News Round-Up
6 January 2025
Musk Says Farage “Doesn’t Have What It Takes” to Lead Reform
5 January 2025
Three doses of the Moderna Covid vaccine increase your risk of Omicron infection by up to 27%, a study has found. Why do the Covid vaccines increase your infection risk? This needs urgently investigating.
David Stacey recently found himself taking tea with sceptic-hero Anders Tegnell – the State Epidemiologist who steered Sweden away from the lockdown herd and showed the world another way.
Publications like the Times and Nature are still publishing pieces pushing the case for lockdowns using discredited claims and fantasy modelling. We are not out of the woods yet. The lockdown fanatics have gone nowhere.
Two scientists in Denmark have written a newspaper article to show that excess mortality in their country during the pandemic was no better than in Sweden despite the Swedes not imposing lockdowns or heavy restrictions.
South Korea was the poster child for the 'contain and vaccinate' strategy. However, it now has the same excess mortality as Sweden, and almost all South Korea's deaths occurred after the vaccine rollout.
In an interview for UnHerd TV, Martin Kulldorff, an original signatory of the Great Barrington Declaration, talks about the attempt to smear him afterwards, Harvard's lack of support and why Sweden got it broadly right.
Primary schoolchildren in Sweden, where schools remained open, did not suffer any educational setbacks, research has found. This is in stark contrast to the UK, where schools were closed for extended periods.
A recent article in the Times claims that our ministers "did their best" during the pandemic, since we finished in the middle of the Covid death table. But the article ignores Britain's dismal economic performance.
Sweden's below average excess deaths in 2020 and 2021 means we should redraft the terms of the Covid inquiry, argues Professor Robert Dingwall. We now have incontrovertible proof that the lockdowns didn't work.
Covid vaccination increases the risk of severe heart inflammation up to 120-fold, a major study from Scandinavia published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) has found.
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