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Monday, 15 June 2026

The Deal That Isn't A Deal



Donald Trump today announced with considerable fanfare what has been described as a peace deal between the United States, Israel, and Iran. After months of on-again, off-again negotiations, threats, missile strikes, counter-strikes, and endless speculation, many observers had become skeptical that any agreement would ever emerge.

Yet here we are.

According to the announcement, a Memorandum of Understanding is expected to be signed next week, with representatives from all sides reportedly indicating that they will proceed.

The obvious question is: what exactly are they signing?

The answer, at this stage, appears to be surprisingly little.

A Deal Without the Details

Despite headlines proclaiming the "end of the war," very few substantive details have been released.

What we have been told is that:

  • The shooting stops.

  • Hezbollah ceases attacks on Israel.

  • Israel and the United States halt military operations against Iran.

  • Restrictions affecting shipping through the Strait of Hormuz are lifted.

  • Oil and commercial traffic resume normal operations.

Everything else—the difficult part—is left for future negotiation.

The core issues that triggered the conflict remain unresolved.

The United States and Israel continue to demand access to, and ultimately destruction of, Iran's stockpiles of enriched uranium.

Iran continues to demand the lifting of sanctions and the release of frozen assets held around the world.

Those matters are apparently to be negotiated over the next sixty days.

That is not a peace deal.

It is an agreement to keep talking.

The Strait of Hormuz Matters

The most immediate and concrete outcome appears to be the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

That is significant.

The disruption of shipping through the Strait had created pressure throughout global energy markets. It affected not only Western economies but also America's Gulf allies whose oil exports depend on secure access to world markets.

Trump can now claim success in restoring stability to international shipping lanes and reducing pressure on oil supplies.

From Washington's perspective, that is a tangible achievement.

But it comes at a price.

Iran Receives a Lifeline

The leverage that the United States held over the Iranian regime was not simply military.

It was economic.

Iran's dictatorship has been under immense pressure from sanctions, financial isolation, declining export revenues, and growing domestic dissatisfaction. Every week that passed increased the strain on the regime.

By reopening the Strait and allowing Iranian exports to flow more freely, a significant portion of that pressure is relieved.

That represents a major concession.

The regime gains access to revenue streams that were increasingly constrained.

The government in Tehran receives breathing room.

And breathing room is exactly what authoritarian regimes seek when they are under pressure.

For Iran's rulers, this may prove to be the most valuable outcome of the agreement.

What Happened to "Help Is On The Way"?

Throughout the conflict many ordinary Iranians heard a message coming from Washington.

The regime was weak.

The regime was isolated.

The regime was vulnerable.

Some interpreted Trump's rhetoric as an indication that meaningful change might finally be possible.

Many Iranian citizens who oppose the dictatorship believed international pressure was steadily increasing.

Now they may feel abandoned.

The economic pressure that was squeezing the regime has been partially released before any meaningful concessions have been secured.

For those who hoped the dictatorship was entering its final chapter, today's announcement will feel less like liberation and more like a reprieve for their oppressors.

The Hard Part Hasn't Been Solved

Supporters of the agreement will argue that stopping the shooting is always preferable to continuing a war.

That is true.

No reasonable person wants missiles flying when diplomacy can achieve the same objectives.

The problem is that diplomacy has not yet achieved those objectives.

The fundamental question remains exactly where it was yesterday:

Will Iran surrender its enriched uranium and abandon its pathway to nuclear weapons capability?

Nobody knows.

The regime's history offers little reason for confidence.

Iran has spent decades mastering the art of prolonged negotiations, partial compliance, strategic ambiguity, and buying time.

Critics of previous negotiations warned repeatedly that Tehran views talks as another battlefield.

If that assessment is correct, the next sixty days may simply become another chapter in a very familiar story.

Peace or Intermission?

The celebrations today may be premature.

If the Memorandum of Understanding is signed next week, it will certainly be an important development.

Missiles will stop flying.

Oil will start flowing.

Markets will breathe easier.

But none of that resolves the central dispute.

A genuine peace deal settles the underlying conflict.

This agreement appears to postpone it.

Perhaps the negotiators will surprise us.

Perhaps Iran will genuinely cooperate.

Perhaps the uranium will be surrendered, sanctions will be lifted in stages, and a lasting settlement will emerge.

But until those things actually happen, today's announcement should be viewed for what it is:

Not the end of the war.

Merely an extension of the ceasefire.

Weekly Roundup - Top Articles and Commentary from Week 25 of 2026

  

Here are links to some selected articles of interest and our posts from this week.




Cartoon of the Day











We welcome all feedback; please feel free to submit your comments or contact me via email at grappysb@gmail.com or on X at @grappysb

Thursday, 11 June 2026

The Rise of the Fake Experts




There was a time when seeing a person on a video gave us at least some confidence that they existed.

Not anymore.

Over the last few months I've noticed an explosion of AI-generated videos on YouTube. You have probably seen them too. A polished presenter appears on screen, looking directly into the camera, speaking confidently and fluently about finance, health, politics, self-improvement, technology or almost any other topic you can imagine.

At first glance they appear completely real.

The face moves naturally. The voice sounds human. The production quality is often better than many genuine content creators can achieve.

Yet after watching for a minute or two something feels off.

There are no pauses. No hesitation. No searching for the right word. No natural interruptions. No little imperfections that make human conversation human. The speech flows relentlessly, sentence after sentence, like a machine gun firing polished paragraphs.

That's because, increasingly, it is.

The technology has advanced so quickly that almost anyone can now generate a convincing presenter in minutes. A script written by AI can be fed into an avatar generator, combined with an AI voice, and uploaded to YouTube almost instantly.

The economics are obvious.

Create hundreds of videos. Cover every trending topic. Collect views. Collect advertising revenue. Repeat.

In one sense this is simply the next stage of automation. We have accepted automated factories, automated customer service systems and automated news aggregation. Why not automated video presenters?

Personally, I don't object to AI-generated content in principle. Some of it is informative. Some is entertaining. Some creators are completely open about the fact that they are using AI tools.

The problem begins when transparency disappears.

A growing number of videos are now crossing a line. Instead of using an obviously artificial presenter, they impersonate real people.

This is where things become much more troubling.

A person's reputation is one of the most valuable assets they possess. It may take decades to build. It is earned through experience, expertise, integrity and consistent performance.

When an AI-generated video pretends to be that person, it is effectively stealing that reputation.

The creator of the fake video gains instant credibility that they have done nothing to earn.

The audience assumes the information is trustworthy because it appears to come from someone they recognize.

Meanwhile the real person loses control of their own identity and receives none of the benefit from the reputation they spent years creating.

This is not merely imitation. It is a form of intellectual and reputational theft.

Even worse, the information being presented may be completely wrong.

Imagine a fake financial expert offering investment advice.

Imagine a fake doctor discussing medical treatments.

Imagine a fake political commentator presenting fabricated statements.

Many viewers will not realise they are watching an AI-generated impersonation. They will naturally assume the information comes from the person whose face and voice they appear to be seeing.

The potential for misinformation is enormous.

What brought this issue into focus for me was a recent YouTube video that I came across, which I have linked below. The video covers the emergence of a large number of Richard Feynman videos that feature the famous physicists voice and imply his expertise despite the fact that he had nothing to do with them, given that he died in 1988. 

We are entering a world where seeing is no longer believing.

For centuries photographs were treated as evidence. Then photo editing made us more cautious.

Video became the new gold standard. If you saw someone saying something on camera, surely it must be true.

Now that assumption is disappearing as well.

The challenge for platforms such as YouTube is that they were built on a foundation of trust. Viewers assume that what they are watching broadly corresponds to reality.

AI-generated impersonations threaten that trust.

There is a simple solution, at least in principle.

AI-generated presenters should be clearly labelled.

AI-generated impersonations of real people should require explicit consent.

And where consent is absent, platforms should remove the content.

Technology itself is not the enemy. AI is an extraordinary tool and will undoubtedly create enormous benefits.

But a society that cannot distinguish between genuine expertise and manufactured credibility is heading into dangerous territory.

The next time you watch a perfectly polished expert delivering an uninterrupted stream of wisdom, pay attention to that small voice in the back of your mind.

If it feels just a little too perfect, there may be a reason.

Perhaps the person speaking doesn't exist at all.

Video reference:












Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Talking Peace, Firing Missiles




The Iran war has entered one of those strange, unedifying phases where everyone is told there is a ceasefire, while the region continues to burn.

We are watching a very public dance of threats, retaliation, diplomatic hints, leaked optimism and supposed deals that are always just a few days away. President Trump insists Iran wants a deal. He says negotiations are progressing. He urges restraint. Yet Iran’s behaviour looks rather less like a party seeking peace and more like a regime testing how much violence it can get away with while still enjoying the language of diplomacy.

Despite the ceasefire, there has been plenty of fire. Iran has attacked Gulf neighbours, threatened shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, disrupted tankers, and most recently fired ballistic missiles towards Israel. This is not peace. It is war conducted under the cover of ceasefire language.

The most troubling element is Trump’s public pressure on Israel not to respond. That is an extraordinary demand. Israel’s doctrine of immediate and punitive response is not a luxury. It is the foundation of deterrence in a region where weakness is read as invitation. Israel has spent decades fighting Iran’s proxies — Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis and others — precisely because Tehran prefers to kill through intermediaries. If Iran now attacks Israel directly, why would anyone expect Israel not to respond directly?

By publicly urging Israel to hold back, Trump handed Iran a diplomatic win. Tehran’s strategy has always been to create distance between Israel and its allies. A wedge between Washington and Jerusalem is not a minor achievement for the regime; it is a strategic prize.

So is this blatant stupidity? Perhaps. But perhaps not.

There is another possibility, although it requires a longer bow. Iran has used proxies for decades. It has fought through others while pretending to remain one step removed. Could the United States now be allowing Israel to play a similar role in reverse? Israel hits back. Iran pays a price. Meanwhile Washington continues to pose as the honest broker, maintaining pressure while pretending diplomacy still has room to work.

That may be too clever by half. It may simply be political theatre. It may be Trump trying to manage domestic pressure, oil markets, nervous Gulf states and an American public weary of war. But it is hard to believe he is about to abandon the US relationship with Israel, whatever the noise of the moment.

The danger is that Iran may believe it is winning the ceasefire. By firing, threatening, escalating and then watching Washington restrain Israel, Tehran may think it has found the formula: provoke, absorb limited retaliation, then demand diplomacy. If that is the game, it must be broken.

We should also remember that we are in the middle of the match, not at the final whistle. In war, there is always ebb and flow. Tactical confusion does not necessarily mean strategic defeat. A day’s headlines do not tell us the end of the story. The final play has not yet been made.

My own view remains unchanged. The objective should be regime change. Not another agreement. Not another temporary pause. Not another piece of paper Tehran can reinterpret, evade, or tear up when convenient.

The sanctions must remain. The blockade must remain. The pressure must increase, not soften. Negotiation has become theatre, and Tehran has used that theatre to buy time for decades.

Let Iran come back when it has no better options.

And if the regime escalates — as it has done by attacking neighbours, shipping and Israel — then the response should be simple and incremental: destroy more of the infrastructure that keeps the regime alive. Bit by bit. Strike the military assets. Strike the command systems. Strike the economic arteries.

A few serious hits on Kharg Island would do more than a thousand diplomatic statements. If Iran’s oil export capacity is crippled, the blockade almost becomes self-enforcing. No exports. No cash. No strategic patience. No ability to fund proxies while pretending to negotiate peace.

The West keeps pretending that Iran can be talked into moderation. But the Islamic Republic has shown us what it is. It survives through repression at home, terror abroad, deception in negotiation and escalation whenever it senses hesitation.

The ceasefire is not peace. It is a battlefield with better public relations.

The question now is whether Trump’s restraint of Israel is a mistake, a tactic, or part of a larger game. We cannot know yet. But we can know this: Iran must not be allowed to turn ceasefire violations into leverage, or diplomacy into a shield behind which it continues the war.

The regime should not be rewarded for escalation.

It should be made to regret it.

Monday, 8 June 2026

When Anti-Racism Becomes Racism




For decades, Western societies have worked to eliminate racism from public life. Few would disagree that this has been a noble and necessary goal.

But what happens when the fight against racism loses sight of the principle that all people should be treated equally under the law?

That is the uncomfortable question raised by commentator Konstantin Kisin in his powerful recent video, Henry Nowak: How Anti-Racism Gave You Racism.

The video centres on the tragic death of 18-year-old British student Henry Nowak. After being stabbed multiple times in Southampton, Nowak reportedly told police officers that he had been attacked. Yet according to bodycam footage subsequently released, officers initially accepted the attacker's claim that he had been the victim of a racist assault and handcuffed the badly wounded teenager as he lay dying. The attacker was later convicted of murder. Hampshire Police have since apologised and an official investigation has been launched. 

For Kisin, however, the story is about much more than one terrible mistake.

He argues that the incident exposes a deeper problem within many Western institutions. Following the death of George Floyd in 2020, governments, corporations, universities and police forces embraced extensive anti-racism programs, diversity training and identity-based policies. While intended to combat prejudice, Kisin contends that these initiatives have sometimes encouraged officials to view people primarily through the lens of race rather than as individuals. 

The result is a form of institutional bias that would have been immediately recognised as racism had the races involved been reversed.

Kisin's central point is simple but provocative: racism cannot be defeated by creating new racial preferences or new racial assumptions. If accusations of racism are automatically given greater weight than evidence, if people are judged differently because of their ethnic background, or if equal treatment under the law is replaced by identity politics, then society has not eliminated racism. It has merely changed its direction.

Whether readers agree with Kisin's conclusions or not, the Henry Nowak case raises questions that deserve serious discussion.

Should police officers ever consider race when deciding whom to believe?

Can anti-racism policies inadvertently create new forms of discrimination?

Have Western institutions become so fearful of accusations of racism that they sometimes abandon the principle of equal treatment?

These are not easy questions, but they are questions that free societies must be willing to ask.

The ideal championed by Martin Luther King Jr. was that people should be judged by the content of their character, not the colour of their skin. Many would argue that remains the gold standard for a fair and just society.

We have drifted away from that principle. The pendulum has swung too far, and the pursuit of equality is being undermined by an ideology that increasingly treats people differently based on their racial identity.

Watch the video below and decide for yourself whether he is right.


Sunday, 7 June 2026

Weekly Roundup - Top Articles and Commentary from Week 24 of 2026


  

Here are links to some selected articles of interest and our posts from this week.




Cartoon of the Day







We welcome all feedback; please feel free to submit your comments or contact me via email at grappysb@gmail.com or on X at @grappysb

Friday, 5 June 2026

Stop Negotiating. Let Iran Come Begging.


For anyone still paying attention to the endless cycle of "deal on, deal off, deal on, deal off" negotiations with Iran, patience is wearing thin.

Western journalists are frustrated. Commentators are frustrated. Politicians are frustrated. Ordinary citizens who have followed this saga for years are frustrated.

Yet many experts on Iran point out that what we are witnessing is entirely consistent with the regime's negotiating style. Delay. Obfuscate. Stall. Buy time. Extract concessions. Then buy more time.

The Islamic regime has spent decades perfecting the art.

The current negotiations appear to be following the same script.

The regime's objective is not necessarily to secure a deal. Its objective is survival.

From Tehran's perspective, if it can avoid total military defeat, preserve the regime, and continue ruling Iran, it can claim victory regardless of the condition of the country it leaves behind.

That is why the current situation is so interesting.

For perhaps the first time in more than forty years, the regime finds itself genuinely vulnerable.

Its economy is battered.

Sanctions continue to bite.

Oil exports remain constrained.

Internal political tensions appear to be growing.

There are recurring reports of mysterious explosions and incidents whose causes remain unexplained.

Public dissatisfaction remains high.

The pressure on ordinary Iranians continues to increase.

None of these developments, by themselves, guarantee regime change. But together they create something the regime fears deeply: instability.

The longer this pressure continues, the greater the possibility that internal opposition gains momentum.

Meanwhile, the United States faces its own pressures.

President Trump is clearly being pulled in multiple directions.

Many Americans have little interest in another Middle Eastern conflict. Polling consistently shows that voters remain focused on issues much closer to home, particularly the cost of living, inflation, and economic security.

The mid-term elections are approaching.

The United States is also preparing to host the World Cup, a major international event that will dominate headlines and attention for weeks.

At the same time, Saudi Arabia is hosting the annual Hajj pilgrimage, bringing millions of Muslims together in one of the most significant religious events on Earth.

None of these factors make military escalation attractive.

It is therefore understandable that President Trump appears reluctant to resume large-scale military action unless absolutely necessary.

Yet there is another pressure that deserves equal attention.

The Iranian people.

For years Western leaders have spoken of supporting the Iranian people against their oppressors.

Western politicians have encouraged protests.

They have praised the courage of Iranian dissidents.

They have condemned the brutality of the regime.

If the West now walks away and allows the regime to recover, what message does that send to those brave men and women who risked everything in the hope of freedom?

Recent commentators at the Gatestone Institute have argued that abandoning pressure on Tehran at this moment would squander a historic opportunity. They contend that the regime is weaker than it has been in decades and that renewed negotiations merely provide breathing room for a government whose primary goal is survival. They also argue that military pressure remains a necessary option if the regime attempts to rebuild capabilities that threaten regional security.

Whether one agrees with every aspect of that argument or not, the central point is difficult to dismiss.

The job is only half done.

Iran today is not the confident, expansionist power it once was.

The regime is under pressure.

Its proxies have been weakened.

Its economy remains fragile.

Its population is restless.

Why relieve that pressure now?

The better strategy may be remarkably simple.

Stop negotiating.

Stop the endless cycle of deadlines, extensions, meetings, proposals, counter-proposals and diplomatic theatre.

Maintain the sanctions.

Maintain the economic restrictions.

Maintain the blockade on the resources that sustain the regime.

Continue to isolate the leadership.

Continue to support the Iranian people.

And wait.

Every day that passes imposes costs on Tehran.

Every day that passes increases pressure on the ruling elite.

Every day that passes reminds ordinary Iranians who is responsible for their misery.

The regime desperately wants relief.

Why provide it?

Let the negotiations lapse.

Let the regime feel the full weight of its choices.

Let Iran come begging for an agreement.

Then, and only then, negotiate from a position of overwhelming strength.

History rarely presents opportunities like this.

The West should not throw one away simply because it has become impatient.

Patience, after all, is a weapon too.

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Australia's Taxpayer Funded Propaganda




One of the most revealing articles I've read in recent months appeared in The Australian by veteran journalist Greg Sheridan. The article is behind a paywall, and if you have any interest in where your tax dollars are going, I strongly encourage you to subscribe and read the full piece. Sheridan lays out a compelling argument that Australia is witnessing the steady growth of a taxpayer-funded progressive ideology that now reaches into almost every aspect of public life.

Whether you agree with all of his conclusions or not, the questions he raises deserve serious discussion.

From Government to Ideology

At the heart of Sheridan's argument is a simple proposition: governments should administer the country, not use taxpayer funds to persuade citizens to adopt a particular political worldview.

Yet increasingly, billions of dollars are being spent not merely on implementing policy, but on promoting and entrenching a specific set of progressive beliefs.

He argues that Australia is moving towards a model where government agencies, publicly funded institutions, educational bodies, regulatory authorities, and advocacy organisations all reinforce the same ideological perspective. The result is not merely policy disagreement but a narrowing of acceptable public debate.

Climate Policy or Climate Evangelism?

One of examples is climate policy.

Australians can reasonably disagree on the speed, cost, and method of transitioning to lower-emission energy sources. Yet many government-funded bodies present highly contested policy choices as settled facts.

Agencies tasked with implementing climate policy often simultaneously act as advocates for that policy. Alternative approaches—such as expanded gas generation, extended coal generation, or nuclear power—are frequently excluded from consideration before any public debate has even begun.

The issue is not whether climate change is real. The issue is whether taxpayers should be funding one side of a legitimate political debate.

The Expanding Bureaucracy of Belief

There is a growing network of publicly funded bodies that increasingly take positions on contentious social and cultural issues.

These include:

  • The Climate Change Authority

  • The Australian Human Rights Commission

  • The Australian Law Reform Commission

  • Government-funded environmental advocacy organisations

  • Publicly funded educational institutions

  • Curriculum development bodies

Many of these organisations no longer operate as politically neutral institutions but instead actively promote progressive interpretations of social issues.

Again, reasonable people can disagree with that assessment. But it is difficult to deny that these organisations almost invariably speak with one ideological voice.

The Curious Case of "Independent" Authorities

Another example is the Australian Human Rights Commission.

The Commission frequently comments on issues involving race, gender identity, discrimination, and historical grievances. Yet critics argue that it rarely defends competing values such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion, or equal treatment regardless of race.

The result is that taxpayers end up funding advocacy for one side of cultural debates while those holding alternative views must fund their own opposition.

That hardly seems like political neutrality.

Education and Universities

Perhaps nowhere is this trend more visible than in education.

Progressive assumptions increasingly permeate school curricula and university culture. Certain viewpoints are encouraged, while others are treated as beyond the pale.

Universities were once places where ideas competed vigorously. Today many Australians have the impression that some ideas are welcomed while others are quietly excluded.

When institutions funded by all taxpayers become ideologically uniform, genuine intellectual diversity inevitably suffers.

The Union-State Connection

Another concern raised is the continuing flow of public money and influence toward trade unions.

Unions play a legitimate role in representing workers. However, when organisations that are overtly political receive substantial financial advantages from government, questions naturally arise about whether taxpayers are indirectly funding partisan activity.

Those questions deserve answers.

The Bigger Picture

The most important point Sheridan makes is not about any individual agency, program, or policy.

It is about the cumulative effect.

Each initiative may appear modest in isolation. But when government departments, schools, universities, regulators, commissions, unions, environmental groups, and publicly funded advocacy organisations all push in the same ideological direction, the result is a powerful political ecosystem funded by taxpayers.

Citizens who disagree are left in the curious position of financing arguments against their own views.

That should concern Australians of every political persuasion.

Today's progressive orthodoxy may be tomorrow's conservative orthodoxy. The principle remains the same.

Government should govern.

It should not use public money to engineer political conformity.

Freedom Requires Debate

Australia has always benefited from robust public debate. Our democracy is strongest when ideas compete openly and citizens are free to reach their own conclusions.

The danger arises when governments stop trusting voters to think for themselves.

Whether one agrees with Greg Sheridan's conclusions or not, his article raises a question that every taxpayer should ask:

How much of our money is being spent solving problems—and how much is being spent teaching us what to think?

For those interested in the full argument, I recommend reading Greg Sheridan's original article in The Australian. It is a thought-provoking examination of a trend that deserves far more public scrutiny than it currently receives.










Wednesday, 3 June 2026

The mRNA Story Is Not Finished Yet



When the COVID pandemic struck, governments around the world were forced to make decisions at breakneck speed. Faced with a rapidly spreading virus, they turned to a new technology—mRNA vaccines—and assured the public that the science was settled.

We were told the vaccines were safe and effective. We were told the mRNA remained largely at the injection site and was quickly broken down by the body. We were told concerns about long-term effects were unfounded.

Yet, as often happens in science, reality has proven more complicated.

A recent article in TrialSite News revisits evidence suggesting that regulators were aware much earlier than publicly acknowledged that the lipid nanoparticles used to deliver mRNA did not simply remain in the arm. Biodistribution studies indicated that vaccine components could travel throughout the body and accumulate in various tissues. The article further argues that evidence of persistence was available long before many public assurances suggested the technology was rapidly cleared.

If true, this raises an obvious question: why were the public repeatedly given such simple and categorical assurances?

Science is rarely black and white. New technologies inevitably contain uncertainties. Yet during the pandemic, uncertainty was often replaced by certainty. Those who questioned official narratives were frequently dismissed as cranks, conspiracy theorists, or anti-vaxxers.

Today, even mainstream medical authorities acknowledge that some adverse effects occurred. Every medical intervention carries risks. The issue is not whether side effects existed, but whether regulators, pharmaceutical companies, and public health authorities fully understood the biological behaviour of these vaccines when they assured the public that the material stayed localised and disappeared quickly.

The very design of mRNA vaccines introduces a degree of uncertainty that traditional vaccines do not. The vaccine does not contain the target antigen itself. Instead, it instructs the body's cells to manufacture the spike protein. This means the amount of spike protein ultimately produced may vary between individuals depending on factors such as distribution, uptake, and biological response.

The result is that the effective "dose" may not be as straightforward as the amount injected into the arm. If vaccine components travel to multiple tissues and continue producing spike protein for longer than initially believed, it is reasonable to ask whether this contributed to some of the adverse events reported over the past five years.

Nor is this merely a matter of historical interest. While the pandemic has largely receded into the rear-view mirror, mRNA technology continues to be actively promoted for a growing range of applications beyond COVID-19. That makes these questions more important, not less.

Before any medical technology is expanded and embraced on a wider scale, the burden should be on its proponents to demonstrate that potential risks have been thoroughly investigated and understood. If there remains uncertainty about how widely vaccine components travel within the body, how long they persist, or how much spike protein individual recipients may ultimately produce, then those uncertainties should be rigorously examined and transparently addressed.

The medical profession has long been guided by the principle of "first, do no harm." That principle demands caution, openness, and a willingness to confront uncomfortable evidence rather than dismiss it. Public confidence in any future use of mRNA technology will depend not on assurances, but on convincing evidence that these concerns have been fully and honestly resolved.

These are questions deserving of investigation rather than censorship.

Unfortunately, the pandemic exposed a disturbing tendency among governments, regulators, media organisations, and even parts of the scientific establishment to suppress debate. Instead of welcoming scrutiny, many institutions attempted to enforce consensus.

Science does not advance through consensus. It advances through questioning assumptions and testing hypotheses against evidence.

Perhaps the greatest lesson from the COVID era is not about vaccines at all. It is about humility.

Public officials should have been willing to say, "This is what we know today, but we may learn more tomorrow."

Instead, many chose certainty.

Now, as additional studies emerge and previously overlooked data receives renewed attention, the public is left wondering whether they were given the whole story.

Trust, once lost, is difficult to rebuild.

Whether the emerging evidence ultimately confirms or refutes these concerns, a thorough and transparent examination is essential. The public deserves honest answers. The scientists who raised legitimate questions deserve a fair hearing. And the regulators who made decisions under extraordinary circumstances deserve scrutiny, not immunity from it.

The pandemic may be behind us, but the search for the truth should not be.

Because science is not a destination.

It is a process.
















Monday, 1 June 2026

Weekly Roundup - Top Articles and Commentary from Week 23 of 2026

  

Here are links to some selected articles of interest and our posts from this week.




Cartoon of the Day









We welcome all feedback; please feel free to submit your comments or contact me via email at grappysb@gmail.com or on X at @grappysb