Stanford Prison Experiment
The Stanford Prison Experiment is one of psychology’s most notorious, and disturbingly telling, explorations of the relationship between self-identity and social role. Conducted at Stanford …
The Stanford Prison Experiment is one of psychology’s most notorious, and disturbingly telling, explorations of the relationship between self-identity and social role. Conducted at Stanford …
Industrial fish farming, or aquaculture, is the fastest growing form of food production in the world.1 About half of the world’s seafood now comes from …
The inability of the Germ Theory to satisfy the POSTULATES OF KOCH… the Virus Theory can’t survive the basic requisites of scientific scrutiny to remain …
A digital “health passport” framework initiated by The Commons Project, the World Economic Forum and The Rockefeller Foundation, which during the first week of July …
The COVID-19 fast-tracked jabs are not conventional vaccines. The FDA’s Emergency Use Authorization was a crime—according to their own data, comparative numbers reveal that the …
The so-called “COVID” vaccines deploy recombinant DNA/RNA technology that “rewrites” the genetic code much as Monsanto, for example, rewrites the genetic code of numerous seeds …
A method developed by Kary B. Mullis who won a Nobel Prize for its discovery. PCR was created to identify DNA viruses; the SARS-CoV2 virus, …
(WNV) arrived in New York City in 1999 and soon grew into an “epidemic” characterized by a sea of contradictions.54 Medical press agencies proclaimed the …
“Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome” which is a wide-open definition that encompasses many diseases common in the affected regions. Symptoms range from flu-like to pneumonia.8 Dr. …
A sweetener derived from cornstarch. Cornstarch is composed of a chain of glucose (simple sugar) molecules joined together. Corn syrup, which is basically 100 percent glucose, …