- Homepage
-
Rhodiola Rosea: the Soviet-era herb that promised stamina, but science keeps a straight face
Rhodiola rosea’s Soviet mystique meets the real science: promising for fatigue, but far from proven magic. Soviet secret herb or just smart marketing? Rhodiola rosea has promise, but the science is still playing catch-up.
-
Whale Protein Hype: What the 200-Year Longevity Story Really Says
Whale research is real, but the “200-year human life” claim is overstated. Here is what bowhead whale science actually shows. Whale biology is fascinating. Human immortality? Not so fast.
-
The $8 Trillion AI Gamble Nobody Can Quite Justify
AI’s trillion-dollar boom may hinge less on innovation and more on whether the economics actually add up. AI isn’t just smart—it’s expensive enough to test the limits of global capitalism.
-
Canada’s cloned-food pause is not the same as a green light
Health Canada proposed easing cloned-cattle and swine rules, then paused the plan after backlash over labels and consumer transparency. Canada did not “green-light” cloned meat and dairy overnight — the real story is a paused proposal, not a finished policy.
-
Europe’s Food Fight: Trade, Standards and the Autonomy Myth
Europe does not need a fantasy of total self-sufficiency, but it does need food policy that makes sense for farmers and shoppers alike.
-
The EU’s 2035 Car Rule Is Not the Clean Break Everyone Keeps Posting About
Brussels is not killing every petrol and diesel car in 2035. The real story is a lot more complicated. The EU’s 2035 car rule is being revised, so petrol and diesel cars will not simply vanish overnight.
