
As US regulators restrict antibiotic use, livestock producers turn to vaccines, hormones, and other problematic drugs
Written by Martha Rosenberg

As US regulators restrict antibiotic use, livestock producers turn to vaccines, hormones, and other problematic drugs
Written by Andy Rowlands

Today, the 17-mile Large Hadron Collider at Cern in Geneva begins its third physics campaign.
Written by Melissa Fine

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, at least one Big Tech behemoth has openly stated its intention to protect those who choose to break the law.
Written by J.C. at theepochtimes

Hypnosis is a much maligned and misunderstood aspect of mind “tinkering.” Many people think of hypnosis as a person clucking around like a chicken on stage after having a pocket watch dangled in front of his eyes. There’s more to this field of study.
Written by Zrinka Peters

Supplements have become a massive industry with plenty of enthusiastic promoters. But for all the research telling us how certain vitamins and nutrients affect our bodies, taking supplements can’t always deliver the results we may hope and expect.
Written by kanekoa.substack
Germany reported a 13% decline in births between January and March 2022 compared to the same period in 2021.
Written by PSI Editor

UK Undertaker John O’Looney, a funeral director in Milton Keynes, is blowing the whistle in a big way on everything he has seen, experienced, and what his peers are saying in their industry, starting with the fact that he’s finding strange crap growing inside the bodies of the deceased.
Written by Future Unity

One question on the minds of SpaceX fans that have been following the testing and development of the Starship is, when will the Super Heavy be launched?
Written by Wilson Sy

Written by Climate Change Dispatch

It seems CNN just can’t play it straight with climate research when it goes against the narrative that climate change is making extreme weather worse.
Written by Tom Hale

Beef from cattle that’s been gene-edited to better withstand heat stress could soon be making its way onto dinner plates in the US.
Written by Erin Chamerlik

Most enzymes fall into two categories. Digestive enzymes helps break down food while systemic enzymes, taken away from food, work to fight against unwanted proteins and harmful cells, like cancer cells. Systemic enzymes work to support the body’s normal inflammatory process.
Written by Tom Ozimek

New York billionaire and refiner John Catsimatidis, who owns hundreds of gas stations, blasted President Joe Biden’s pinning the blame on high prices at the pump on gas station owners, arguing there’s only one solution for inflation—boosting production of crude.
Written by Nathan Worcester

Dutch farmers are continuing their demonstrations against a government climate policy that officials expect to end many farmers’ livelihoods, with organizers on Telegram planning July 4 protests they say will “flatten” the whole of the Netherlands.
Written by Joseph Mercola

The rate of hospitalization for COVID among children is so low, that it’s basically zero. Then why is it so important to jab babies and toddlers two or three times, even though the side effects of the injection could harm them for life – or kill them?
Written by CD Media Staff

Just a few months into the COVID-19 pandemic — and almost two years before global health officials warned of a food shortage crisis — the Rockefeller Foundation issued a report predicting the crisis and offering up solutions, including “shifts to online enrollment, online purchasing of food.”