Activists Profiting Off Panic Are Wrong. The World Is Getting Better.
But if they admitted that, they would be out of a job.
But if they admitted that, they would be out of a job.
Someone did allegedly threaten first responders, but the panic may have done more damage.
One year ago, political figures spread a false terrorism panic that made everyone less free—and incited violence against a child.
About 20 years ago, many American bees did die. Then that steadily diminished—but hysteria in the press continued.
The errors are so glaring that it's hard not to suspect an underlying agenda at work here.
"Over the last 20 years, because of temperature rises, we have seen about 116,000 more people die from heat. But 283,000 fewer people die from cold."
Your support makes some of the "riskiest" journalism on the internet possible.
People should be free to choose how cautious to be. Mask mandates, lockdowns, and closing schools won't stop the virus.
The doomsday consensus around climate change is "manufactured," says scientist Judith Curry.
Plus: Few Americans support full abortion bans, a win for cryptocurrency in Ripple case, and more...
The new energy drink has about as much caffeine as a large Starbucks coffee.
In rebuking the legislation, the president showed that he may not know what's in it.
Despite an apocalyptic media narrative, the modern era has brought much longer lives and the greatest decline in poverty ever.
Senator Warren wants to extend the financial surveillance state cooked up by drug warriors and anti-terrorism fearmongers to cryptocurrencies.
Another officer claims to have been laid out just by being close to the drug. That’s not how it works.
Even though no one's trying to give your kid rainbow fentanyl this Halloween, it hasn't stopped journalists from repeating the myth.
Why are activists trying to stop research into a promising backup plan to handle climate change?
The Limits to Growth is still “as wrongheaded as it is possible to be.”
British police want greater surveillance powers and they’re willing to destroy everybody’s cybersecurity to get them.
Politicians and activists claim social media is turning us into zombies. But new technologies have been greeted with skepticism since the dawn of time.
With panic in the air, federal law enforcement seized the moment.
Fearmongering culture panic leads to a new dumb low.
One very sketchy story about an Oklahoma City teen’s tragic death has gone viral.
Feel free to reject the advice of this terrible new book.
Unless we cause one by overreacting to Asia's changing political and economic landscape
"There's no question public health would benefit dramatically if everybody switched completely to e-cigarettes."
Plus: the foundations bankrolling bad tech policy, they is the word of the year, and more...
Why do new things reliably freak us out?
H.L. Mencken defined Puritanism as "the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy." The rub against vaping, and other smokeless tobacco products, is that people enjoy it.
Bad science and panics by those who want to escalate the opioid drug war.
Get food, coffee, medicine, and golf balls (if your aim is just that bad).
The Drake-inspired viral challenge has seen the nation's youth fling themselves out of moving vehicles.
Americans have a poor sense of risk, and media panics don't help.
Four questions to ask yourself before you freak out about Trump's latest tweet