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Happy New Year! No. 1 Story: Bombshell for 1% Myth

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Story No. 2: My Conversation with Denis Noble

December 31, 2025
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Why Christmas is the Greatest Story of All Time

December 30, 2025
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Bioethicist: Let Surgeons Kill Patients During Organ Harvesting

December 29, 2025
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Assisted Suicide Legalized in Illinois

December 13, 2025
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Tom Steyer’s Affordable Energy Promises to California Are Unaffordable

Tom Steyer, the billionaire climate activist running for California governor, promises to cut electric bills by 25 percent by breaking up big utility companies like PG&E and Southern California Edison. In his ads, he boasts about fighting oil and gas companies, like when he helped kill Proposition 23 back in 2010. But here’s the problem: California’s economy runs 84 percent on fossil fuels. It powers our cars (mostly petroleum), factories, homes for heating (mostly natural gas), and even backs up our electricity (gas plants fill the gaps). Steyer’s war on these companies ignores simple supply-and-demand math, making his bill-cutting talk ring hollow.

Video

The Origin of Animal Body Plans

Stephen C. Meyer
December 2, 2025

Why Humans Can’t Be Replicated by AI

George Montañez
November 25, 2025

Keri D. Ingraham Talks Education Innovation on the Futures Edge Show

American Center for Transforming Education
November 25, 2025

San Francisco’s Harm Reduction Problems

Editor
November 24, 2025

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Podcast

Forrest Mims: The Essential Role of Skepticism in Science

Forrest M. Mims III
December 29, 2025
Science is a very human enterprise, so it can fall prey to very human problems. How a scientist conducts himself or herself professionally matters. On this ID The Future, host Andrew McDiarmid begins a two-part conversation on the importance of skepticism and integrity in science with engineer, inventor, writer, and self-taught scientist Forrest Mims. How important is skepticism to scientific research? How can scientists collaborate respectfully? In what ways can scientists honor their profession while interacting honrably with the public? Forrest shares stories and examples from his decades-long career in science as he answers these and other questions. Mims emphasizes that integrity and skepticism are fundamental to scientific progress, arguing that a lack of skepticism leads to

Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick on the Nature of Evil

Wesley J. Smith
December 29, 2025
Is evil a metaphysical reality, or is it merely a word we use to describe intentionally destructive behavior or horribly painful outcomes? If evil is real, what is its nature? Can one believe in the existence of evil without having a religious understanding of reality? And if evil does exist, does that mean good must also? My guest today, a priest in the Orthodox Church, has some informed opinions on these questions. The Very Rev. Archpriest Andrew Stephen Damick is Chief Content Officer of Ancient Faith Ministries, the former pastor (2009-2020) of St. Paul Antiochian Orthodox Church of Emmaus, Pennsylvania, and author or co-author of The Wolf and the Cross (2025), The Lord of Spirits (2023), and several other books, all from Ancient Faith Publishing. He has been podcasting since

Marcos Eberlin and Jonathan Wells on Life’s Problem-Solving Engineering

Marcos Nogueira Eberlin
December 26, 2025
On our latest visit into the ID The Future archive, we stumbled on this little gem: a 2019 conversation between ID pioneer and biologist Dr. Jonathan Wells and distinguished Brazilian chemist Marcos Eberlin. The occasion for the chat was the publication of Dr. Eberlin’s book Foresight: How the Chemistry of Life Reveals Planning and Purpose. A member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences, Eberlin is a world leader in the field of mass spectrometry. His book was endorsed by three Nobel laureates. In this first of two conversations, Eberlin speaks to the scientist’s duty to follow the evidence where it leads, and explains how the incredible problem-solving engineering involved in just one structure, the cell membrane, may lead one to the conclusion that a mind planned it in

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