• Login
  • Register
The Daily Sceptic
No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • About
  • Archive
    • ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ROUND-UPS
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Premium
  • Donate
  • Log In
The Daily Sceptic
No Result
View All Result

Lancet Paper Claims Zero Covid Is a Sensible Strategy, but It’s Not Very Convincing

by Noah Carl
30 April 2021 1:30 PM

Yesterday, a short paper titled “SARS-CoV-2 elimination, not mitigation, creates best outcomes for health, the economy, and civil liberties” was published in The Lancet. The authors claim, “Countries that consistently aim for elimination – i.e., maximum action to control SARS-CoV-2 and stop community transmission as quickly as possible – have generally fared better than countries that opt for mitigation – i.e., action increased in a stepwise, targeted way to reduce cases so as not to overwhelm health-care systems.”

This claim is supported by three charts, each comparing “OECD countries opting for elimination” with “OECD countries opting for mitigation” (see below). The first chart shows that “OECD countries opting for elimination” had fewer deaths per million; the second shows that they had smaller declines in GDP; and the third shows that they had less restrictive lockdowns.

The authors note, “With the proliferation of new SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern, many scientists are calling for a coordinated international strategy to eliminate SARS-CoV-2.” They also note, “Countries that opt to live with the virus will likely pose a threat to other countries” whereas those “opting for elimination are likely to return to near normal”.

One might be tempted to conclude that “elimination” (or “Zero Covid” as it’s sometimes termed) is a sensible strategy going forward. However, I don’t find the authors’ analysis very convincing.

First, they don’t explain how they classified countries as either “opting for elimination” or “opting for mitigation”. For example, did they simply look at outcomes (which would be circular), or did they examine statements by politicians from the spring of last year? (E.g., “This Government will pursue an elimination strategy.”) It’s not clear.

Only five countries were classified as “opting for elimination”: Australia, Iceland, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea. All other OECD countries were classified as “opting for mitigation”. It may have occurred to you that the five “eliminationist” countries are not exactly representative. Four are islands and one is a peninsula (with a fairly impenetrable border to the north). Two are East Asian. And in fact, these two – Japan and South Korea – are the only East Asian countries in the OECD.

As I argued in a piece for Quillette, all the Western countries that have kept their death rates low are geographically peripheral countries that imposed strict border controls at the start (Norway and Finland, plus a few islands). Their geographic circumstances not only made border controls practical, but also gave them a head start in responding to the pandemic.

It’s very unlikely that large, highly connected countries like France, Italy or the US would have been able to contain the virus during the deadly first wave. And although Britain is an island, we probably wouldn’t have been able to either. The epidemic was already more advanced in London and other international hubs by the time most Western countries introduced lockdowns and social distancing.

In other words, “elimination” was probably never a realistic option for Britain and other large Western countries – even if it could have a passed a cost-benefit test. But what about Japan and South Korea?

Although South Korea did use a combination of early lockdowns and strict border controls to contain the virus, the same cannot be said for Japan. According to the Oxford Blavatnik School’s COVID-19 Government Response Tracker, Japan has had only two days of mandatory business closures and zero days of mandatory stay-at-home orders since the pandemic began. (And the two days of mandatory business closures were the 25th and 26th of April this year.)

Japan did introduce border controls quite early, which may have protected it during the first wave. However, these were not sufficient to prevent an epidemic from burgeoning in the winter of 2020–21. (By early February, the number of daily deaths was in the 90s.) Yet this epidemic retreated without any real lockdown measures being imposed, which suggests that some other cultural or biological factor accounts for Japan’s success.

Second, even if you believe an “elimination” strategy was feasible for Britain and other large Western countries in the early weeks of the pandemic, that ship has arguably sailed. This is particularly true for Britain, where almost 70% of adults now have COVID antibodies. In other words: while it might have been sensible to “eliminate” the virus last spring (assuming that was possible), the costs of doing so now would almost certainly outweigh the benefits.

Overall, the Lancet study does not provide a strong case for “elimination” of COVID-19. And in fact, a survey by Nature of 119 experts found that 89% believe it is “likely” or “very likely” that SARS-CoV-2 will become an endemic virus. As Michael Osterholm – an American epidemiologist – noted, “Eradicating this virus right now from the world is a lot like trying to plan the construction of a stepping-stone pathway to the Moon. It’s unrealistic.”

Tags: DeathsEconomic costsThe Lancet
Previous Post

22 Million Brits Are Living In Areas That Have Seen Zero Covid Deaths in a Month

Next Post

Small Proportion of Vaccinated People Have Died Of Covid – and Most Caught the Virus before the Vaccine Could Have Taken Effect

Donate

We depend on your donations to keep this site going. Please give what you can.

Donate Today

Comment on this Article

You’ll need to set up an account to comment if you don’t already have one. We ask for a minimum donation of £5 if you'd like to make a comment or post in our Forums.

Sign Up
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
Please log in to comment

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

60 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
fon
fon
4 years ago

Why worry? We are essentially at or beyond the threshold of Herd immunity: Britain, where almost 70% of adults now have COVID antibodies.We are in a strong position wrt this virus.

17
-2
steve_w
steve_w
4 years ago
Reply to  fon

there’s no need to worry now and there was no need to worry last april or last march either. its a mild sniffle that only kills the terminally ill and has only taken UK overall mortality back to 2008 levels. I didn’t see any panic back then

35
-1
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  fon

Well indeed, so you have to ask yourself why those in the driving seat do still seem/pretend to be worried.

18
0
Attaboy
Attaboy
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

facebook and google are in the driving seat

13
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Attaboy

I was thinking primarily of the PM and the Cabinet, plus SAGE, in the UK at least. Facebook and Google are indeed on the long list of entities who have been a force for bad during this madness.

14
0
isobar
isobar
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Interesting that only if you click on the full author list is the dreaded Devi Shridhar revealed as being one. What a surprise (not!)

19
0
Attaboy
Attaboy
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

are politicians allowed to buy shares?

2
0
Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago
Reply to  fon

Beyond that, if T cells were tested. What fun to be able to agree with Fon.

2
0
PoshPanic
PoshPanic
4 years ago

What has NZ’s test cycle rate been? Why was there a big flu surge there early last year? How do you show the rest of the world that you are in control and have beaten nature? Theatrics?

15
-1
Annie
Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  PoshPanic

NZ is living a ‘normal’. life – sealed off from the world, with panic always gibbering at its elbow, and snap lockdowns every couple of months as a sniffler gets loose. And so it will remain. The world’s biggest open prison.

15
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Yes, I used to hanker after taking a holiday to NZ. In more idle moments might have thought about relocating there. Not any longer.

1
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago

Again – no proper cost/benefit analysis, even if you accept the barmy premise.

18
0
Lucan Grey
Lucan Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

There is no cost.

Not to those people that matter – as far as they are concerned. They’ve been living like kings for the last year.

12
0
TORs
TORs
4 years ago

It feels like there’s now a mad race on between the anti-lockdown pro-lifers, who are demanding their freedom back thanks to herd immunity, antibodies etc, and the Big Pharma/Big Tech “pro-covid” faction that desperately needs to keep the pandemic going just long enough to force their vaccines and digital IDs on all of us. Who gets to the door first?

22
0
Lucan Grey
Lucan Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  TORs

On the plus side Bacofoil is still in production so you’re sorted.

4
-23
realarthurdent
realarthurdent
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

It’s amusing to see people who are themselves wearing non-functional masks and visors, leaving their shopping in quarantine in the garage for 3 days and being vaccinated with a vaccine that isn’t a vaccine against a virus which is only marginally more threatening than seasonal influenza, accusing sceptics of being tinfoil hatted conspiracy theorists.

50
0
Noumenon
Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

Literal tin foil hat wearers calling everyone else tin foil hat wearers.

9
-1
Lucan Grey
Lucan Grey
4 years ago

Yes we can all eliminate the virus.

All we have to do is become exactly like China and the job is done.

Which I suspect is what authors like these want.

16
-1
steve_w
steve_w
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

exactly. and why even bother to eliminate something so mild. Might as well go for ‘zero athlete’s foot’ policy

22
0
Jabba the Hut
Jabba the Hut
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_w

My athlete’s foot players me up something rotten, I’d go for that, as long as I can have my liberty back.

8
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

We don’t really know what happened in China.

4
0
CovidiousAlbion
CovidiousAlbion
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

I think he was joking.

0
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  CovidiousAlbion

Probably was, but Rick H makes a good point. Half the planet followed what they thought China did, hoping to achieve the result they thought China achieved. We based the most expensive state action in global peacetime history on the actions of and information from a totalitarian regime that few would have given much credit to for truthfulness up to now.

Why haven’t opposition and journalists and ordinary people called out the lockdown zealots on this?

12
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Wuhan’s famously draconian lockdown didn’t even bring covid under control (it reduced R from 3.9 to 1.3 IIRC). China actually beat the virus in China by a form of test and trace where the suspected infected and their contacts were actually rounded up into quarantine facilities rather than being allowed to self-isolate at home.

Many other East Asian countries were to imitate them (and New Zealand did eventually adopt this practice, but far too late to have been decisive in their own success) but as far I know the only country outside the Pacific region to try it was Israel. And for them it didn’t work out (although they have of course redeemed themselves with their top-notch vaccination programme).

1
-11
CovidiousAlbion
CovidiousAlbion
4 years ago
Reply to  GCarty80

I doubt we can know the true status of CoViD-19 in China. As to causation of any drop in prevalence, we can’t even be sure about this for countries we regard as reasonably open and honest.

See my other comment, quoting from “SARS : how a global epidemic was stopped”. Elsewhere, in that report, the authors explain why they can’t even be certain that containment measures explain the disappearance of the, less transmissible, SARS. (https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/207501)

3
0
Noumenon
Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

China beat the virus by putting out bulletins saying they’d beaten the virus.

10
0
realarthurdent
realarthurdent
4 years ago

Zero Covid is a sensible strategy if your objective is to have an excuse to impose draconian restrictions on the freedom of your citizens, in order to fulfil other policy objectives. But as a public health policy, it’s insane, barking mad, scientifically illiterate and should be thrown in the policy skip along with vaccine passports, masks and vaccines which aren’t vaccines. In most countries, coronavirus is already endemic. In a few, it is not. But it is those countries – the ones aiming for Zero COVID – which have the problem now. The vaccines, it is clear, are not the solution, as they do not prevent transmission or infection. So these countries are faced with a future which either involves: isolation of their countries from the rest of the world, with all of the economic and social impacts that would mean, together with the constant need for “snap lockdowns” and the wider risks to the immune systems of its populations with their ongoing lack of exposure to other viruses from the rest of the world or at some point, having to “let the virus rip” to use a topical expression, while protecting the vulnerable. The latter would of course be… Read more »

Last edited 4 years ago by realarthurdent
38
0
I am Spartacas
I am Spartacas
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

Aus and NZ are in a real pickle now.

I had this very same thought the other day when I read recently about a cluster of cases in Australia that spread to NZ triggering yet another panic and a bunch of snap lockdowns. New Zealand achieved ‘zero covid’ because it completely shut its borders to the entire world. You can’t live in isolation for ever – and all this isolation policy is doing is storing-up much bigger problems for the future. It would have been a much better policy to let people carry on as normal as possible while using all resources available to protect the elderly and the vulnerable.

30
-1
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  I am Spartacas

(Exactly as Giesecke predicted)

7
0
realarthurdent
realarthurdent
4 years ago
Reply to  I am Spartacas

“It would have been a much better policy to let people carry on as normal as possible while using all resources available to protect the elderly and the vulnerable.”

A bit like those highly distinguished academics said at Great Barrington and were promptly cancelled from social and mainstream media.

30
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

No way will zero covid countries open their borders because they are sufficiently vaccinated for herd immunity. This issue is that the leaders of those countries may be too afraid to reopen their borders even then because it’s likely that a few unlucky sods (likely those whose immune systems were already so weak that the vaccine doesn’t work) will die of Covid never the less, and the populace has been whipped up into such a frenzy that they’ll (metaphorically) crucify whoever reopened the borders.

Last edited 4 years ago by GCarty80
8
0
Brett_McS
Brett_McS
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

Why? Herd immunity will be gained by vaccines.

1
0
Attaboy
Attaboy
4 years ago

zero covid strategy is BIG TECHS strategy… this way we can be more and more dependent on them for longer

16
0
Attaboy
Attaboy
4 years ago

In this the alarm should be loud and clear. Big Tech have an investment in keeping the lockdowns alive and their consumers held captive. There is arguably a clash of interests and currently the power held by Big Tech means that there can be no balancing of those interests; the equation is slanted all one way.

Last edited 4 years ago by Attaboy
10
0
George J Dance
George J Dance
4 years ago

I’ve bookmarked this article and the Lancet article for future reading and comment, but I’ll probably never get to it, but here’s my first takeaway:

The authors’ binary classification (elimination vs. mitigation) is not the classification we’ve been debating over the past year, suppression (lockdowns) vs. mitigation (“herd immunity”). Of the 5 OECD “elimination” countries (Australia, Iceland, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea), “elimination” the majority (Japan, Iceland, and SK) never had lockdowns – whereas the majority of “elimination” countries did have lockdowns, several of them more than one. (If I do write about this, I’ll tot up the statistics).

Instead the authors are classifying countries in terms of outcomes (elimination = little COVID vs. mitigation = lots of COVID) instead of actual strategy. By classifying all of OECD Europe as ‘mitigation’, the differences between the countries’ actual strategies can be ignored.

Which fits Team Lockdown’s defensive strategy they’ve been using since last October, to defend lockdowns by changing the subject.

17
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  George J Dance

A good analysis.

Beyond that – it’s essentially predictive modelling – and we know all about that.

7
0
realarthurdent
realarthurdent
4 years ago
Reply to  George J Dance

Exactly. If Japan has “zero COVID” it’s more likely because their population aren’t very susceptible to it, not because it was government policy.

6
0
AfterAll
AfterAll
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

When they wrote “Countries that consistently aim for elimination – i.e., maximum action to control SARS-CoV-2 and stop community transmission as quickly as possible”, this doesn’t describe what Japan did, at all.

Last edited 4 years ago by AfterAll
3
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  AfterAll

Indeed: neither Japan nor South Korea are really “zero covid”. South Korea of course is an example of containment via extremely effective test and trace (of a kind likely too invasive for Westerners to tolerate), while Japan is still something of a mystery.

2
0
CovidiousAlbion
CovidiousAlbion
4 years ago
Reply to  GCarty80

“Certain characteristics of the SARS virus made containment possible. Infected individuals usually did not transmit the virus until several days after symptoms began and were most infectious only by the tenth day or so of illness, when they develop severe symptoms. Therefore, effective isolation of patients was enough to control spread. If cases were infectious before symptoms appeared, or if asymptomatic cases transmitted the virus, the disease would have been much more difficult, perhaps even impossible, to control.” (Emphasis added)

Source: https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/207501 (page “243” = 254 in viewer).

2
0
Brett_McS
Brett_McS
4 years ago
Reply to  GCarty80

The population of Japan have very high levels of D3 in their system, and the elderly population of Japan are the healthiest in the world.

3
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

Japan seems to have had four waves of Covid, each worse than the one before it. Anybody here got any idea what would lead to such an infection history? It can’t be lockdowns (as I don’t think Japan had any) and it’s not the right shape to be caused by seasonality.

A pattern of Covid infection driven by seasonality would look like that of Sweden (or of other European countries with very bad first waves): one big wave at the start of the pandemic and another big wave in the late autumn and winter, but almost nothing in the summer.

Last edited 4 years ago by GCarty80
1
0
NonCompliant
NonCompliant
4 years ago

I expect Labour and the vast majority of Tories are thrilled at this report. Gotta keep that pot boiling !!!

5
0
Attaboy
Attaboy
4 years ago

Zero Covid strategy is a money making machines…

Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Netflix profits have soared in 2020 to 2021 to unprecedented billions. In the second quarter of 2020 Amazon had reported a 40% sale increase amounting to $88.9 billion dollars and Twitter reported a 34% growth increase.

The services offered by the Tech giants have become indispensable to a world in lockdown. Their power has increased exponentially and with this they have developed an unfettered power to control who appears on their platforms and the information that is permitted to be published.

Last edited 4 years ago by Attaboy
13
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  Attaboy

It wouldn’t surprise me if some of the US teachers’ unions which are vehemently opposed to in-person education, turned out to be on the take from tech companies with an interest in online learning

3
0
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
4 years ago
Reply to  Attaboy

Well done – You say it all… It is glaring people in the face and they refuse to see it…
Let us not forget Big pharmaceutical

2
0
peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago

Baloney, the Lancet and some of the LDS article. Islands plus S Korea/Japan which are representative of a lot of East Asian country experience. S. Korea never locked down, that is a fallacy. East Asian countries experienced SARS1, they have some inbuilt immunity. They also don’t use ACE inhibitors as in the west. Its one of the tragedies of SARS2/covid that the link between illness and recipients of ACE inhibitors ( and statins) has been completely covered up. Yet S Korean scientists pointed to this over 12 months ago.

9
0
CovidiousAlbion
CovidiousAlbion
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

https://www.upi.com/Health_News/2021/04/26/coronavirus-ace-inhibitors-risk-mice-study/5471619450818/

1
0
crazypaving
crazypaving
4 years ago

Devi Schrider is an author so it should be ignored immediately. Depressingly the Mail is running this story without suggesting it is what it is, batshit crazy.

9
0
JamesM
JamesM
4 years ago

The idea that you can pursue a zero-covid policy in a country that is heavily dependent on international trade is clearly nonsense. But this is pretty much what you would expect from the Lancet, which seemingly promulgates the idea that the entire country revolves around the NHS and we should all bow down and worship it.

17
-1
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  JamesM

Well China is an exemplar of zero covid as well as being the champion exporter par excellence. The issue isn’t with international trade in general, but with international trade by truck. Countries in the Asia/Pacific region tend to do amost all their international trade by easily-quarantinable means: the crews of container ships need never leave their vessels, while those of cargo aircraft can be isolated within airports until they fly out again. By contrast, making truck transport Covid-safe would mean changing drivers anytime trucks cross borders, which would impose a serious limit on throughput. A Covid-secured border crossing between China and Vietnam took roughly 150 trucks per day, but the number of trucks crossing the English Channel daily is closer to 7,000. Many of the better-known Asia/Pacific countries never had to deal with the issue of cross-border truck traffic because they never had any in the first place. Australia and NZ are far enough away from any other country that the labour cost of having a trucker babysit his cargo across the sea would outweigh the savings in time (and thus money) that roll-on roll-off could enable. Taiwan also won’t have roll-on roll-off access from mainland China because of the… Read more »

Last edited 4 years ago by GCarty80
1
0
CovidiousAlbion
CovidiousAlbion
4 years ago

What are they proposing to do about the (ahem) bats?

1
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  CovidiousAlbion

The ones in the labs?

1
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago

It’s very unlikely that large, highly connected countries like France, Italy or the US would have been able to contain the virus during the deadly first wave. While the linked tweetstorm by Devan Sinha (eerily similar name to one infamous zero covid advocate!) is certainly a sterling demolition of the wider zero covid cause, it doesn’t actually have much to say about the first wave in particular. That seems to indeed to be fairly simple: major Western nations were highly connected (as Noah had said), weren’t culturally amenable to sealing their borders quickly (as East Asian countries were), and didn’t have extra time to react due to favourable seasonality in the critical early weeks (as Australia and NZ did thanks to being in the southern hemisphere). Dr Sinha seems more concerned with addressing the query that goes something like “in August 2020 the UK had fewer Covid cases per capita than Victoria, so why could Victoria go to zero but not the UK?” His point on this question is that the whole Dictator Dan bargain of “harsh lockdown now, so you can get your freedom back when the country is covid-free” cannot work in a country like the UK because… Read more »

0
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  GCarty80

Just a question: if the UK had decided on a “zero covid” strategy back in March 2020, wouldn’t it have meant in practice that the government would spend the first lockdown reconfiguring the UK’s trade patterns to eliminate international truck traffic (either by Chunnel or by roll-on roll-off ferries) in favour of using only container ships as the Pacific zero covid countries do?

Did any MPs (of any party) explicitly suggest such a policy, and if not do you think it is because they considered it practically impossible, or was it because they didn’t believe the British public wouldn’t tolerate a “seal the borders until vaccination” policy?

1
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  GCarty80

Just a question: if the UK had decided on a “zero covid” strategy back in March 2020, wouldn’t it have meant in practice that the government would spend the first lockdown reconfiguring the UK’s trade patterns to eliminate international truck traffic (either by Chunnel or by roll-on roll-off ferries) in favour of using only container ships as the Pacific zero covid countries do?

Did any MPs (of any party) explicitly suggest such a policy, and if not do you think it is because they considered it practically impossible (due to time delays and/or lack of port staff), or was it because they didn’t believe the British public would tolerate a “seal the borders until vaccination” policy?

0
0
Brett_McS
Brett_McS
4 years ago

As Ivor Cummins notes, the population of Japan in particular, but also other East Asian countries have very high levels of Vitamin D3 in their systems.

2
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  Brett_McS

That would certainly help, but Japan is clearly using some kind of suppression method (even if not the kind of lockdowns seen in Western countries) because the shape of their infection curve doesn’t look like one which seasonality would generate.

2
0
swedenborg
swedenborg
4 years ago

A very interesting thread about the futility of zero covid for UK with interesting data.according to Prof Balloux, all chances for zerocovid in UK was already minimal in the end of 2019.This thread should be read regarding the Lancet article discussing zerocovid options.

https://twitter.com/DevanSinha/status/1387828825061564422

1
0
GCarty80
GCarty80
4 years ago
Reply to  swedenborg

That exact tweetstorm was quoted in the original article: it’s the link at “It’s very unlikely that large, highly connected countries like France, Italy or the US would have been able to contain the virus during the deadly first wave.”

0
0

PODCAST

The Sceptic | Episode 65: David Frost on the Scourge of New Labour’s “Stakeholder” Revolution – and Why Britain Must Reclaim Free-Market Thinking

by Richard Eldred
23 January 2026
3

LISTED ARTICLES

  • Most Read
  • Most Commented
  • Editor’s Picks

The Unsolved Mystery of How Viruses Spread – and Why Germ Theory Isn’t the Whole Answer

27 January 2026
by Dr Clare Craig

News Round-Up

28 January 2026
by Richard Eldred

The Launch of Another Centrist Damp Squib Allows Us to Reminisce Happily About Other Hopeless Political Offerings

27 January 2026
by Joanna Gray

The Guardian is Seething Over Amelia Memes

28 January 2026
by Nick Dixon

British Intelligence Goes Full Guardian Promoting Untestable Computer-Generated Scares of Eco-System Collapse

28 January 2026
by Chris Morrison

The Unsolved Mystery of How Viruses Spread – and Why Germ Theory Isn’t the Whole Answer

43

News Round-Up

34

The Guardian is Seething Over Amelia Memes

24

The New Adolescence Spin-Off Book Sounds More Like an Anti-Male Civilisational Suicide-Note – Will Sir Keir Starmer’s Own Emetic Family-Letter be in it?

21

The Launch of Another Centrist Damp Squib Allows Us to Reminisce Happily About Other Hopeless Political Offerings

19

The End of the World Order as We Know It – Nice of You to Notice

28 January 2026
by Michael Rainsborough

The Guardian is Seething Over Amelia Memes

28 January 2026
by Nick Dixon

British Intelligence Goes Full Guardian Promoting Untestable Computer-Generated Scares of Eco-System Collapse

28 January 2026
by Chris Morrison

The New Adolescence Spin-Off Book Sounds More Like an Anti-Male Civilisational Suicide-Note – Will Sir Keir Starmer’s Own Emetic Family-Letter be in it?

28 January 2026
by Steven Tucker

The Launch of Another Centrist Damp Squib Allows Us to Reminisce Happily About Other Hopeless Political Offerings

27 January 2026
by Joanna Gray

POSTS BY DATE

April 2021
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
« Mar   May »

NEWSLETTER

View today’s newsletter

To receive our latest news in the form of a daily email, enter your details here:

DONATE

SOCIAL LINKS

Free Speech Union

NEWSLETTER

View today’s newsletter

To receive our latest news in the form of a daily email, enter your details here:

PODCAST

The Sceptic | Episode 65: David Frost on the Scourge of New Labour’s “Stakeholder” Revolution – and Why Britain Must Reclaim Free-Market Thinking

by Richard Eldred
23 January 2026
3

DONATE

LISTED ARTICLES

  • Most Read
  • Most Commented
  • Editor’s Picks

The Unsolved Mystery of How Viruses Spread – and Why Germ Theory Isn’t the Whole Answer

27 January 2026
by Dr Clare Craig

News Round-Up

28 January 2026
by Richard Eldred

The Launch of Another Centrist Damp Squib Allows Us to Reminisce Happily About Other Hopeless Political Offerings

27 January 2026
by Joanna Gray

The Guardian is Seething Over Amelia Memes

28 January 2026
by Nick Dixon

British Intelligence Goes Full Guardian Promoting Untestable Computer-Generated Scares of Eco-System Collapse

28 January 2026
by Chris Morrison

The Unsolved Mystery of How Viruses Spread – and Why Germ Theory Isn’t the Whole Answer

43

News Round-Up

34

The Guardian is Seething Over Amelia Memes

24

The New Adolescence Spin-Off Book Sounds More Like an Anti-Male Civilisational Suicide-Note – Will Sir Keir Starmer’s Own Emetic Family-Letter be in it?

21

The Launch of Another Centrist Damp Squib Allows Us to Reminisce Happily About Other Hopeless Political Offerings

19

The End of the World Order as We Know It – Nice of You to Notice

28 January 2026
by Michael Rainsborough

The Guardian is Seething Over Amelia Memes

28 January 2026
by Nick Dixon

British Intelligence Goes Full Guardian Promoting Untestable Computer-Generated Scares of Eco-System Collapse

28 January 2026
by Chris Morrison

The New Adolescence Spin-Off Book Sounds More Like an Anti-Male Civilisational Suicide-Note – Will Sir Keir Starmer’s Own Emetic Family-Letter be in it?

28 January 2026
by Steven Tucker

The Launch of Another Centrist Damp Squib Allows Us to Reminisce Happily About Other Hopeless Political Offerings

27 January 2026
by Joanna Gray

POSTS BY DATE

April 2021
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
« Mar   May »

POSTS BY DATE

April 2021
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
« Mar   May »

SOCIAL LINKS

Free Speech Union
  • Home
  • About us
  • Donate
  • Privacy Policy

Facebook

  • X

Instagram

RSS

Subscribe to our newsletter

© Skeptics Ltd.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • About
  • Archive
    • ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ROUND-UPS
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Premium
  • Donate
  • Log In

© Skeptics Ltd.

wpDiscuz
You are going to send email to

Move Comment