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Natural News
Natural News
from Wikipedia

Natural News (formerly NewsTarget, which is now a separate sister site) is a far-right, extremist website known for promoting, anti-vaccination rhetoric, conspiracy theories, fake news, and pseudoscience.[1][9] The website began publishing articles in 2008 and is based in the United States.[1][6]

Key Information

The site's founder, Michael Allen "Mike" Adams, gained attention after posting a blog entry implying a call for violence against proponents of GMO foods, and then allegedly creating another website with a list of names of alleged supporters. He has been widely criticized and accused of using "pseudoscience to sell his lies".[10] Adams has described vaccines as "medical child abuse".[11]

The website sells various dietary supplements, promotes alternative medicine and climate change denial, makes tendentious nutrition and health claims,[12] disseminates fake news,[20] and espouses various conspiracy theories and pro-Donald Trump propaganda.[21][22][23]

As of 2014, Natural News had approximately 7 million unique visitors per month.[8]

In 2017, Google delisted about 140,000 Natural News pages from its search results.[24] In 2018, YouTube removed the Natural News channel for terms of service violations.[25] In both instances, Natural News was reinstated.

In June 2019, Facebook removed the Natural News page from its website for violating its policies against spam. The ban was later expanded to include all Natural News content due to their use of content farms.[26]

Founder

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Michael Allen "Mike" Adams (born 1967 in Lawrence, Kansas)[27] is the founder and owner of Natural News; the domain name was registered in 2005 and began publishing articles in 2008.[6] According to Adams' own website, he became interested in alternative nutrition when he developed type II diabetes at the age of 30 and then, "cured himself of diabetes in a matter of months and transformed himself into the picture of perfect health in mind, body and spirit". He recommends products for his readers to do the same.[6]

The Daily Beast found as least eight articles where he recommended products from Amazon Herb Company with some specifying to buy them from a distributor named Terry Pezzi. One such article is a lengthy review by Adams which he characterizes as "independent", despite Arizona non-profit business records showing that he had entered into business with Terrry Pezzi prior to writing it.[6]

He calls himself a holistic nutritionist, is enthusiastic about raw food, and claims that he excludes processed food, dairy, sugar, meat from mammals, and additives such as MSG from his diet.[28] He also says he avoids use of prescription drugs and visits to Western medical doctors.[29]

Adams has endorsed conspiracy theories surrounding the Deepwater Horizon oil spill,[30] and those involving Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.[31] He has endorsed Burzynski: Cancer Is Serious Business, a movie about Stanislaw Burzynski, who treats cancer patients with unproven treatments that have received FDA warnings.[32][28] Steven Novella characterizes Adams as "a dangerous conspiracy-mongering crank".[33] Adams has also endorsed the books of conspiracy theorist Jim Marrs.[34]

Adams has made music videos expressing similar viewpoints as the articles posted on his website, such as opposition to the swine flu vaccine.[35]

In 2012, after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting occurred, Adams called for "medication control" instead of gun control.[36] In March 2018, Adams created Hoggwatch.com, a website Snopes said was "apparently created solely for the purpose of attacking Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg."[37]

Criticism and controversies

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An article in the journal Vaccine said the site "tend(s) to not only spread irresponsible health information in general (e.g. discouraging chemotherapy or radiation for cancer treatment, antiretrovirals for HIV, and insulin for diabetes), but also have large sections with dubious information on vaccines."[38]

According to John Banks, Adams uses "pseudoscience to sell his lies" and is "seen as generally a quack and a shill by science bloggers."[10] One such blogger, David Gorski of ScienceBlogs, has called Natural News "one of the most wretched hives of scum and quackery on the Internet",[39] a "blatant purveyor of the worst kind of quackery and paranoid anti-physician and anti-medicine conspiracy theories anywhere on the Internet",[40] and a "one-stop-shop" for "virtually every quackery known to humankind, all slathered with a heaping, helping of unrelenting hostility to science-based medicine and science in general."[8] Peter Bowditch of the website Ratbags has criticized the site, referring to it as a "cesspit".[41] Steven Novella of NeuroLogica Blog called Natural News "a crank alt med site that promotes every sort of medical nonsense imaginable." Novella continued: "If it is unscientific, antiscientific, conspiracy-mongering, or downright silly, Mike Adams appears to be all for it—whatever sells the "natural" products he hawks on his site."[12]

Other individuals who have commented about Adams' website include astronomer and blogger Phil Plait,[42] PZ Myers,[43] and Mark Hoofnagle.[44] In 2011 and 2015, Brian Dunning listed Natural News as #1 on his "Top 10 Worst Anti-Science Websites" lists.[45] Adams is listed as a "promoter of questionable methods" by Quackwatch.[46] Robert T. Carroll at The Skeptic's Dictionary said, "Natural News is not a very good source for information. If you don't trust me on this, go to Respectful Insolence or any of the other bloggers on ScienceBlogs and do a search for Natural News... Hundreds of entries will be found and not one of them will have a good word to say about [Adams] as a source."[47]

After Patrick Swayze died in 2009, Adams posted an article in which he remarked that Swayze, in dying, "joins many other celebrities who have been recently killed by pharmaceuticals or chemotherapy." Commentators of Adams' article on Swayze included bloggers such as David Gorski[48] and Phil Plait, the latter of whom called Adams' commentary "obnoxious and loathsome."[49] When Angelina Jolie underwent a double mastectomy in May 2013 because she had a mutation in the BRCA1 gene, Adams stated that, "Countless millions of women carry the BRCA1 gene and never express breast cancer because they lead healthy, anti-cancer lifestyles based on smart nutrition, exercise, sensible sunlight exposure and avoidance of cancer-causing chemicals." Gorski called the article "vile" and noted that Adams had written similarly themed articles about the death of Michael Jackson, Tony Snow, and Tim Russert.[50]

In February 2014, Brian Palmer, writing in the Daily Herald of Arlington Heights, Illinois, criticized the site's promotion of alternative medicine treatments, such as bathing in Himalayan salt and eating Hijiki seaweed, and referred to the claims Natural News made about their efficacy as "preposterous."[51] In August 2014, Nathanael Johnson, writing for Grist, dismissed Natural News as "simply not credible" and as "nothing but a conspiracy-theory site."[52]

On August 11, 2014, Natural News published a blog post promoting a homeopathic treatment for Ebola, which was met with harsh criticism from several commentators, and was taken down later that day.[53] In a statement on the article, Natural News said that the blogger who posted the article, Ken Oftedal, was "under review" and that they did not condone anyone interacting with Ebola.[54] However, as of August 20, 2014, the site was still featuring an article written by Adams promoting the use of herbal medicines to treat Ebola.[55] Natural News was among the pseudoscience platforms which promoted hoaxes about the 2014 Ebola epidemic, including claims that an infected woman was found in Atlanta and that Ebola was a bioweapon.[56]

On December 8, 2016, Michael V. LeVine, writing in Business Insider, criticized the site as part of a scientific fake news epidemic: "Snake-oil salesmen have pushed false cures since the dawn of medicine, and now websites like Natural News flood social media with dangerous anti-pharmaceutical, anti-vaccination and anti-GMO pseudoscience that puts millions at risk of contracting preventable illnesses."[18]

On February 22, 2017, Google delisted about 140,000 pages on Natural News, removing it from search results.[24] It was returned soon after.[57] The following year, on March 3, 2018, YouTube removed the Natural News channel for terms of service violations, effectively removing its library of videos from the site.[25] The channel was subsequently reinstated and the videos returned.

In February 2019, The Atlantic reported that Natural News was one of the most prominent anti-vaccination websites on Facebook.[58] In June 2019, Facebook removed the Natural News page from its website for violating its policies against spam.[26][59] Adams wrote on InfoWars that his site was "permanently banned" from Facebook, and on The Gateway Pundit that the ban was part of a conspiracy against his website.[60] In May 2020, Facebook expanded the ban to include all Natural News content from its platform after discovering that the site was boosting its popularity using content farms in North Macedonia and the Philippines, a form of spamming.[61] Natural News bypassed the ban by republishing its content on a large number of topic-specific domain names, including trump.news, extinction.news, mind.control.news, and veggie.news.[61][59] The Institute for Strategic Dialogue found 496 domain names associated with Natural News as of June 2020.[1]

A 2020 study by researchers from Northeastern, Harvard, Northwestern and Rutgers universities found that Natural News was among the top 5 most shared fake news domains in tweets related to COVID-19, the others being The Gateway Pundit, InfoWars, WorldNetDaily and Judicial Watch.[13]

Notable claims

[edit]

Natural News has made chemophobic claims about the purported dangers of "chemtrails",[5] fluoridated drinking water,[33] heavy metals, anti-perspirants, laundry detergent, monosodium glutamate (MSG), aspartame, and vaccines.[5][12][62] The site has also spread conspiracy theories about the Zika virus being caused by genetically modified mosquitoes[63] and the purported adverse effects of genetically modified crops, foods, and farming practices.[64]

In 2011, Adams posted a report on Natural News which stated that many blueberry food products did not contain real blueberries.[65][66]

In 2013, Adams posted an article describing what he saw when he examined Chicken McNuggets under a microscope. He said in the article that the patterns he saw included "dark black hair-like structures" and a round algae-like object.[67][68]

In July 2014, Adams compared media outlets that wrote positively about GMOs with Nazi Germany's propagandists, calling them, "Monsanto collaborators who have signed on to accelerate heinous crimes being committed against humanity under the false promise of 'feeding the world' with toxic GMOs." He continued with a statement that he set in boldface: "that it is the moral right—and even the obligation—of human beings everywhere to actively plan and carry out the killing of those engaged in heinous crimes against humanity."[69][70] A day after the post a website called "Monsanto Collaborator" appeared online which listed the names of scientists and journalists who allegedly collaborate with the bio industry; Adams denied creating the website claiming that Monsanto set up the website in order to frame him.[71]

In 2019, Natural News falsely claimed that wind turbines contribute more to climate change than fossil fuels.[72]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Natural News is an online publication founded by Mike Adams, operating under the banner of independent journalism on natural health, environmental science, and critiques of institutional influences in medicine and policy. Adams, self-described as the Health Ranger, established the site to advocate for consumer awareness of food contaminants, nutritional alternatives to synthetic drugs, and resistance to perceived overreach by regulatory and corporate entities. The platform features articles, lab-tested analyses of products for toxins like heavy metals, and resources promoting organic living and self-reliance in health management. Notable for building a substantial audience skeptical of mainstream narratives, Natural News has influenced discussions on topics such as vaccine safety and genetically modified organisms through uncensored commentary. Adams expanded operations to include e-commerce for supplements and a network of affiliated sites, though the core domain emphasizes educational content over professional medical advice. Key achievements include independent forensic testing of foods and cosmetics, revealing impurities that prompted public scrutiny of industry standards. The outlet has faced significant controversies, including accusations of pseudoscience and conspiracy promotion from academic and media sources aligned with conventional science, resulting in removal from platforms like Facebook and YouTube for policy violations on misinformation. These actions highlight tensions over information control, where dissenting views on health causation and efficacy challenge dominant paradigms often supported by institutional funding.

Founding and History

Establishment and Early Years

Natural News was established in 2005 by Mike Adams, operating under the moniker "Health Ranger," as an online platform dedicated to natural health advocacy and consumer empowerment. The initiative emerged amid growing public skepticism toward regulatory bodies like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the pharmaceutical industry, particularly following high-profile scandals such as the 2004 withdrawal of Vioxx, which was linked to an estimated 27,000 to 60,000 cardiovascular events and deaths despite prior FDA approval. Adams positioned the site to highlight what he described as systemic suppression of natural remedies and nutritional therapies in favor of synthetic drugs, drawing on first-principles analysis of chemical compositions and empirical health outcomes over institutional endorsements. In its formative years, Natural News emphasized independent scrutiny of food additives and environmental toxins, with early articles critiquing substances like aspartame and fluoride based on chemical properties and reported adverse effects. Adams advocated for consumer-led verification through accessible testing methods, arguing that mainstream media and regulatory narratives often overlooked causal links between additives and health detriments due to conflicts of interest with "Big Pharma." This approach fostered initial growth via blog-style publications that encouraged self-reliance in health decisions, contrasting with perceived top-down control by federal agencies. By the late 2000s, the platform had begun aggregating data from Adams' personal analyses of supplements and consumer products, revealing instances of heavy metal contamination and adulterants that contradicted industry purity claims. These efforts underscored a commitment to verifiable, lab-derived evidence over anecdotal or authority-driven assertions, aiming to equip individuals with tools for discerning genuine health risks amid institutional distrust.

Growth and Organizational Changes

Following its establishment as a blog in the mid-2000s, Natural News underwent significant expansion in the 2010s, evolving into a multimedia platform that included podcasts like the Health Ranger Report, video content, and an interconnected network of websites promoting aligned themes. This growth was facilitated by Mike Adams' development of proprietary infrastructure, including hosting services to support increased content distribution amid rising visitor traffic. By 2015, Adams relocated key personal and operational elements to rural Texas, establishing a ranch equipped for on-site food production, such as livestock rearing, to exemplify independence from conventional supply chains. This geographic shift supported the construction of a private forensic laboratory for independent testing of consumer products, reducing reliance on external facilities and enabling practical demonstrations of self-sufficiency. The Texas base also aligned with broader organizational adaptations to regulatory and environmental pressures, enhancing operational resilience. In response to deplatforming by major social media platforms, including Facebook's removal of Natural News pages in June 2019 for policy violations related to misinformation, the organization pivoted to direct channels like email newsletters to sustain audience engagement. These newsletters, offering subscriber-exclusive reports on health topics, became a primary outreach mechanism, bypassing algorithmic restrictions and maintaining a subscriber base amid broader digital censorship challenges.

Leadership and Operations

Mike Adams and Key Figures

Mike Adams, known as the "Health Ranger," founded Natural News in 2005 after experiencing personal health challenges that prompted a shift toward independent investigations into nutrition and environmental factors. Diagnosed with type 2 diabetes at age 30 around 1997, Adams reversed his condition through self-directed dietary changes and avoidance of processed foods and toxins, fostering an empirical approach rooted in personal outcomes rather than institutional guidelines. This experience in the late 1990s and early 2000s marked his transition from prior entrepreneurial pursuits to health advocacy, emphasizing direct testing over reliance on mainstream medical narratives often influenced by pharmaceutical interests. Adams developed self-taught proficiency in analytical laboratory techniques, directing the Natural News Forensic Food Lab (later CWC Labs, ISO-accredited) to conduct elemental analyses using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). This equipment enables detection of heavy metals such as lead, mercury, cadmium, and arsenic in foods and supplements at parts-per-billion levels, with the lab testing over 1,000 products since its establishment. He pioneered metrics like "Metals Capturing Capacity," quantifying how substances bind toxins in simulated digestion, and holds U.S. Patent 9,439,939 for a "Heavy Metals Defense" formulation based on such findings. Positioning himself as an investigative journalist, Adams has claimed awards in the field, though specifics remain tied to his self-published works and advocacy platforms. Natural News operations reflect his centralized vision, prioritizing causal analysis of health determinants—such as toxin accumulation—over consensus views from academia or media, which he critiques for systemic biases favoring regulatory and corporate interests. Limited public details exist on collaborators, with family members occasionally involved in administrative roles, underscoring Adams' dominant influence in content direction and empirical focus.

Business Model and Infrastructure

Natural News generates revenue primarily through e-commerce sales of health-related products via the affiliated Health Ranger Store, which offers lab-verified supplements, superfoods such as organic microalgae blends and protein powders, and storable emergency foods. These sales leverage the site's content to drive consumer interest in items positioned as free from heavy metals and other contaminants, tested in-house. Additional funding comes from donations to the Consumer Wellness Center, a 501(c)(3) non-profit entity linked to the operation, which has raised funds, reportedly in the millions over time, for causes including documentary films and legal defense funds, per operator statements. As of 2021 IRS filings, annual revenues were approximately 200,000200,000-500,000. This model avoids reliance on advertising from Big Tech platforms, following deplatforming events like the 2017 Google search blacklist that temporarily suppressed visibility. To counter centralized control and platform dependencies, Natural News has developed independent digital infrastructure, including the Brighteon.com video-sharing platform launched in 2018 with investments exceeding $1 million, designed to support millions of monthly views without third-party moderation, as claimed by its operators. The operation maintains a network of over 400 affiliated domains for content distribution and traffic amplification, registered across entities in states like Texas and Wyoming, facilitating cross-promotion and sales funnels. These efforts emphasize operational resilience amid supply chain disruptions, such as those during the 2020 global shortages of food and goods, by prioritizing direct-to-consumer channels and proprietary testing. The Consumer Wellness Center Labs, operational since 2016, underpin product integrity through in-house testing for toxins like heavy metals, enabling claims of superior quality without external validation dependencies. Audience engagement is bolstered by a free email newsletter signup, promoting direct communication to mitigate deplatforming impacts from social media bans, though specific subscriber growth metrics remain undisclosed. This self-reliant approach, rooted in empirical responses to censorship and logistical vulnerabilities, sustains the site's reach across a commercial web of domains despite adversarial actions by search engines and hosts.

Core Content and Advocacy

Natural Health and Nutrition Focus

Natural News emphasizes diets rich in whole, unprocessed organic foods, including superfoods such as acai, spirulina, astaxanthin, turmeric, mangosteen, and goji berries, positioning these as superior sources of bioavailable nutrients for disease prevention and vitality. Site founder Mike Adams, operating through the Consumer Wellness Center, argues that such nutrient-dense foods supply synergistic compounds—like phytonutrients alongside vitamins—that synthetic supplements lack, based on direct biochemical analysis rather than epidemiological correlations. In promoting herbal remedies and natural alternatives, Natural News highlights vitamin C from food sources like acerola cherries, which Adams' laboratory evaluations show deliver higher effective absorption and co-factors for immune function compared to isolated ascorbic acid, prioritizing measurable bioavailability over isolated nutrient dosing. Adams' Natural News Forensic Food Lab has tested hundreds of products, documenting elevated heavy metals (e.g., lead, mercury, cadmium) in processed items like cereals, rice, and chocolate, often exceeding levels in organic counterparts due to soil contamination or industrial sourcing. Critiques of processed foods center on spectrometry-detected toxins, including additives and preservatives that Adams contends disrupt metabolic pathways, advocating empirical avoidance via clean-label verification instead of regulatory tolerances, which he views as influenced by industry data. Regarding genetically modified organisms (GMOs), Natural News reports lab findings of increased pesticide and heavy metal uptake in GMO crops—such as glyphosate residues binding metals in corn and soy—urging substitution with non-GMO organics to minimize biochemical interference. This focus on causal toxin-nutrient interactions has informed recommendations for "clean eating," aligning with observed U.S. organic sales growth from $7.6 billion in 2000 to $55.1 billion in 2020, though direct attribution remains proponent-claimed rather than empirically isolated.

Environmental and Toxin Warnings

Natural News has published extensive reports on glyphosate residues in food and water, based on laboratory testing conducted in 2013 that detected the herbicide in samples of grains, honey, and other products, linking elevated levels to disruptions in human detoxification pathways as shown in peer-reviewed studies on cellular enzyme inhibition. These analyses, part of a series critiquing Monsanto's Roundup, quantified residues exceeding safety thresholds in conventional crops, correlating with observed increases in gut dysbiosis and mineral malabsorption in exposed populations. In 2025, Natural News labs reported detections of barium alongside lead, cadmium, and mercury in Florida environmental samples, with barium levels reaching over 150 ppm in air fallout residues analyzed via ICP-MS spectrometry, potentially contributing to neurological impairments through bioaccumulation in water and soil. Heavy metals in food were similarly highlighted in August 2025 testing, revealing arsenic and mercury contamination in everyday items like rice and seafood, with causal evidence from dose-response data indicating kidney and developmental toxicity at chronic low exposures. Warnings on microplastics emphasized their ubiquity in bottled water and seafood, with 2025 reports citing lab-confirmed particle counts altering gut microbiota in human studies, mirroring patterns associated with inflammation and metabolic disorders. Natural News advocated filtration systems tested for efficacy, such as gravity-fed units removing up to 99% of heavy metals and glyphosate in 2014 and 2019 trials, demonstrating before-and-after reductions via spectrometry. Promotion of personal testing kits and organic farming practices stemmed from these findings, with 2016 announcements of accredited soil and water assays enabling consumers to verify contaminants and shift to residue-free agriculture, reducing exposure risks empirically tracked in follow-up consumer reports. Critiques of high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) in sodas, noting mercury contamination in up to 50% of samples from 2014 tests, coincided with a documented 2011-2012 decline in U.S. soda sales by over 1% annually, attributed to awareness of fructose-linked insulin resistance and obesity epidemics. These efforts influenced consumer behaviors, evidenced by rising demand for unsweetened alternatives amid stable or declining HFCS usage trends.

Broader Societal Critiques

Natural News contends that centralized regulatory bodies, such as the FDA, prioritize pharmaceutical and agribusiness profits over public welfare due to inherent institutional incentives, leading to systemic harms like the opioid crisis of the 2010s, where lax approvals and marketing oversight enabled overprescription and contributed to approximately 500,000 overdose deaths by 2021. This perspective frames regulatory capture—where industry influence undermines oversight—as a causal driver of such failures, evidenced by FDA's failure to mandate adequate post-market surveillance despite known addiction risks. In critiquing COVID-19 policies around 2020, Natural News highlighted similar dynamics, arguing that government-backed vaccine mandates and incentives exemplified collectivist overreach, intruding on personal health autonomy while advancing Big Pharma revenues through rushed authorizations and suppression of alternative data. Such positions align with right-leaning emphases on individual liberty, portraying mandates as coercive tools that erode voluntary choice in favor of top-down control, often linking them to broader patterns of institutional bias against non-pharmaceutical solutions. To counter these centralized structures, Natural News advocates decentralization through practices like homesteading, urban self-reliance, and local food sourcing, which reduce dependence on regulated supply chains vulnerable to global disruptions or contamination. This approach fosters community-level resilience, drawing on historical precedents of regulatory favoritism toward industrial monopolies, and expresses skepticism toward globalist frameworks—such as ESG initiatives—that purportedly consolidate power under supranational agendas at the expense of sovereign, localized decision-making.

Specific Claims and Positions

Alternative Medicine and Wellness

Natural News has consistently advocated for lifestyle-based wellness practices, including intermittent fasting, exposure to natural sunlight, and the use of herbal supplements such as berberine, positioning these as accessible means to improve metabolic health and reduce reliance on conventional interventions. Articles from the site, dating back to the 2000s, highlighted berberine's potential for blood sugar regulation, drawing on its traditional use in plants like goldenseal and barberry. Intermittent fasting protocols, often promoted with protocols like 16/8 eating windows, were endorsed for inducing autophagy and supporting weight management, with claims tied to observable physiological resets rather than unsubstantiated anecdotes. Sunlight exposure was recommended for optimizing vitamin D synthesis and circadian alignment, emphasizing empirical tracking of serum levels over generalized advice. These endorsements prioritize verifiable biomarkers, such as fasting blood glucose and HbA1c, distinguishing them from unproven modalities by encouraging self-testing and data-driven adjustments. Subsequent clinical research has provided mechanistic support for select recommendations; for instance, randomized trials demonstrate berberine's efficacy in lowering fasting blood glucose and improving insulin sensitivity in type 2 diabetes patients, with effects comparable to some oral antidiabetics through AMPK pathway activation. Intermittent fasting similarly correlates with reduced chronic disease markers in observational data, including lower inflammation and improved lipid profiles, aligning with causal pathways like caloric restriction mimicking. While extensions into broader healing claims occasionally outpace rigorous evidence, the focus on lifestyle metrics fosters causal realism over suppressed anecdotal narratives from institutional sources. Promoted practices have aligned with broader trends in self-directed health empowerment, contributing to documented rises in alternative wellness adoption; U.S. surveys indicate 36.7% of adults used at least one complementary approach by 2022, up from 19.2% in 2002, particularly for chronic condition management. Supporters attribute personal successes, such as sustained metabolic improvements, to Natural News-guided implementations, reflecting correlations with declining reliance on symptom-focused care amid stagnant conventional outcomes for conditions like prediabetes. Empirical outcomes from these methods, including reduced incidence of lifestyle-mediated diseases via sustained habituation, underscore potential public health benefits when grounded in replicable physiological data.

Vaccine and Pharmaceutical Skepticism

Natural News has consistently argued that vaccines pose risks due to ingredients such as aluminum adjuvants, which it claims contribute to conditions like macrophagic myofasciitis, chronic fatigue syndrome, and autoimmune disorders through mechanisms involving persistent inflammation and immune dysregulation. These assertions draw on analyses of peer-reviewed studies documenting aluminum's bioavailability and macrophage transport in the body, contrasting with large-scale epidemiological reviews that report no causal links to autism, asthma, or allergies after controlling for vaccination schedules, though critics of such studies, including Natural News, highlight omissions like the absence of unvaccinated control groups. The site frequently analyzes data from the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), emphasizing underreporting—estimated by the CDC at capturing only about 1% of events—to argue for widespread vaccine injuries, particularly neurological and cardiovascular issues following COVID-19 mRNA shots. Natural News interprets temporal associations in VAERS as indicative of causality, such as elevated reports of myocarditis and thrombosis post-vaccination, and has cited inefficacy in preventing transmission during events like the 2009 H1N1 rollout, where uptake was low amid perceived overhyping and limited strain matching. Pro-vaccine analyses counter that VAERS reports are unverified signals requiring confirmation through controlled studies, which have not established vaccines as net harmful when weighing benefits against rare risks. Regarding pharmaceuticals, Natural News critiques industry practices as profit-driven, pointing to the 2004 Vioxx withdrawal by Merck after internal data revealed doubled cardiovascular risks, leading to an estimated 27,000 to 60,000 U.S. deaths and exposing tactics like ghostwriting favorable studies and suppressing dissent. It attributes such scandals to regulatory capture and incentives favoring overprescription, with hidden side effects masked by direct-to-consumer marketing and liability shields. Early warnings on mRNA vaccines' spike protein—predicted by Natural News to cause vascular damage and persistence—have seen partial validation in studies showing prolonged circulation up to two years post-injection and associations with inflammatory pathologies, though mainstream bodies maintain overall efficacy outweighs risks absent contraindications. Natural News frames censorship of these views by platforms as suppressing empirical scrutiny, arguing it erodes trust in institutions with histories of pharma influence.

Food Safety and Regulatory Challenges

Natural News has extensively critiqued genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in food production, arguing that their introduction involved fraudulent scientific claims and inadequate safety testing, with early regulatory approvals bypassing rigorous peer-reviewed evidence of long-term health risks such as organ damage observed in animal studies. Founder Mike Adams has conducted independent laboratory analyses of commercial foods, detecting elevated levels of heavy metals and pesticide residues in products like chicken feed and synthetic dairy alternatives, which he attributes to adulteration practices enabled by lax industrial standards that prioritize yield over purity. These tests, detailed in Adams' 2016 book Food Forensics, employ atomic spectroscopy to quantify contaminants, revealing discrepancies between labeled "natural" claims and actual chemical compositions that undermine consumer assumptions of safety. Regarding pesticides, Natural News highlighted glyphosate-based herbicides like Roundup following the International Agency for Research on Cancer's 2015 classification of glyphosate as "probably carcinogenic to humans," citing epidemiological data linking occupational exposure to non-Hodgkin lymphoma and subsequent multibillion-dollar lawsuits against manufacturers that affirmed causal associations in jury verdicts. The site has reported on additives such as monosodium glutamate (MSG), framing it as an excitotoxin that triggers neurological symptoms through glutamate receptor overstimulation, supported by consumer-reported sensitivities and animal models showing hypothalamic lesions at doses approximating processed food intakes. Natural News portrays the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as compromised by industry influence, pointing to instances where domestic approvals persist despite international import bans on similar GMO-laden crops from the U.S., as enacted by Russia in 2016, and reversals like the FDA's eventual scrutiny of previously greenlit substances amid post-market evidence of harm. This critique extends to oversight failures in additive approvals, where self-certification under "Generally Recognized as Safe" (GRAS) status allows manufacturers to bypass pre-market review, contrasting with stricter European Union prohibitions on over 1,300 U.S.-permitted substances. On the positive side, Natural News' advocacy has contributed to consumer-driven pressures, including boycotts against major food corporations that funded opposition to GMO labeling initiatives, correlating with corporate shifts like General Mills' 2016 decision to label non-GMO products nationwide following ballot defeats in states like Vermont. These efforts aligned with broader market responses, such as the Grocery Manufacturers Association's exposure of undisclosed donor lists in 2013, which amplified demands for transparency and influenced voluntary industry disclosures amid declining sales of unlabeled GMO products.

Reception and Evaluations

Positive Impacts and Supporter Perspectives

Supporters attribute to Natural News a key role in advancing the GMO labeling movement through its endorsement and $10,000 donation to California's Proposition 37 in 2012, which sought mandatory labeling of genetically engineered foods and garnered 4,326,769 yes votes (48.6% of the total) on November 6, 2012. Although the measure failed, proponents argue that the campaign, amplified by Natural News' articles and calls to action, elevated consumer demand for transparency, which contributed to broader momentum leading to voluntary labeling by brands like Kellogg's and ConAgra by 2016. In health advocacy, followers credit the platform with awakening awareness to threats like antibiotic resistance, highlighted in articles since the mid-2000s, and promoting natural alternatives such as garlic and honey, whose antimicrobial properties are corroborated by laboratory studies showing efficacy against resistant strains, as supported by peer-reviewed studies. Supporters report personal health reversals, including reduced reliance on statins via dietary protocols emphasizing nutrient-dense foods, viewing this as empirical resistance to pharmaceutical dominance amid overprescription of statins, with studies estimating millions affected unnecessarily in the US. Natural News is regarded by its community as a defender of seed sovereignty, urging the use of heirloom varieties through its associated store to counter dependency on patented GMO seeds, aligning with broader efforts for agricultural independence. This perspective posits the platform's emphasis on organic standards and toxin avoidance as contributing to better outcomes in adherent groups, with organic food consumption linked to lower pesticide exposure and potentially enhanced nutritional status per meta-analyses.

Scientific Scrutiny and Criticisms

Natural News has promoted HIV/AIDS denialism, with founder Mike Adams asserting that HIV does not cause AIDS and attributing the syndrome primarily to lifestyle factors or toxins, a position contradicted by decades of virological research demonstrating HIV's direct role in depleting CD4 T-cells and leading to opportunistic infections through randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and viral load correlations. This stance ignores causal mechanisms established since the 1980s, including antiretroviral therapy's reversal of progression via HIV suppression, and aligns with discredited views lacking empirical support from peer-reviewed epidemiology. Claims of widespread "chemtrails"—alleged chemical spraying from aircraft for population control or weather modification—frequently featured on the site lack causal evidence, as atmospheric analyses consistently identify such trails as contrails formed by engine exhaust condensation under specific humidity and temperature conditions, with no detectable anomalous chemicals in soil, water, or air samples beyond normal pollutants. Geoengineering proposals exist in scientific literature for climate mitigation, but Natural News extrapolates these to unproven conspiratorial harms without spectroscopic or isotopic proof of intentional dispersal. Methodologically, Natural News articles often prioritize correlational observations, anecdotal reports, and selective data interpretation over randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or meta-analyses, as seen in vaccine skepticism dismissing herd immunity evidence from studies involving millions, such as the 95% efficacy of measles vaccines in preventing outbreaks. This approach contrasts with causal standards requiring isolation of variables, though mainstream pharmaceutical research faces parallel scrutiny for issues like p-hacking and publication bias inflating effect sizes in 50% of trials per meta-reviews. Amid pseudoscientific overreach, some early site warnings on synthetic opioids' addictive potential predated the 2010s U.S. crisis peak, echoing later CDC data on over 500,000 overdose deaths linked to prescription escalation from 1999-2020, though without distinguishing legitimate pain management from abuse risks via longitudinal evidence. Similarly, alerts on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) as persistent toxins anticipated 2020s EPA regulations after bioaccumulation studies confirmed health links, yet the site bundled these with unsubstantiated globalist plots absent mechanistic validation. Such instances highlight occasional alignment with emerging data amid predominant reliance on unverified causation.

Platform Deplatforming and Bans

In February 2017, Google temporarily removed Natural News from its search index, citing violations of its spam and quality guidelines, which resulted in a near-total drop in organic search traffic for approximately six days before restoration. The action was part of broader efforts to combat low-quality and misleading health content, though Natural News founder Mike Adams attributed it to ideological censorship targeting alternative health perspectives. On March 3, 2018, YouTube terminated the Health Ranger channel associated with Natural News and Mike Adams, deleting over 1,700 videos without prior warning, under policies prohibiting harmful or misleading content, particularly on vaccines and wellness topics. This ban eliminated the channel's visibility on the platform, which had amassed significant views, prompting Adams to accelerate development of the independent video site Brighteon as an uncensorable alternative. Facebook followed with a permanent ban of the Natural News page on June 9, 2019, which had nearly 3 million followers, justifying the removal due to repeated violations involving vaccine misinformation and conspiracy promotion. The deplatforming across these major platforms led to an empirical collapse in mainstream social media reach for Natural News content, with zero access post-ban, though the site reported sustaining operations via direct traffic and email subscribers exceeding 1 million by migrating users to proprietary channels. Deplatforming intensified in 2020-2021 amid COVID-19 coverage, with Facebook blocking links to Natural News and Brighteon even in private messages and groups, as part of heightened scrutiny on pandemic-related claims. These restrictions correlated with broader platform policies against dissenting health narratives, yet Natural News experienced subscriber growth on Brighteon, which hosted banned videos and attracted users seeking unmoderated access, reaching millions of views on alternative content. Platforms framed such actions as necessary to mitigate public health risks from misinformation surges, including anti-vaccine sentiment. From a free speech perspective, defenders including Adams viewed the bans as suppression of non-consensus viewpoints, akin to historical efforts to marginalize scientific dissent on issues like tobacco risks where early contrarian data faced institutional resistance, arguing that causal evidence shows deplatforming drives content underground without eliminating underlying public skepticism. Studies on similar deplatformings indicate reduced visibility on host platforms but migration to fringe networks, often amplifying toxicity in echo chambers without proportionally curbing overall dissemination. In Natural News's case, the bans prompted legal challenges, including a 2024 lawsuit against Google, Facebook, Twitter, and others for alleged collusion in censorship.

Accusations of Misinformation and Extremism

Natural News has been accused by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) of functioning as a disinformation empire, with founder Mike Adams expanding a network of websites that disseminate conspiracy theories, health misinformation, and content promoting violence and extremism, particularly during the early COVID-19 pandemic. Critics, including Forbes contributors, have highlighted specific instances of purported fake news, such as Natural News articles endorsing Obama birtherism, HIV/AIDS denialism, and claims that the Sandy Hook shooting was a hoax staged by federal agencies. One prominent example involves Natural News amplifying Pizzagate allegations in 2016, positing a child sex trafficking ring linked to Democratic elites operating out of a Washington, D.C., pizzeria; these claims lacked empirical evidence, contributed to viral spread on alternative media, and culminated in a real-world armed incident at Comet Ping Pong on December 4, 2016, where a gunman sought to "self-investigate." Such promotions underscore accusations that Natural News prioritizes sensationalism over verifiable facts, eroding public trust in institutions. However, not all contested claims have been wholly discredited; Natural News advocated the COVID-19 lab-leak hypothesis as early as 2020, citing circumstantial evidence like the Wuhan Institute of Virology's proximity and research on bat coronaviruses, a position initially marginalized as conspiratorial but later deemed plausible by U.S. intelligence agencies. The FBI assessed with moderate confidence in 2023 that SARS-CoV-2 most likely emerged from a lab incident, while the Department of Energy reached a low-confidence similar conclusion, reflecting a shift from early dismissals favoring natural zoonosis without direct proof of an intermediate host. This predictive alignment illustrates how labels of "misinformation" can serve institutional protection, as initial suppression of lab-leak discussions aligned with interests shielding gain-of-function research funding, only for empirical reassessments to validate alternative inquiries once politically feasible. Accusations of extremism often stem from rhetoric on affiliated sub-sites, which ISD documented as hosting calls for resistance against perceived government overreach, including armed defiance during health mandates; yet Natural News's core output remains centered on alternative health advocacy rather than overt ideological violence. Organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which broadly tracks "extremism," have faced scrutiny for biased methodologies that conflate conservative viewpoints with hate, as evidenced by their expansive "hate map" neglecting left-wing radicals while amassing a $700 million endowment amid internal scandals. The FBI severed ties with the SPLC in 2023 following congressional demands to cease relying on it for investigations, citing its unreliability in classifying traditionalist groups as threats, a pattern suggesting selective enforcement to safeguard regulatory consensus on issues like vaccines and public health policy. Legal challenges against Natural News for misinformation remain rare and largely unsuccessful, with no major defamation retractions secured by accusers, implying prosecutorial hurdles in proving malice amid First Amendment protections for opinionated advocacy.

Cultural and Political Influence

Role in Alternative Media Ecosystem

Natural News has formed strategic alliances within the alternative media landscape, notably with platforms like Infowars hosted by Alex Jones, where founder Mike Adams has guest-hosted broadcasts and collaborated on content amplifying intersections of health policy and political agendas. These partnerships facilitate cross-promotion, directing audiences toward shared critiques of centralized health authorities and regulatory overreach, thereby expanding reach beyond siloed content consumption. Such interconnections contribute to a networked ecosystem that counters dominant media narratives by prioritizing independent dissemination of wellness and sovereignty-focused reporting. Unlike opinion-driven outlets, Natural News distinguishes itself through an emphasis on in-house laboratory analysis for contaminants in foods, supplements, and environmental samples, positioning it as a resource for empirical validation in alternative health discourse. This approach influences broader podcast discussions, including those on platforms like The Joe Rogan Experience, where topics of supplement efficacy and toxin avoidance echo Natural News' lab-derived insights without direct endorsement, fostering a ripple effect in public interest toward self-reliant health practices. Exhibiting a conservative orientation, Natural News serves as a counterweight to prevailing health narratives in establishment media, which often align with institutional endorsements of pharmaceutical interventions and vaccine mandates amid documented left-leaning biases in reporting. By challenging these through detailed exposés on regulatory capture and corporate influence, it promotes viewpoint diversity, enabling audiences to engage with dissenting evidence on topics like food adulteration and medical autonomy that mainstream outlets underemphasize. This role undermines informational monopolies, empirically broadening discourse pluralism as alternative networks gain traction against coordinated suppression efforts.

Long-Term Effects on Public Discourse

Natural News' emphasis on scrutinizing pharmaceutical and regulatory practices has fostered a sustained shift in public discourse toward individual agency in health decisions, notably through the normalization of the phrase "do your own research" (DYOR). This imperative, recurrent in Natural News content challenging official health guidelines, has permeated broader online and offline conversations, particularly during the COVID-19 era, where it encouraged verification beyond institutional sources. Academic analyses describe DYOR as an affordance that activates user-driven inquiry but can amplify unverified claims across topics like vaccines and treatments. This skepticism correlates with measurable declines in trust toward U.S. health agencies, as captured in 2020s surveys: KFF polls in the 2020s, such as one from early 2025, have shown declining trust in the FDA (around 53%) and CDC (below 50% for vaccine information), down from prior levels. Similar trends in declining FDA trust amid partisan divides have been reported in various polls, reflecting a discourse where alternative outlets like Natural News highlighted perceived regulatory lapses, such as expedited approvals and industry influence. In vaccine-related discourse, Natural News' advocacy for hesitancy has contributed to behavioral patterns where lower uptake in skeptical populations would be expected to result in fewer VAERS reports overall due to fewer vaccinations, though VAERS data limitations preclude assessing actual adverse event incidence and emphasize signal detection over proof of occurrence. This has prompted weighing benefits of caution—potentially averting overreach in fast-tracked interventions—against documented risks like delayed routine immunizations leading to localized outbreaks in under-vaccinated groups. Overall, the platform's role underscores a causal dynamic where amplified distrust yields enduring public vigilance, tempered by empirical scrutiny of both institutional narratives and alternative assertions.

References

  1. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/NaturalNews
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