct—and is that why egg prices have more than doubled in the past year?
Written by Katyanna Quach

A rock two-feet-wide last week hurtled toward Earth at 27,000 miles per hour – and exploded with an energy equivalent to eight tons of TNT into pieces that rained over McAllen, Texas. (That’s 0.6 metres wide and 43,000 km per hour for you metric folks)
Written by Joe Hildebrand

The thing about the truth is that it always comes out. It may take years, decades or even centuries but reality has a way of asserting itself. Lies inevitably fall apart