Martha Rosenberg

109 POSTS
Martha Rosenberg is an investigative health journalist for NewsBlaze, known for exposing misconduct in the food and pharmaceutical industries. Her award-winning reporting and sharp editorial cartoons connect public health, corporate influence, and policy. Rosenberg’s work has appeared in CounterPunch, Salon, Public Library of Science, and other outlets. She continues to illustrate key health stories, combining fact-driven research with visual commentary.

Exclusive articles:

Speech and Reporting Censored as “Anti-Muslim”

For animal lovers Eid al-Adha is the saddest day of the year. To thank Allah for sparing Ibrahim's child from death, Muslim families sacrifice...

Is Obesity The New Smoking? It Certainly Is In the U.S.

In the 1960s, 42 percent of Americans smoked. Ubiquitous cigarette ads, eventually banned in the US, promised that smoking made men more masculine and...

How Drug Ads Get This New Product in Your Medicine Cabinet

Direct-to-consumer (DTC) drug ads please almost everyone. Drug makers sell more product without having to pay reps,* TV, radio and print outlets clean up...

Has Covid Increased Your “Housing Rage”?

Covid reduced tensions that existed at the office because people working from home don't complain about cube mates' noise or constant microwave popcorn. It...

Liberal Magazine Reverses Its Crazy Positions to Remain Vaccine Woke

Liberal media, represented by Mother Jones, is out of its mind. The liberal magazine has thrown out all of its guiding principles to become...

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Mariana Bravo Rivera: Building for Change, from the Master Plan to the Drawing Board

‘Flexibility’ is one of those words that architects use...

5 mobility scooter features that matter more than top speed after age 70

  Key Takeaways Weight beats top speed every time —...

Why herman miller aeron size b outsells every other aeron size

  Key Takeaways Check your actual seat height need first...

Why More Americans Are Choosing Refurbished Electronics Over New, and How Magnakom Helps

Refurbished electronics are gaining traction as schools, businesses and consumers look for lower costs, secure data destruction and reduced e-waste.
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