For the first time ever, scientists have recorded the activity of a dying human brain, discovering that it showed the same patterns as seen during dreaming, memory recall and meditation, a new study has revealed.
Professor Luc Montagnier, a French scientist whose Paris laboratory discovered the HIV virus in the 1980s, has passed away aged 89. Montagnier earned a joint Nobel Prize in 2008 for his work in identifying HIV.
A parliamentary committee is set to investigate scare ads created by the UK government’s shadowy ‘behavioural insights’ team to nudge the public into obeying Covid-19 restrictions. The move comes amid concerns about the grossly unethical use of the unit to inflate fear levels.
Situated just a few miles from the neighbouring German border, Nijmegen is the oldest city in The Netherlands. After a recent archaeological dig, it’s recognised also as the site where a stunningly preserved bowl made of blue glass was discovered.
The ex-head of the vaccine task force in the UK has said it’s time to end mass jabs and to live with Covid-19, and to treat it as an endemic virus similar to flu. Dr Clive Dix said it’s time for a major rethink of the Covid-19 strategy.
Follow the science is the media mantra behind the highly profitable feardemic. But what happens when the world’s most esteemed medical journal reveals that the entire experimental vaccine is unsupported by science?
One undeniable outcome of the pandemic is that the public’s faith in scientific and medical authorities is perhaps at its lowest point in living memory, and no objective observer can truly be surprised.
German newspaper Berliner Zeitung has published a report seeking to answer why an ‘unusually large number of professional and amateur soccer players have collapsed recently.’
The life-threatening issue is much more widespread than the public realises. The recent Dispatches programme and article in the Times by journalist Matthew Syed highlighted the plight of whistle-blowers in the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) citing the case of Peter Duffy, a consultant surgeon, working for the Morecambe Bay Foundation Trust. Faced with failures at the trust in the emergencies department he expressed concern for patients who subsequently died from kidney sepsis.
‘However, we also know that the effectiveness of vaccines in limiting the spread of disease at the population level is much lower than promised. This is why we find it unethical to force someone to get vaccinated.’
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