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
On February 18, 2026, President Trump signed an executive order (EO) treating elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicides like supply-chain vulnerabilities. Why? Because, in the administration’s framing, they are. Following the EO, sheer panic ensued over an order that people apparently briefly skimmed, and over one word they hate. The order, which leans on the Defense…Continue reading The Executive Order Everyone Misread
Some recent discovery has been released in the Missouri v. Biden case, namely from Rob Flaherty, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Digital Strategy. If you are unaware of what may be the most important civil liberties case in the modern era, you can follow our previous reporting here, here, and here.
The recent revelations spotlighting the true scope of social media censorship at the direction of the U.S. government has been staggering. The latest in a frenzy of discovery emails from litigation, Twitter Files timelines and personal testimonies have exposed a technocracy attempting to reach runaway speed. Newly sworn in Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey just…Continue reading Yes, The U.S. Government’s Covid-Era Censorship Was Really That Bad…So What’s Next?
I read a column in “The Atlantic” today written by Emily Oster, an economist at Brown University. She lists in her bio that she is the author of “The Family Firm: A Data-Driven Guide to Better Decision Making in the Early School Years.”
By Helen Stead “If thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought”—George Orwell, On Politics and the English Language Say it enough times, they will believe it is true: Safe and effective. It’s a phrase repeated ad nauseum in sponsored advertisements, onmainstream news, and by health agencies all over the world. It’s a phrase synonymous…Continue reading The Illusion of Truth: How Pharmaceutical Interests Persuade Vaccine-Hesitant Parents