News Round-Up
30 October 2024
The Saga of the Benin Bronzes Takes a Farcical New Turn
30 October 2024
by Mike Wells
The European Court of Human Rights could rule that governments have to protect people from climate change.
The treatment of Mark Steyn and Donald Trump at the hands of American 'justice' shows just how biased and politicised it is, says law professor James Allan. America increasingly resembles Pakistan.
Covid totalitarianism is akin to Nazi totalitarianism, says C J Hopkins, "and even should the German state imprison me for saying this I will continue to do so". Read his powerful statement to the judge who acquitted him.
In the widely-billed climate trial of the century, the fake Nobel laureate Michael Mann is suing Mark Steyn for libel for saying his infamous 'hockey stick' graph is fraudulent.
Americans are increasingly looking back on the Trump years, with a growing economy, declining illegal immigration, low energy prices, no wokeness and a strong and peaceful foreign policy, with longing.
Civil service lawyers have been accused of trying to scupper Kemi Badenoch's schools trans guidance following a leak which claimed the guidance has a "high risk of successful legal challenge".
In the latest Weekly Sceptic podcast the talking points are Nigel Farage eating ze bugs, Elon Musk's lawsuit against the haters at Media Matters and Argentina's new libertarian President.
Israel's robust response to the recent Hamas atrocity has produced cries of 'war crimes' and demands for immediate ceasefire. Law expert David McGrogan takes a look at how the response shapes up under international law.
Fifty doctors have voiced their support for Dr. Aseem Malhotra as the Good Law Project takes the GMC to court over its decision not to strike him off after he spoke out about Covid vaccine safety concerns.
TV naturalist Chris Packham is threatening legal action to prevent Rishi Sunak's watering down of Net Zero. But the Climate Change Act is so vague that this is highly unlikely to succeed, says Dr David McGrogan.
© Skeptics Ltd.