The 15-minute city (FMC) is an urban planning concept designed to meet the sustainability targets and indicators pursuant with Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11). The international construction of 15-minute cities is a global project that is being rolled out in the UK in cities like Oxford and Bath.
The local council’s FMC objective in Bath is to establish a “movement strategy” to engineer “how people move” and “how space is shared.” This will “shift” resident “away from decades of car dependency” and will instead compel them to prioritise “sustainable travel”—walking, cycling and public transport.
The overarching ambition in Bath is to achieve “climate goals.” The local authority is, like nearly every other UK local authority, on an SDG-driven “Journey to Net Zero.” This has led to the creation of four “traffic cells” in Bath. The clearly stated reason for the zoning is to enforce a “reductions in car use.” [Read More]
Stuff the Covid OGs were saying in 2021. https://t.co/7MkOJFvqyy
— Edward Dowd (@DowdEdward) January 23, 2026
Last Friday, it was reported that a man in New Zealand suddenly began vomiting blood. It was discovered he had hundreds of blood clots and multiple organ failure, and may need a heart transplant. Medical staff have been unable to provide a diagnosis.
In the following, Dr. Philip McMillan provides a possible explanation of what’s really going on. Covid changed the rules – and we’re still pretending it didn’t, he says. [Read More]
PRO TIP: If your doctor is 'baffled,' get a new doctor. pic.twitter.com/LdThEsdQYe
— Chris Martenson (@chrismartenson) January 15, 2026
The UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) on Saturday approved Arcturus Therapeutics’s Kostaive (zapomeran, ARCT-154) self-amplifying sa-mRNA COVID-19 vaccine for individuals aged 18 years and older.
Governments are not only ignoring concerns about mRNA injections but are authorising enhanced versions of these genetic products despite limited long-term safety data and unresolved questions about duration, biodistribution, and immune effects. [Read More]
"Someone" is so afraid of this peer-reviewed paper's conclusions that they have resorted to DOS attacks to keep it from being read. The reason? It explores the hypothesis that the spike protein produced by the mRNA jab contributes to cancer. It would be a shame if it went viral https://t.co/NQFBiGBcvE pic.twitter.com/xqBjqMFWt5
— Chris Martenson (@chrismartenson) January 8, 2026