Well bah humbug to you too, we say to The Atlantic for having the gall to serve up stale leftovers for Christmas, in the form of a piece saying “Winter Is Cooked”.
They’re dreaming of a brown Christmas
Written by Op Ed Watch
Written by Op Ed Watch
Well bah humbug to you too, we say to The Atlantic for having the gall to serve up stale leftovers for Christmas, in the form of a piece saying “Winter Is Cooked”.
Written by Phillip Altman
The Australian Government has a problem – How to hide and/or minimise the number of Covid jab serious injuries and death which have now reached unprecedented numbers never before seen in the history of the pharmaceutical industry
Written by Ron Unz
Donald Trump has selected Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to serve as Secretary of Health and Human Services in his new administration, and the latter has declared that his mission will be to “Make America Healthy Again”
Written by Jacinta Bowler
In 2015, Australian metal detectorist David Hole found what he thought was an interesting, and unusually heavy, rock in yellowish clay
Written by Chris Morrison
Last month, the Daily Sceptic highlighted the practice at the U.K. Met Office of inventing temperature averages from over 100 non-existent measuring stations
Written by Peter A. Mccullough, MD, MPH
I appeared on the Evening Edit with Fox News host Liz MacDonald to comment on a meeting Trump and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr had with BIG PHARMA executives. You may be surprised with my answer.
Written by Maydeen Merino
Republican-led states and business groups argued in federal court Friday that the Environmental Protection Agency rule requiring power plants to reduce emissions by using ‘carbon’ capture technology is unachievable
Written by Andy Rowlands
In the face of mounting opposition to wind and solar farms, the current British Labour government wants to stop people objecting to such new projects
Written by David Nield
Researchers have linked spending more time playing video games with a boost in intelligence in children, which goes some way to contradicting the narrative that gaming is bad for young minds.
Written by Paul D Thacker
More work awaits science writing outlets needing to make an effort at journalism to recapture public trust
Written by Madhava Setty
On November 14th a book appeared on Amazon with a similar cover and title to one that was published two years ago which blew the doors wide open on the deception around vaccine safety
Written by Mike Mcrae
Not all superheroes wear capes. Capable of handling extreme cold, acid, and dehydration, the microbe Deinococcus radiodurans handles doses of radiation that would kill a human tens of thousands of times over, earning it the nickname ‘Conan the Bacterium’ after the valiant pulp fantasy character.
Written by The New Lede
In the waning days of the Biden administration, a long-fought battle over a cancer-causing food additive is again in the spotlight as consumer advocacy groups and lawmakers demand federal regulators ban red dye No. 3, a chemical used to give popular candies, foods and drinks their cherry-red colors.
Written by Agent131711
In May of 2024, I published an article called Ivermectin: Population Control Poison.
Written by Michelle Starr
The Moon bears its history on its skin. Earth’s only permanent natural satellite is scored and scarred with billions of years’ worth of cratering – a record of constant bombardment.
Written by Peter burke
Dr. Jeremy London, a cardiovascular surgeon in Savannah, Georgia, posed the question to more than one million of his followers on social media. His answer may be surprising to some.