
In the good old days when London Calling marked the week even more than the publication of the Spectator or the Beano, I heard our general editor, Toby Young, use the phrase ‘jot and tittle’
Written by James Alexander

In the good old days when London Calling marked the week even more than the publication of the Spectator or the Beano, I heard our general editor, Toby Young, use the phrase ‘jot and tittle’
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

Rep. Thomas Massie on Tuesday introduced legislation to repeal the “sweeping” liability shield that exempts COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers from responsibility for serious injuries or death caused by their products
Written by Andrew Montford

In some ways I pity Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart, who, on the latest edition of their The Rest is Politics podcast, have put themselves through an hour of ‘net zero’ word soup from the new Climate Change Committee CEO Emma Pinchbeck
Written by Gareth Roberts

Pre-tax profits for vehicle leasing company Lex Autolease have plummeted by more than £400 million, according to newly-filed accounts
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

Children of activists generally learn early not to depend on their parents for amusement. Long-ago there were the “red diaper” babies of committed Communists whose sense of fun stretched from struggle all the way to Leninist reading circles
Written by John Curran

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is recommending that Congress consider requiring major Federal government agencies to develop modernization plans for legacy IT systems that have been identified as among those most in need of overhauling.
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

We also find ourselves asking “Was your thesaurus consumed in the conflagration?” after reading “Temperatures to soar to 34C today”
Written by Net Zero Watch

Britain’s Reform Party’s Richard Tice has written to green energy bosses warning them that a Nigel Farage-led government would terminate ‘green’ subsidy contracts associated with Labour’s Clean Power 2030 agenda
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

On the subject of ‘attribution’ non-science, we routinely receives messages like “Climate Change Tripled Heat Deaths in European Heatwave” which sound as though someone has a pile of facts not a web of speculation
Written by John Leake

On July 15, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee held a hearing for the vaccine injured and their family members
Written by Kevin Adjei-Darko

The Netherlands is rationing electricity as its overloaded power grid buckles under the pressure of rapid electrification and ambitious climate goals
Written by Dr Jennifer Marohasy

When I first wrote about the flooding of the Guadalupe River, I expressed my tremendous sorrow, and I also mentioned cloud seeding
Written by Toby Rogers

Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) is a relatively recent phenomenon. The term itself was not coined until 1991. It began with the best of intentions — to give frontline doctors the tools from clinical epidemiology to make science-based decisions that would improve patient outcomes.
Written by Robert Malone MD MS

Cable news is losing both audience share and financial stability, with no clear prospect for reversing these declines as the cable ecosystem itself continues to erode. The old cable news model is unlikely to survive in its current form much longer.
Written by Chris Morrison

The UK Met Office recently declared an average daily maximum temperature of 22.3°C for June 2025 at Lowestoft, but there is no weather station at Lowestoft and hasn’t been since 2010
Written by David Turver

On July 15th, the Government published its plans to reform the Contract for Difference (CfD) subsidy scheme for the forthcoming Allocation Round 7