The science influencers going viral on TikTok to fight misinformation
Scientists and medical experts are countering climate denialism, vaccine scepticism and wellness pseudoscience on social media.
Read MoreConspiracy news & views from all angles, up-to-the-minute and uncensored
Scientists and medical experts are countering climate denialism, vaccine scepticism and wellness pseudoscience on social media.
Read MoreBarack Obama made the extraordinary claim in a candid and wide-ranging interview with Brian Tyler Cohen.
Read MoreMany social media posts by Tesla CEO on his platform are indiscernible from those of white supremacists, say experts
Elon Musk’s longtime fixation on a white racial majority is intensifying. The richest man in the world posted about how the white race was under threat, made allusions to race science or promoted anti-immigrant conspiracy content on 26 out of 31 days in January, according to the Guardian’s analysis of his social media output. The posts, made on his platform X, reflect a renewed embrace of what extremism experts describe as white supremacist material.
“Whites are a rapidly dying minority,” Musk said on 22 January, a short time before taking the stage at the World Economic Forum in Davos, while reposting an Irish anti-immigrant influencer’s video about demographic change.
Read MoreThe global expansion of high-containment biolabs without oversight — increasingly engaged in Nipah virus research — combined with aggressive patent consolidation of Nipah’s core glycoproteins and their integration into mRNA and self-amplifying mRNA (saRNA) injection platforms, represents a profound and …
The post The Next Plandemic: 3,625 Biolabs, Nipah Virus Patents, and Self-Amplifying mRNA Injections appeared first on Global Research.
Read MoreHe’s hot for tin foil hats. The co-founder of the viral campaign “Hot Girls for Zohran” pushed bonkers anti-Israel conspiracy theories online claiming the country was involved with 9/11 and the …
Read MoreThe documents confirm what many have long assumed: elites live by their own special rules and codes of immunity
The millions of Jeffrey Epstein files dumped last Friday by the US Department of Justice will provide journalists, conspiracy theorists and interested members of the public with months of reading. And what they will read is enraging.
What makes these files so infuriating, however, is not just Epstein’s horrific predatory behavior, which is well-known, but the more mundane examples of elite conduct that the documents continue to expose. They vividly illustrate a world whose existence many everyday people, whether fevered with visions of the Illuminati or just jaundiced by banal anti-establishment cynicism, already suspected exists: an informal global club of powerful, ultra-rich people who all seemingly know each other, help one another out, and protect each other from the consequences of their depravity.
Read MoreA popular post alluded to the unfounded rumor Erika Kirk and U.S. Vice President JD Vance were having an affair.
Read MoreThe allegations against Trump stemmed from an unverified, anonymous message to the FBI. There’s no evidence to support them.
Read MoreThe release of three million documents related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has sparked conspiracy theories about who the paedophile financier may have fathered.
Read MoreA recent study takes a closer look at what’s happening in the human mind when we really want to believe something.
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