Thank you, Mr. Grogan. I'm a struggling freelance journalist whose last science class was 11th grade chemistry in 1982! I got interested in "early spread" because I think myself, my two kids and 20 percent of my town probably had the virus by the end of January 2020. It bugs me (no pun intended) that the obvious never becomes the obvious. I DO trust the anecdotes ... not the experts!
Thank you, Mr. Grogan. I'm a struggling freelance journalist whose last science class was 11th grade chemistry in 1982! I got interested in "early spread" because I think myself, my two kids and 20 percent of my town probably had the virus by the end of January 2020. It bugs me (no pun intended) that the obvious never becomes the obvious. I DO trust the anecdotes ... not the experts!
I'm very happy to find out that there are journalists like you still out there!!! btw, my dad was a journalist in WW2, covering the war. I also trust the anecdotes, it used to be that anecdotal evidence was one of the best, if not the best ways to determine accurate science. Also it was considered highly valuable in a court of law. Can you point me to any articles or websites where you articles appear? I'd love to read your articles, you're so thorough and you think outside the box. btw, I'm not a Mr. I'm an old lady LOL. Literally EVERYONE online makes that mistake and assumes I'm a Mr. - which btw, I've never been :)
I've had several articles published at The Brownstone Institute website. I think that's the best site for contrarian Covid journalism these days (except Steve's site).
Here's the story that got me started on "early spread" investigations. It was published by UncoverDC.com. It took me a month to find ONE publication that would even publish it!
Thank you, Mr. Grogan. I'm a struggling freelance journalist whose last science class was 11th grade chemistry in 1982! I got interested in "early spread" because I think myself, my two kids and 20 percent of my town probably had the virus by the end of January 2020. It bugs me (no pun intended) that the obvious never becomes the obvious. I DO trust the anecdotes ... not the experts!
I'm very happy to find out that there are journalists like you still out there!!! btw, my dad was a journalist in WW2, covering the war. I also trust the anecdotes, it used to be that anecdotal evidence was one of the best, if not the best ways to determine accurate science. Also it was considered highly valuable in a court of law. Can you point me to any articles or websites where you articles appear? I'd love to read your articles, you're so thorough and you think outside the box. btw, I'm not a Mr. I'm an old lady LOL. Literally EVERYONE online makes that mistake and assumes I'm a Mr. - which btw, I've never been :)
Sorry, Ms. Grogan! Thanks for the nice words.
Here's my Substack site. You can subscribe for free.
https://billricejr.substack.com
I've had several articles published at The Brownstone Institute website. I think that's the best site for contrarian Covid journalism these days (except Steve's site).
Here's the story that got me started on "early spread" investigations. It was published by UncoverDC.com. It took me a month to find ONE publication that would even publish it!
https://uncoverdc.com/2020/06/25/an-alabama-man-nearly-died-from-covid-19-the-first-week-in-january/
Thank you for this, I subbed to your substack and will be looking for you on the internet. Best of luck!