• Login
  • Register
The Daily Sceptic
No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • About
  • Archive
    • ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ROUND-UPS
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Premium
  • Donate
  • Log In
The Daily Sceptic
No Result
View All Result

News Round-Up

by Richard Eldred
13 December 2023 1:40 AM

  • “The Covid bereaved have overplayed their hand” – Covid victims’ groups are disrupting a ruinously expensive probe they themselves demanded, says Isabel Oakeshott in the Telegraph.
  • “The Hallett Inquiry’s obsession with the ‘Eat Out to Help Out’ scheme” – Prof. Carl Heneghan and Dr. Tom Jefferson focus on the controversy surrounding Rishi Sunak’s ‘Eat Out to Help Out’ scheme in the Covid Inquiry.
  • “Medicare death data proves the Covid vaccines are killing people. No more doubts. The debate is over” – While typical vaccines show a decline in daily deaths post-inoculation, the Covid vaccine demonstrates a continuous increase for up to 365 days, writes Steve Kirsch on Substack.
  • “Flu season of 2019-2020 was one of worst in decades” – Data metrics show that the 2019-2020 ‘flu season’ was not normal or typical, says Bill Rice Jr. on Substack. So why don’t virus experts recognise what might have been obvious evidence of early Covid?
  • “Is antibiotic resistance causing China’s pneumonia outbreak?” – Doctors fear the surge in pneumonia cases in children in China may have been caused by antibiotic resistance, reports the Mail.
  • “My email conversation with Sarah Caul at the U.K. ONS” – We are about to find out whether the Office for National Statistics is protecting Big Pharma or the people of the U.K., says Steve Kirsch on Substack.
  • “Finding the courage to speak out” – On Substack, Laura Dodsworth features a guest essay by “Britain’s most outspoken headmaster” Mike Fairclough.
  • “Will killing Yahya Sinwar end the war in Gaza?” – When Yahya Sinwar, the terrorist leader who orchestrated the October 7th massacre, meets his end, it will provide the Israeli’s with a useful ‘offramp’ out of the conflict, suggests Sean Rayment in the Spectator.
  • “Harvard cancels congressman who mocked Harvard cancellations” – It would be one thing if Harvard President Claudine Gay’s commitment to free speech were the real deal, but the truth is she doesn’t believe a word she said in Washington, says Sohrab Ahmari in the American Conservative.
  • “Liz Magill’s hypocrisy on free speech” – Penn President Liz Magill, alongside counterparts at MIT and Harvard, faces condemnation not for their many free speech abuses but for their one accurate articulation of it, writes Heather Mac Donald in City Journal.
  • “Harvard President accused of plagiarism” – On Substack, Igor Chudov reacts to revelations that Harvard President Claudine Gay plagiarised part of her own PhD dissertation.
  • “‘This is definitely plagiarism’” – Claudine Gay copied entire paragraphs from others’ academic work and claimed them as her own, says Aaron Sibarium in the Washington Free Beacon.
  • “Harvard’s Claudine Gay uses ‘free speech’ as a defense after a history of squelching it” – Connor Murnane in the New York Post argues that Claudine Gay’s professed love of free speech hasn’t been much in evidence since her appointment as President of Harvard.
  • “Resignations won’t fix America’s universities” – In U.S. universities, antisemitism extends from students to administrators, warns Jacob Howland in UnHerd.
  • “It’s no surprise Palestine marches have drained the Met’s coffers” – If the authorities had consistently arrested those promoting terrorism in recent decades, the London Mayor wouldn’t be seeking £240 million to contain the problem now, argues Jake Wallis Simons in the Spectator.
  • “The things I never thought possible – until October 7th” – In the Free Press, Axel Springer CEO Mathias Döpfner reflects on the many illusions shattered by Hamas’s pogrom and the tsunami of antisemitism it has inspired.
  • “Only 1% of voters believe Rwanda Bill will stop the boats, poll shows” – A poll by YouGov has revealed that only 1% of voters believe that Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda Bill will stop illegal migrants arriving on small boats, says the Telegraph.
  • “Labour could send illegal migrants abroad to be processed, says Starmer” – Keir Starmer has announced that, under a Labour government, small boat migrants could be “diverted” abroad to have their asylum applications decided, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Nigel Farage slams ITV’s Kevin Lygo over ‘unpleasantries’” – Nigel Farage has blasted ITV boss Kevin Lygo and warned him not to “go to war” with him, claiming he now knows there was a conspiracy at the broadcaster to “stitch me up” on I’m a Celeb, reports the Mail.
  • “Nigel Farage and the hysteria of the Remoaners” – Nigel Farage’s turn on I’m a Celeb has both baffled and terrified the elites, says Fraser Myers in Spiked.
  • “Is this the end for Zelenskyy?” – The Ukrainian President is facing calls for regime change, writes Thomas Fazi in UnHerd.
  • “Blasphemy laws have returned to Denmark” – Even fanatical Quran-burners should have their right to freedom of expression upheld, argues Andrew Doyle in UnHerd.
  • “Prince Harry ordered to pay the publisher of the Mail almost £50,000” – Prince Harry has been ordered to pay the publisher of the Mail almost £50,000 after he lost the latest stage of a legal battle, according to the Mail.
  • “The retired NHS doctors earning more than the Prime Minister” – Public sector pensions are now so generous that a handful of retired doctors and teachers are being paid a higher income than the Prime Minister, reveals the Telegraph.
  • “So much for world-beating NHS! U.K. doesn’t make top 20 for safest care” – A new report has revealed that health services in Estonia, Israel and Austria provide safer care than Britain, reports the Mail.
  • “Heather Mills blames ‘litany of lies’ as vegan empire collapses” – Heather Mills has blamed the “gaslighting” meat industry for the collapse of her vegan food empire, says the Telegraph.
  • “We must be free to call this man a man” – The Green Party’s Melissa Poulton is clearly not a woman. Why can’t we say so, asks Lauren Smith in Spiked.
  • “Enoch Burke must stay behind bars over Christmas, court rules” – An Irish teacher, who refused to refer to a transitioning transgender student as ‘they’ rather than ‘he’ in May last year, is set to spend Christmas in prison, reports the Mail.
  • “It’s time the BBC put Have I Got News for You out of its misery” – Have I Got News for You was once the sharpest satire on TV. Now it’s predictable liberal-Left pap, says Michael Deacon in the Telegraph.
  • “How to decolonise Britain” – Britain must escape the bind of the American Empire, argues Aris Roussinos in UnHerd.
  • “Harry and Meghan’s Archewell Foundation suffers $11 million donations drop” – The Sussexes’ charity has seen an alarming dive in its finances, says the Mail.
  • “Student who sued professional body for psychotherapists after he was thrown off his course for expressing gender critical views reaches settlement in discrimination case” – James Esses has won a major victory for free speech, persuading the U.K. Council for Psychotherapy to issue a statement saying psychotherapists with gender critical views will not be penalised in future, reports the Mail.
  • “Are we ruled by midwits?” – Noah Carl tries to work out just how stupid MPs are in Aporia.
  • “This is the single most important exchange of the inquiry” – On X, Prof. Karol Sikora has isolated a clip from the Covid Inquiry, where Rishi Sunak says a QALY-analysis revealed the cost of lockdown would be greater than the benefits, only to be promptly shut down by Hugo Keith KC, who has no idea what QALY stands for.

This is the single most important exchange of the inquiry.

Sunak rightly highlights the possibility that lockdown may have caused more harm than good, and is promptly shut down by Keith who doesn't even understand what the term QALY means.

Scandalous – please watch and share. pic.twitter.com/S95RYJ9Uu6

— Professor Karol Sikora (@ProfKarolSikora) December 12, 2023

If you have any tips for inclusion in the round-up, email us here.

Tags: News Round-Up

Donate

We depend on your donations to keep this site going. Please give what you can.

Donate Today

Comment on this Article

You’ll need to set up an account to comment if you don’t already have one. We ask for a minimum donation of £5 if you'd like to make a comment or post in our Forums.

Sign Up
Previous Post

Nick Dixon and Toby Young Talk About Nigel Farage Reaching the Jungle Final, Robert Jenrick Quitting and Alex Jones’s Return to Twitter

Next Post

U.K. Health Security Agency Deploys Made-Up Rise of 5°C in 80 Years to Spread Alarm About Dengue Fever Plague in London

Subscribe
Login
Notify of
Please log in to comment

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

40 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago

Privileged King Lectures Us On Climate

latest leaflet to print at home and deliver to neighbours or forward to politicians, media, friends online. 

07a-Privileged-King-Lectures-Us-On-Climate-MONOCHROME-copy
43
-2
NeilParkin
NeilParkin
1 year ago

“Are we ruled by midwits?”

A lacking in basic maths skills is one thing. An ignorance of history, geography, economics is another. We educate our people poorly, then expect them to be wise when they get elected.

43
-2
DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Does the majority of the population need to calculate probabilities on a regular basis? If not, it’s not a surprise the majority might get this wrong if asked unprepared. Same goes for any “simple” question that requires knowledge that may have lapsed.

What is important is the actions they would take to make an informed decision with the data presented to them.

20
-1
soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

Yet many incapable of calculation will offer contrary opinions on others’ informed opinions.

5
0
Jon Mors
Jon Mors
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

Absolutely.

I got the false negative one wrong first, but I understood the explanation when I read it, and I’d totally forgotten what ‘mode’ meant.

Although I’ve never taken a formal IQ test, based on online quizzes, my educational history and achievements, profession etc., I estimate it at 130-135.

Cummings is hardly a mid-wit, nor is Nassim Taleb – but both are catastrophically wrong on lockdowns and the “vaccines”. They are both supreme narcissists however.

2
-1
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

It’s fairly irrelevant whether MPs are brilliant or crass when you have a civil service that openly blocks policy. Skills in root-and-branch civil service reform are the first priority at this stage.

20
0
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Smart, worldly Ministers would put the Civil Servants in their place but only with the backing of their PM.

although it is clear the education system has been failing for decades, there are better candidates available than the ones selected to contest elections.

m They are rejected because they refuse to ape their Party leadership.

8
0
DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago

Does Hugo Keith not understand what QALY means or has he inserted a false description into the proceedings to make the PM’s information seem irrelevant to a casual observer who may not know the term? Given the way the inquiry is progressing and the skillset of the KC, it would not be a surprise.

61
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

I think he knows very well what QALY means, that’s why he doesn’t want to go there. As soon as you start thinking in terms of QALYS, the case for lockdowns ought to be utterly demolished. I say ought to but sadly when I argued this with people I know, they more or less called me a eugenicist. Society can only function decently by accepting that people die and that there may be some postponable deaths but the cost (financial or otherwise) of postponing them is too high – this general consensus went out of the window during covid.

79
0
DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

There was a sudden mass-amnesia where people forgot how they had managed to get by in life before 2020.

50
0
DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

and the government disinterest in their health and wellbeing up until that point.

31
0
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

Subtle diversion of lay public attention to “quality of life,” when QUALYs are essentially about how many years of life are lost. Sunak says more lives were lost by lockdown than saved, and KC waves his hands away from that vital fact in the direction of “quality of life” like a conjuror.

It sounds similar to the way that, during the panic, “lives” were trumpeted over “the economy,” as if the two were not completely interconnected. This is even more blatantly misleading. Look out in the future discussions for the press referring to “QUALY” as a measure of quality of life, and saying that one life saved is worth a bit of inconvenience.

26
0
Myra
Myra
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

I argue that each and every one of us lost QALYs to some extend. Some more so than others.
I remember a paper a while ago that tried to quantify QALYs lost due to Covid restrictions.

https://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/eclinm/PIIS2589-5370(22)00035-9.pdf

14
0
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  Myra

True. But not measurable, except statistically, until we snuff it.

4
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Oooh how crass. Surely you mean ‘pass away’?

I really dislike the weasel term ‘pass away’. As far as I’m concerned ‘die’ is a neutral term which describes what every living thing will do eventually. The only questions being ‘when’ and ‘how unpleasantly’?

My preferred black humour term for ‘dead’ is ‘on the wrong side of the grass’.

12
0
JohnK
JohnK
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

And the likely increase in deaths by alternative routes, due to lack of service & extended waiting lists for a range of other diseases. It’s entirely possible to demonstrate that the concept of “lockdown” had a negative effect, just based on QALY using the original definition of the term. No surprise that the barrister steered clear of it.

19
0
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

Notice also that Rishi was, more subtly, playing games. The cost benefit analysis done later, he says, shows that lockdowns caused more harm than good. This conveniently distracts from the fact that his government failed to do a cost-benefit analysis at any stage, which would have shown the same thing.

32
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Mr Keith cuts off Mr Sunak with:

I’m so sorry, I don’t want to get into…

Why not? It’s evidence being presented by the PM of the United Kingdom.

Even if it was just a slip of the forked tongue to refer to QALY as ‘Quality Life Assurance models’. Why should you expect precision in language from a KC?

Oh.

17
0
JayBee
JayBee
1 year ago
Reply to  DHJ

The ‘false description’ is too obviously an embarrassment for it to have been made to just deflect attention.
He is absolutely clueless about what QALY means.
Which is a real shocker, as the whole point of a real lockdown inquiry would be to make just that assessment.
Everything else is just noise and foregone conclusions.

17
0
NeilParkin
NeilParkin
1 year ago

“Heather Mills blames ‘litany of lies’ as vegan empire collapses”

Sure. So the meat industry is gaslighting us by selling sausages made of pork..?

58
0
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Yeah, nothing to do with extraordinary levels of industrial ultraprocessing, dubious taste & flavour, exorbitant cost, bl**dy awful product spelling (‘beeph’ – ‘fsh’ – ‘chkn’ – ‘cheezly’, etc). smug eco-warrior marketing, ingredient lists longer than a bottle of self-tanning lotion (titanium dioxide-coloured ‘fsh’ steaks – really?)…

47
-4
Dinger64
Dinger64
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

I mentioned this yesterday
“Heather Mills blames ‘corporate greed’ as vegan food company collapses”
Cobblers!
It’s that nobody wants the f#@king bland chaff!”

27
-1
Mogwai
Mogwai
1 year ago

A good article explaining why antizionism is antisemitism. **WARNING** Definitely triggering to Jew-haters.

”Imagine a group of people who work to destroy Italy because, they claim, Italy’s origins are illegitimate. Imagine further that these people maintain that of all the countries in the world, only Italy doesn’t deserve to exist. Then imagine that these people vigorously deny that they are anti-Italian. Would you believe them?

Now substitute “Israel” for “Italy,” and you’ll understand the dishonesty and absurdity of the argument that one can be anti-Zionist — that is, against the existence of a Jewish state — but not be anti-Jew.

Yet, that is precisely what anti-Zionists say. They say that Israel’s existence is illegitimate. They don’t say this about any other country in the world, no matter how bloody its origins. And then they get offended when they’re accused of being anti-Jew.
How can they make this argument?

First, they change the topic. They say it’s unfair to charge those who merely “criticize” Israel with being antisemitic. No one says criticism of Israel is antisemitic. But anti-Zionism isn’t criticism of Israel. Anti-Zionism is opposition to Israel’s existence.
Zionism is the name of the movement for the return of the Jews to their historic homeland. Over the past 3,000 years, there were only two independent states located in what is called Israel. Both were Jewish states, and invaders destroyed both. No Arab or Muslim or any other sovereign country ever existed in that land, which was given the name “Palestine” by the Romans so as to remove all memory of the Jewish state they destroyed in the year 70.

If the Palestinians would stop killing Israelis, Israel would have no problem with a “two-state solution.” But Palestinians have rejected offers to have their own state on four separate occasions since 1947. That is the only reason they don’t have their own state. 
And why have they always rejected having a Palestinian state? Because the only state they would accept is one that eradicates Israel. They have therefore been solely dedicated to destroying the Jewish state, not in having their own state alongside Israel.”

https://pjmedia.com/dennis-prager/2023/12/12/yes-anti-zionism-is-antisemitism-n4924670

( Awaits inevitable pile-on from all the antisemites…3,2,1 GO!! )

47
-25
Mogwai
Mogwai
1 year ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Speaking of Jew-haters, look how triggered this Polish antisemite MP is. What normal person behaves this way? Prat!

”Antisemitic Polish MP Grzegorz Braun uses a fire extinguisher to extinguish the candles on a Hanukkah Menorah as MP’s gathered to celebrate the Jewish holiday.”

https://twitter.com/OliLondonTV/status/1734625026974925289

31
-14
DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Perhaps post what Hamas has been doing since 7th October to inform people of their continued campaign? 7th October is looking increasingly like an anomaly.

What happened in 70AD seems a bit of a stretch and leaves the conversation open to what other groups were doing back in the day. That may not help your argument.

10
-15
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago

Dr Pierre Kory has published three of the vids from Andrew Bridgen’s parliamentary debate on 4th December (Kory, Martin, Malone), more to follow. (Dr Malone already published his on Substack, Dr Yeadon’s is available on the HART Substack).

https://pierrekorymedicalmusings.com/p/uk-parliament-testimony-videos-from?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

28
-3
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago

At this time of deliberately propagandised polarisation, great reminder from James Corbett on the Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect – don’t believe everything you read in the MSM…

https://corbettreport.substack.com/p/the-gell-mann-amnesia-effect

28
-3
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  WyrdWoman

Some kooky people on here this morning, downvoting a reminder of the Gell-Mann effect. Either they are media shills, or they’re not expert enough in anything to have noticed it themselves.

18
0
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

No worries Jon – its my fan club, not the content of the posts!

12
-1
godknowsimgood
godknowsimgood
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Their beloved ultra-processed vegan food products, with more than 100 ingredients, must be affecting their brains, muddling their thinking.

16
0
Boomer Bloke
Boomer Bloke
1 year ago
Reply to  WyrdWoman

Thank you, that’s the most interesting article I have read for some time. Most of my friends are avid consumers of the MSM in all its modes. I’m not. It’s good to know why we don’t see eye to eye on any of the burning issues that we are confronted with continually, from Brexit to Ukraine.

14
0
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago
Reply to  Boomer Bloke

👍

2
0
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago

Another magnum opus by Dr Jessica Rose on the frameshifting issue in the jab (creation of foreign ‘junk’ proteins in the body with unknown (but likely damaging) effects). Some of the comments are additionally informative. Plus one cross-posted from Anandamide on the same issue. Coincidence and c*ckup my a*se.

https://jessicar.substack.com/p/that-substack-about-n1-methylpseudouridines

https://anandamide.substack.com/p/frameshiting-slippery-sequence :

So in summary, this Frameshifting risk was known in 2021 and it was censored at the journals and on Twitter. Smoke screen papers like Kim et al appeared so some researches could get some Fauci biscuits. After billions of shots we can now see the warts through the lens of the next patent that will fix the crap forced into our kids. 
And once again the goal posts begin to shift. 
It stays in the arm.
Oops it doesn’t, but it doesn’t matter
It’s gone in 48hrs
Oops is still here months later, but it doesn’t matter
There is no DNA!!!
Ok there is a little, but it doesn’t matter
There is no SV40!!!
Oops there is, but it’s safe and effective
It stops transmission
Oops, it doesn’t but it makes it not so bad.
It’s good for the immunocompromised and those at risk
Oops that was never a clinical trial endpoint but its still safe and effective.

Mutant-Proteins
21
0
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  WyrdWoman

Badly controlled protein production -> amyloid protein. Amyloidosis is heap nasty disease.

8
0
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Yup. Remember reading Dr Rose’s first paper on this at least a year ago, if not longer. Felt physically sick just at the thought of it.

8
0
JayBee
JayBee
1 year ago

The DailyscepticabouteverythingbutIsrael and its Jerusalem Times-like commentators surely won’t like John Mearsheimer’s take on it. Good.
https://mearsheimer.substack.com/p/death-and-destruction-in-gaza

12
-4
WyrdWoman
WyrdWoman
1 year ago
Reply to  JayBee

Come now JayBee, you know Mearsheimer’s nothing more than a Hamas shill, don’t you? Him, Scott Ritter, Alastair Crooke, Max Blumenthal, Larry Johnstone, Lawrence Wilkerson, etc etc etc – the whole bally lot of them. /sarc. Let’s have some balance here – link to those jolly children singing that lovely song. Warms the cockles.

https://twitter.com/intifada/status/1726345295515058255?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1726334346431479989%7Ctwgr%5Edeb9d35650e06054d914c2cc9df3a64cf931a6bc%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Felectronicintifada.net%2Fblogs%2Fali-abunimah%2Fwatch-israeli-children-sing-we-will-annihilate-everyone-gaza

8
-2
A Y M
A Y M
1 year ago
Reply to  WyrdWoman

That must be Palestinian children being taught to hate Israelis for no reason except their religion then surely?

1
0
JayBee
JayBee
1 year ago

Thorough piece and obituary on Z’s political career and events since 2014.
Too many truth bombs for IanRons&co:
https://gordonhahn.com/2023/12/11/sad-clown-with-the-circus-closed-down-zelenskiys-demise/

5
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago

https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/why-squander-200million-on-a-foregone-conclusion/

A short but worthwhile dissection of the Hallett pantomime.

9
-1

NEWSLETTER

View today’s newsletter

To receive our latest news in the form of a daily email, enter your details here:

DONATE

PODCAST

In Episode 35 of the Sceptic: Andrew Doyle on Labour’s Grooming Gang Shame, Andrew Orlowski on the India-UK Trade Deal and Canada’s Ignored Covid Vaccine Injuries

by Richard Eldred
9 May 2025
1

LISTED ARTICLES

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Sun-Dimming Quango has £800 Million of Taxpayer Money to Blow – and a CEO on £450k

8 May 2025

News Round-Up

9 May 2025

UK “Shafted” by US Trade Deal

8 May 2025

The Sugar Tax Sums Up Our Descent into Technocratic Dystopia

8 May 2025

What Does David Lammy Mean by a State?

9 May 2025

News Round-Up

26

The Sugar Tax Sums Up Our Descent into Technocratic Dystopia

25

Sun-Dimming Quango has £800 Million of Taxpayer Money to Blow – and a CEO on £450k

28

UK “Shafted” by US Trade Deal

12

Electric Car Bursts into Flames on Driveway and Engulfs £550,000 Family Home

10

BBC Quietly Edits Question Time After Wrongly ‘Correcting’ Richard Tice on Key Net Zero Claim

9 May 2025

Electric Car Bursts into Flames on Driveway and Engulfs £550,000 Family Home

9 May 2025

“I Was a Super Fit Cyclist Until I Had the Moderna Covid Vaccine. What Happened Next Left Me Wishing I Was Dead”

9 May 2025

Nature Paper Claims to Pin Liability for ‘Climate Damages’ on Oil Companies

9 May 2025

What Does David Lammy Mean by a State?

9 May 2025

POSTS BY DATE

December 2023
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Nov   Jan »

SOCIAL LINKS

Free Speech Union
  • Home
  • About us
  • Donate
  • Privacy Policy

Facebook

  • X

Instagram

RSS

Subscribe to our newsletter

© Skeptics Ltd.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
wpDiscuz
No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • About
  • Archive
    • ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ROUND-UPS
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Premium
  • Donate
  • Log In

© Skeptics Ltd.

You are going to send email to

Move Comment
Perfecty
Do you wish to receive notifications of new articles?
Notifications preferences