Some very new news

21st July 2025

Thank you to everyone who filled in our recent survey about the possibility of the Skeptics Guide to the Universe podcast hosts coming over to New Zealand next year, and whether this might have an effect on our conference plans for this year and next. We’ve been discussing your responses as a committee, and will be able to let everyone know fairly soon what our plans are.

In the meantime, and if you don’t already have survey fatigue, the New Zealand Association of Rationalists and Humanists (NZARH) are currently looking into the possibility of offering non-religious pastoral care in New Zealand. It’s a big project, and the group (including me, as I’m a Council member) would love to hear your views on what type of care would suit you. So, if you have a couple of minutes to spare, it would be really helpful if you could fill in the form below:

https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=HvNsEEy1ZkqGgUAZ3n1tF_pATHgg6jBHspU20U66gn9UOE4zUTNDQUU4M0xKRlJCTUlCWVJFTklRNSQlQCN0PWcu

The NZARH are also starting up a cult leavers’ support group, so if you’ve left a cult, or if you’re in the process of leaving one, and you feel like you need some help, feel free to contact Jude, the office administrator, at office@rationalists.nz to find out more details.

In our newsletter this week Katrina’s written about nootropics and brain hacking, although she ends her article with a blasphemous jibe at green tea that I’ll have to push back against when we talk about this on our podcast. Bronwyn and I visited a Christian Revival night on the weekend, and I’ve written up an account of the signs and wonders we saw, or rather didn’t see. Bronwyn has looked into a haunted doll, its most recent “victim” from just a week ago, and the mundane truth behind some of the fantastical claims being made. And finally I’ve been given a heads-up by my kids about a new trend on TikTok, and this time it’s not six months old so I’m reporting on it while it’s still relevant - a supposed cult, born on TikTok, that hasn’t even reached its two week anniversary yet.

Mark Honeychurch

Neuroplasticity and nootropics

Katrina Borthwick - 21 July 2025

Neuroplasticity and nootropics

According to Life Extension, a website selling brain-boosting supplements called nootropics, our brains can be hacked (known as “neurohacking”) through “a variety of complementary strategies, including dietary and lifestyle changes and the use of nootropic drugs and supplements, brain-training activities and games, and neurotechnologies (e.g. electrical stimulation devices) designed to increase brain fitness”. Their Australian branch will sell you 30 pills for about AU$30. The pills contain gotu kola, bacopa, and marigold extract.

Pioneer Ministry's Revival Night

Mark Honeychurch - 21 July 2025

Pioneer Ministry's Revival Night

On Friday evening Bronwyn and I, rather than running our usual Skeptics in Cyberspace meeting, visited the Johnsonville Community Centre to experience the signs and wonders of a Christian Revival event, where we were promised healing, hope and miracles.

Possessed doll strikes again?

Bronwyn Rideout - 21 July 2025

Possessed doll strikes again?

On July 13th, paranormal investigator Dan Rivera died in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Occult news from the United States doesn't normally hit the NZ Press, but the NZ Herald did report this particular story in its Entertainment section.

Children of the Waning Star

Mark Honeychurch - 21 July 2025

Children of the Waning Star

TikTok is an interesting social media platform. As a host of short videos that anyone can make these days pretty easily with just a mobile phone, an interface that makes it easy to scroll through hundreds of videos, and an algorithm that attempts to feed you content that will keep you engaged, many kids use Tik Tok as their main social media platform. The platform allows viewers to easily engage through not just their likes, but also through posting their own opinions in response videos.