
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
newstarget.com | |Willow Tohi |Lance Johnson |Ethan A. Huff
Laetrile, also known as amygdalin or vitamin B17, is a natural substance derived from apricot pits and other fruits, which has been both praised as a potential cancer cure and dismissed as quackery, leading to significant debate and controversy in the medical community. Dr. Ernst T. Krebs, Jr., introduced laetrile in the 1950s, proposing that cancer is a deficiency disease similar to scurvy, treatable by restoring vitamin B17.
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3 weeks ago |
newstarget.com | Lance Johnson |Willow Tohi |Jacob Thomas |Ethan A. Huff
In a bold move to hold pharmaceutical giants accountable, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has taken his fight against Pfizer to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit. The appeal, filed on Wednesday, challenges the federal court's dismissal of a lawsuit that accuses Pfizer of making false and misleading claims about its COVID-19 vaccine.
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Feb 11, 2025 |
newstarget.com | Lance Johnson |Willow Tohi |Roy Green |Ethan A. Huff
Breaking free from the restraints of the West, Russian wheat exports have reached a record high at the start of the 2024-2025 agricultural season, defying Europe’s efforts to curb Moscow’s access to global grain markets. Despite the European Union’s imposition of higher tariffs on Russian grain last year, Russia has managed to redirect its exports to new markets, including Egypt, Bangladesh, Algeria, and Kenya.
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Feb 8, 2025 |
newstarget.com | Belle Carter |Willow Tohi |Arsenio Toledo |Ethan A. Huff
The U.S. government, through the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), has been a significant funder of over 6,200 journalists across 707 media outlets and 279 media NGOs, including major organizations like Politico, the Associated Press and BBC, with 90 percent of reporting from Ukraine being supported.
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Jan 14, 2025 |
scienceclowns.com | S.D. Wells |Willow Tohi |Ethan A. Huff |KEVIN HUGHES
Trump and RFK Jr. are raising concerns about U.S. agencies like NIH, FDA, and CDC funding studies to make animal diseases transmissible to humans, arguing that such research should be illegal and its violators should face severe punishment. A recent study aims to modify the bacterium responsible for tularemia to better understand its ability to infect humans, raising fears of accidental creation of more dangerous strains that could pose significant public health threats.
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