News Round-Up
13 January 2025
The Cold Truth – Britain’s Grim Winter’s Tale
13 January 2025
by Sallust
The Australian Senate voted to establish a parliamentary inquiry into the nation's excess deaths today, giving the green light to what is possibly the first inquiry of this nature in the world. It will report in August.
Who would have believed we'd still be talking about Covid vaccine mandates in 2024, but given how resistant authority figures are to accepting reality it seems likely we'll be talking about them forever, says Ian Miller.
How can Germany’s Covid oracle be so wrong and continue to be treated as an oracle, asks Robert Kogon. Christian Drosten has been wrong on everything but suffered no fall from his pedestal.
Now that puberty blockers have been banned, it's time to ban Covid vaccines for children too, and for the same reason – because they do more harm than good and the evidence of benefit isn't there, says Mike Fairclough.
Dr. Martin Kulldorff has been fired from his position as Professor of Medicine at Harvard University. A victim of the college's brutal Covid vaccine mandate, the Great Barrington Declaration author tells his story.
On Monday, UKHSA head Jenny Harries told MPs the agency had supplied detailed deaths data to vaccine companies but couldn't release it to the public for 'commercial sensitivity reasons'. Something to hide?
Excess deaths since 2022 were primarily in the vaccinated, official data suggest, fuelling fears that the Covid vaccines may be playing a significant role in the high excess deaths in recent years.
At a parliamentary debate on excess heart deaths last week, MPs demanded that the Government publish the full data on deaths by Covid vaccination status so the impact of the vaccines can be properly ascertained.
Mild myocarditis following Covid vaccination can lead to sudden death from a fatal heart arrhythmia, a Japanese autopsy has found. But this would not be picked up by most autopsies as the relevant test is left out.
Covid vaccine mandates in Queensland, Australia, have been declared "unlawful" for failing to sufficiently consider workers' human rights, in a landmark Supreme Court ruling this week.
© Skeptics Ltd.