
Constant promotion of unnatural 60-second heat spikes has characterised the performance of the UK Met Office during an average British summer interrupted by a number of short-lived ‘heatwaves’
Written by Chris Morrison

Constant promotion of unnatural 60-second heat spikes has characterised the performance of the UK Met Office during an average British summer interrupted by a number of short-lived ‘heatwaves’
Written by Sayer Ji

Imagine a world where the pursuit of beauty comes at the cost of our ability to connect with others emotionally. Welcome to the unsettling reality of “Botox Brain”
Written by world council for health

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has initiated a concerted push toward a national digital ID. In one sense he’s a bit behind the curve — many other countries are further down this road already — but the UK has a history of rejecting proposals for national identity cards (just ask Tony Blair).
Written by Ian Brighthope

Controlled by “Confidence”: How AHPRA Has Become Australia’s Ministry of Medical Truth
Written by Pierre Kory MD, MPA

More evidence that international health care organizations (and all governmental health care and regulatory agencies) are fully captured by Big Pharma
Written by Paul Homewood

The latest nonsense from the BBC‘s utterly absurd Justin Rowlatt
Written by BBC

The number of data centres in the UK is set to increase by almost a fifth, according to figures shared with BBC News
Written by Vijay Jayaraj

The push for solar energy is carving a path of destruction through the Thar Desert in India’s Rajasthan, where native species maintain a delicate balance of life now being sacrificed to an absurd and futile climate agenda
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

The American Academy of Pediatrics recently sued U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over COVID-19 vaccine recommendations and is working to end religious exemptions for childhood vaccination
Written by Mike Stone

In my most recent article, I examined the foundational evidence behind the supposed discovery of the tobacco mosaic “virus” (TMV).
Written by Sayer Ji

In 1971, the U.S. government classified psilocybin as having “no accepted medical use.” In 2025, scientists discovered it could extend human cellular lifespan by 57 percent
Written by A Midwestern Doctor

To maintain the illusion of knowing everything, science will often choose to simply ignore phenomena which are too complex for its existing models to explain
Written by David Blackman

The ‘green’ fairy tale now seems to be unraveling faster than a faulty wind turbine blade in a Nantucket storm
Written by John Leake

The Greek geographer and historian Strabo told the famous story of Cleopatra committing suicide by holding an “asp”—i.e., Egyptian cobra—to her breast
Written by William L. Anderson

When Gov. Leland Stanford was inaugurated on Jan. 10, 1862, he didn’t walk to the state Capitol, nor did he take a carriage. Instead, he got into a small boat and rowed from the governor’s mansion to the Capitol steps. The Great Flood of 1862 is something that anyone interested in California history should know
Written by Audrey Streb

New Yorkers and experts warn lithium-ion batteries can catch fire, contaminate water, and defy green-energy claims. The Trump administration on Monday released the first federal safety guidance for battery energy storage systems (BESS), citing safety concerns as several of the green energy facilities have caught fire in recent years. [emphasis, links added]