Back in the day, copper didn’t need a glossy ad campaign or some TV doctor promoting its many healing benefits. For thousands of years, it just did the job—straightforward and with no frills. Folks figured out early that tossing water into copper pots kept the gut-rot at bay when indoor plumbing was a pipe dream…Continue reading Copper vs. The Medical Machine
What drives disease? With roots dating back to the mid-19th century, the germs vs. terrain debate often fuels discord. Sure, many have heard the discussion, which centers on whether specific microorganisms or “germs” are the primary cause of disease, and on the terrain theory, which holds that disease arises primarily from an imbalance or poor…Continue reading The Germ Is The Alibi
Somewhere in Moscow, a pigeon is doing what pigeons do—flapping, gliding, showing off that smug “I own this city” energy—except this one is wearing a tiny backpack, carrying a camera, and taking directions from a neural implant. That’s the claim, anyway. A Russian neurotech firm called Neiry has been making headlines for a project called…Continue reading Sky Spies With Feathers
Despite his billions, Bill Gates’ swaggering around the planet as if it were his petri dish—experimenting with health, agriculture, and global systems—has done far more damage than good. Instead of healing, his billions are often used to prop up systems of dependency on his entities, corporate control, and ecological collapse. Without a doubt, beneath his…Continue reading Control Over Care: The Real Agenda Behind Bill Gates’s Work in Africa
Currently making headlines in the news for its probable link to autism, acetaminophen (also known as “paracetamol” in many countries) is a chemical pain reliever and fever reducer with roots dating back to the 19th century. It was synthesized around 1878, but its adoption as a safe pain-reliever is thanks to earlier pain drugs (such…Continue reading From Fever to Fallout: Does Tylenol Tip the Scale Toward Autism?
In a move that has already sparked debate on the global stage, U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that the United States will not support the United Nations’ Political Declaration on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs). While critics in mainstream outlets are quick to paint the decision as “controversial,” the truth is that walking away…Continue reading The U.S. Rejects U.N.’s Political Declaration on Non-Communicable Diseases
In recent days, outlets from Reuters to cable news have seized on reports that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is considering adding autism symptoms to the list of compensable vaccine injuries. The coverage is predictable: breathless headlines positioning the health secretary as reckless, dangerous, even villainous. Rather than report on the countless suffering families…Continue reading The Manufactured Villain: Why Accountability Terrifies Pharma and Its Media Allies
The Hepatitis B vaccine has been presented to the public as an unquestionable good—a shield against disease, an emblem of public health progress. Yet beneath this official narrative lies a tale not of triumph, but of coercion, negligence, and betrayal. For decades, newborn infants—hours old, with no capacity for exposure—have been subjected to a medical…Continue reading Infant Hepatitis B Vaccine: Medicine’s Silent Scandal
“We want no mercury in the vaccine. We want no aluminum in the vaccine.” These were the words of President Trump during his opening statement when releasing the scientific findings learned to date regarding autism. It’s been just over seven months since Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was sworn into office as Secretary of the U.S.…Continue reading First Autism Report Lists Tylenol, Folate Deficiency as Trump Rails Against Vaccines