News Round-Up
5 May 2024
by Will Jones
No Phones in Lavatories
5 May 2024
by Joanna Gray
Former Headteacher Hugh McCarthy tells how his talk on the harms Covid lockdowns have done to children was refused several venues for his dissent from the official narrative. And he is not alone in being censored.
The co-winner of the 2022 Nobel Physics prize has launched an excoriating attack on the 'climate emergency' narrative, calling it a "dangerous corruption of science that threatens the well-being of billions of people".
Lockdowns were “a global policy failure of gigantic proportions”, driven by Government fear campaigns and "fantasy numbers" from dud models, a top international team of researchers has concluded.
A new paper examines the computer code inside NASA's Model E climate simulation and finds that it doesn't even reproduce basic physics correctly. So how will it get 50-year climate predictions right?
The central problem was that Government pandemic plans didn't prepare us to lock down hard enough and fast enough, ex-Health Secretary Matt Hancock has told the Covid Inquiry.
The journal Science has published an op-ed arguing that Peter Hotez shouldn't debate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. because public debates are simply "rhetorical matches". This view is mistaken, argues Noah Carl.
An NHS conference has cancelled a presentation by risk expert Professor Norman Fenton over unrelated "Twitter vaccine controversy", saying they "fear it may distract".
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky knew that Covid vaccines did not stop infections in January 2021 but continued to claim they did and promote policies based on it, a newly released email reveals.
Ex-Chancellor George Osborne surprised many at the Covid Inquiry today by coming out as a lockdown sceptic while ex-Chief Medical Officer Sally Davies said "awful" lockdowns had "damaged a generation".
Has science become a threat to human health? After it was co-opted by Governments to impose disastrous interventions during the pandemic, that's the shocking possibility considered by Prof John Ioannidis and colleagues.
© Skeptics Ltd.