- Why people believe COVID conspiracy theories: could folklore hold the answer?
- Apocalypse Now: On vaccination, Revelation, and the mark of the beast.
- The controversies over Ivermectin show that not all science is worth following.
- Neuroscientist argues that the left side of our brains have taken over our minds.
- Hidden Maya complexes hint that the famous calendar was already in use 3,400 years ago
- Sun fires off a major solar flare from an Earth-facing sunspot.
- Nasa calls for new ways to announce discovery of alien life amid fears of misunderstandings.
- Six chilling historical exorcisms.
- West Virginia’s Mothman leads cryptid renaissance.
- Mystery of deadly US infections solved – aromatherapy spray at Walmart to blame.
- Five-day brain stimulation treatment highly effective against depression, Stanford researchers say.
- Image of the Day: A guide to figuring out the age of an undated world map.
Quote of the Day:
The web is becoming the medium of choice for disinformation and misinformation, including official efforts to inject new ‘memes’ into the culture. Although I remain an optimist about the web as a medium for free exchanges of data and faster communication of high value, it is also a potential tool for propaganda, false rumors intentionally planted and for a range of techniques designed to alter or filter social reality.
Jacques Vallee (in 2010)