mother-nature Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date October 30, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEthics Tagged , authoritarianism, business entities, criminal sanctions, duties, enforcers, fines, governments, House of Lords, human thriving, individuals, landscapes, legal person, Nature, nature rights, Nature Rights Tribunal, offenders, organisms, violators The Rise of “Green” Authoritarianism Wesley J. Smith October 30, 2025 Bioethics, Ethics 5 This is the most draconian and potentially tyrannical “nature rights” proposal I have yet seen. Read More ›
abstract-image-representing-quantum-mechanics-and-the-myster-917689749-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date September 15, 2025 CategoriesPhysicsScientific Freedom Tagged , Albert Einstein, conspiracy theory, Daniel Kagan Kans, Eric Weinstein, general relativity, governments, Johns Hopkins University, Leonard Susskind, physical world, physics, Piers Morgan, quantum mechanics, quantum physics, Rob Sheldon, Sabine Hossenfelder, Sean Carroll, string theory, taxpayers, theoretical physicists, tinfoil hat, Wall Street Journal, YouTubers “Conspiracy Physics”: Platforming an Attack on Dissenting Scientists Denyse O’Leary September 15, 2025 Physics, Scientific Freedom 7 If physicists now “worry about the consequences” of long-term theory failure, it is reasonable to think that there are more serious problems in the discipline. Read More ›