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How to link the evidence to Noah’s Flood …read more Source: creation.com     
By Heather Brinson Bruce The snow leopard survives in its frigid climate thanks to a collection of cool features. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
The use of universal lockdowns in the event of the appearance of a new pathogen has no precedent. It has been a science experiment in real time, with most of the human population used as lab rats. The costs are legion. The question is whether lockdowns worked to control the virus in a way that is scientifically verifiable. Based on the following studies, the answer is no and for a variety of reasons: bad data, no correlations, no causal demonstration, anomalous exceptions, and so on. There is no relationship between lockdowns (or whatever else people want to call them to [More]
“All the data that I am aware of, looking at children and the virus, shows that it’s safe” to reopen schools, Debloisblanc told Sandra Smith on Fox News’ “America’s Newsroom.”   “There are many other states now that have months of track records showing that it’s safe for their kids to go back to school. And the state of California and the county is just not making that possible,” he said.   “All the data that I am aware of, looking at children and the virus, shows that it’s safe” to reopen schools, Debloisblanc told Sandra Smith on Fox News’ [More]
By Brian Miller Today’s ID the Future is Part 3 of a conversation between Rice University chemist/inventor James Tour and Brian Miller, research coordinator for Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture. In this concluding portion of their conversation, Miller fields questions Tour pulls from his mailbag. They cover everything from how simple can a cell get and still survive and reproduce to questions of design detection, bouncing cosmologies, the possibility of alien life, and the similarities between computers and cells in how they process information. The interview is borrowed, with permission, from Tour’s Science and Faith podcast, available here. [More]
Sever an arm from an octopus, and like an underwater zombie it’ll keep groping its surroundings. Even without a brain, its suckers still detect and grab crabs in lab experiments. Now Harvard researchers have begun discovering what makes octopus suckers so smart. The team led by molecular biologist Nicholas Bellono found special sensory cells on each sucker’s skin surface.1 One type of sensor houses mechanorec… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham I posted an item recently on Facebook about a video posted by Phil Vischer, the creator of VeggieTales. In that video, he showed a photo of me and a Creation Museum exhibit as an example of what he claimed were those “rejecting mainstream science.” After my post, Phil Vischer responded on Twitter. Many of his followers responded to his tweet with personal attacks on me, with many committing the epithet fallacy (where the arguer uses biased, and often emotional, language to persuade people rather than using logic). As examples of this, consider the four following examples: Read [More]
By Michael By Amy Elizabeth Harwood, Coventry University; Chris Seenan, Glasgow Caledonian University, and Garry Tew, Northumbria University, Newcastle Exercise has been used in the treatment of many medical… …read more Source: Natural Blaze     
By Dr. Jerry Bergman Over 100 innocent people were murdered to prove a theory that turned out to be not only wrong but based on an erroneous secular philosophy, namely Darwinism. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
By Michael Greger M.D. FACLM Various fasting regimens have been attempted for inflammatory autoimmune diseases such as lupus, ankylosing spondylitis, chronic urticaria, mixed connective-tissue disease, glomerulonephritis, and multiple sclerosis, as well as osteoarthritis and fibromyalgia. …read more Source: nutritionfacts.org     
By Michael By GreenMedInfo Research Group Go and drink that cup or two of organic coffee or tea. An October 2020 study has linked drinking four or more cups of green tea every day, combined with two or more… …read more Source: Natural Blaze     
Christian researchers understand the need for a revision of the standard Egyptian chronology. If Christians are working from the same premise though, why are there such huge differences of opinion? …read more Source: creation.com     
The nervous and immune systems have long been thought to be separate entities in the body, but new research has uncovered a direct cellular interaction between the two. Scientists from Harvard Medical School, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, MIT, and the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard have found that pain-sensing neurons surround lymph nodes in mice, and can modulate the activity of these small organs, which are key parts of the immune system. The new research, published in Cell, reveals the cells that mediate the crosstalk between the nervous and immune systems. It also paves the [More]
A book review of Unbelievable: 7 myths about the history and future of science and religion by Michael Newton Keas. Debunks many science-related historical myths that demean the Christian faith.  …read more Source: creation.com     
By Brian Miller Today’s ID the Future is Part 2 of an extended interview between synthetic organic chemist James Tour and physicist/engineer Brian Miller. Here the conversation turns to the challenge and necessity of quickly evolving error-correction mechanisms in origin-of-life scenarios and the way origin-of-life researchers slip information and design into their origin-of-life work in the lab. Miller also makes a case for the research benefits of studying cells from a design perspective. Source …read more Source: id the future     
By Lori Alton, staff writer (NaturalHealth365) High blood pressure, a major trigger for heart attacks, heart failure and stroke, affects a stunning 45 percent of the adult population in the United States. Unfortunately, high blood pressure medications such as beta blockers and ACE inhibitors come with a long list of possible side effects, including dizziness, fatigue and weight gain. In fact, some have even been linked with an elevated risk of stomach, pancreatic and liver cancer. Many people turn to botanical remedies – such as fennel seeds, lavender oil and German chamomile – to help lower blood pressure. In a [More]
By Damon Hines, staff writer (NaturalHealth365) Microwave sickness, or electrosensitivity, can be traced back to World War II and the development of radar. Early reports of the “syndrome” came from Eastern Europe and Soviet bloc countries, as individuals exposed to electromagnetic fields (EMFs) complained of a wide range of mysterious neurological conditions, including frequent headaches, fatigue, poor memory, an inability to concentrate, and emotional instability. While the West has long described these symptoms as being as a “psychological issue,” new evidence suggests that electrosmog – similar, say, to a biological weapon or the CIA’s mind control program – is being [More]
By Ken Ham How does God’s Word instruct us to train children? What are the roles of parents in their kids’ education? How should Christians view public schools? How can we train our children to face the secular giants of our day? I cover these questions and much more in my new book, Will They Stand: Parenting Kids to Face the Giants, that was just released. Throughout the book, I also weave my personal testimony concerning how my parents trained us from God‘s Word and how that led to the formation of the Answers in Genesis ministry (and the building [More]
By Guest Contributor by Robert Wheeler Life cannot return to normal until there is a vaccine for COVID 19. At least, that is what governments, corporations, and their mainstream propaganda media outlets have … Read the rest The post Vaccine Passports and Health Passes: Is Showing Your “Papers” the “New Normal?” appeared first on The Organic Prepper. …read more Source: Organic Prepper     
The most recent large-scale study from the World Health Organization shows remdesivir does not produce promised results. As I’ve covered in the past, there are numerous scientists who question the official story about the COVID-19 pandemic and the baseless fearmongering driving changes to worldwide behavior. Recently I shared a video interview in which British journalist Anna Brees spoke with Michael Yeadon, Ph.D., who is a past vice-president and chief scientific adviser of the drug company Pfizer and founder and CEO of the biotech company Ziarco, now owned by Novartis. Yeadon has over 25 years of experience working in the pharmaceutical [More]
God’s creative power on display …read more Source: creation.com     
By Michael Greger M.D. FACLM Is there a nonsurgical alternative to knee replacement surgery that instead treats the cause and offers only beneficial side effects? …read more Source: nutritionfacts.org     
It seems as though a traditional Christmas complete with carol singing, Christmas Eve service and large family gatherings will not be permitted this year in many parts of the UK as governments continue to struggle with how to combat the virus.   However, what appears to be the ‘traditional’ is perhaps not as old as we might think. Many of the ‘traditional’ elements are from the Victorian times – Christmas trees, carolling and of course Charles Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’. This is what we mean by a Dickensian Christmas and it ain’t happening this year. Perhaps we are now in [More]
By Brian Miller Today’s ID the Future features Part 1 of an extended interview that first appeared on a podcast show hosted by distinguished Rice University synthetic organic chemist James M. Tour. As he typically does, since it’s the Science & Faith podcast, Dr. Tour begins his show by asking his guest for a statement of faith. Miller, a Christian, gives his, and then they dive into origin-of-life science. In a surprisingly accessible discussion given the depth of the material, the pair cover a range of issues—thermodynamics and the origin of the first cell, entropy, free energy, order and disorder, [More]
By Sara Middleton, staff writer (NaturalHealth365) According to the American Cancer Society, 1 in 125 men and 1 in 417 women will be diagnosed with esophageal cancer. While smoking significantly increases the risk of this potentially deadly disease – which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 50 percent – even people who have never smoked can develop it, especially if they drink a lot of alcohol, have a family history, have chronic acid reflux, or have other recognized risk factors. While esophageal cancer accounts for just 1 percent of all U.S. cancer cases, you still might be wondering [More]
By Brandon Clay The top articles published (or republished) in 2020 on AnswersInGenesis.org sorted by pageviews reveals an interesting content trend from the year. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
By Guest Contributor by Robert Wheeler As small businesses disappear into the black hole of “pandemic restrictions,” major international corporations devour what is left of the market. Those institutions, which Carroll Quigley referred … Read the rest The post Amazon’s Halo Device Will Tell You If You’re Condescending, Opinionated, or Fat appeared first on The Organic Prepper. …read more Source: Organic Prepper