Freedom-Wins (1)

Freedom Wins – August 2025

  • A truck seized by Ottawa Police following the trucker’s convoy has finally been returned after 1136 days. The Crown had applied for permanent forfeiture of Norman Blanchfield’s truck because “it was instrumental in the Freedom Convoy and Rolling Thunder Protest.”
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that the United States won’t be contributing to the Bill and Melinda Gates-funded Vaccine Alliance, GAVI, since the global health organization has lost the public’s trust.
  • Chris Carbert, one of the so‑called “Coutts Four” linked to the February 2022 border blockade at Coutts, Alberta, has been released from custody after more than three years behind bars. Carbert is now back with his family while the legal proceedings continue.
  • In 2022, questioning school library books that promoted puberty blockers got teacher Carolyn Burjoski silenced, smeared as “transphobic,” and dragged into a legal fight. But in a win for free speech, Ontario’s top court ruled her defamation case against the school board can move forward.
  • The US Olympic and Paralympic Committee has complied with President Trump’s executive order to ban men from women’s sports. The US Olympic Committee said it will now ensure a “fair and safe competition environment” for women.

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  • US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy sent a letter to the governors of all 50 states telling them to remove potentially dangerous distractions from intersections and roadways. In a post on X about the letter, Duffy wrote “Taxpayers expect their dollars to fund safe streets, not rainbow crosswalks. Political banners have no place on public roads.”
  • The US Department of Agriculture takes bold action to protect American agriculture from foreign threats. The National Farm Security Action Plan is a seven-point initiative aimed at securing US farmland from foreign adversaries, including China.
  • In a win for free speech, British Columbia’s “Billboard Chris” Elston has successfully overturned an Australian government order that censored his X post under the country’s Online Safety Act. Elston’s 2024 post criticized the World Health Organization’s appointment of controversial “expert” Teddy Cook and referred to Cook using biologically accurate pronouns. Australia’s eSafety Commissioner labeled the post “cyber abuse” and ordered X (formerly Twitter) to remove it.
  • A groundbreaking new scientific resource has been released: The “COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Harms Research Collection”—featuring over 700 peer-reviewed studies detailing the biological risks associated with COVID-19 mRNA injections.
  • Deborah Conrad, a Physician Assistant who was fired from Rochester Regional Health for “over-reporting” vaccine adverse events, has been vindicated by a federal court. A US court has ruled that hospitals must report adverse events (and can even be held liable if they don’t.)
  • Under pressure from new federal policies, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (US’s largest provider of gender procedures for youth) as well as The Children’s National Hospital in Washington, DC and UChicago Medicine have shut down their transgender interventions for minors, ending all so-called “gender-affirming” pediatric procedures. While the hospitals cited compliance concerns, the result is a step toward protecting children from irreversible medical interventions.
  • Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has signed a recommendation to remove the mercury-based preservative thimerosal from flu vaccines in the US—a major step toward safer, cleaner vaccines and greater medical transparency.
  • Conservative MPs Andrew Lawton and Tamara Jansen are stepping up to defend the vulnerable by launching a national campaign to stop the expansion of Canada’s assisted dying laws (MAiD) to those with mental illness. Their stand pushes back against a system that risks offering death instead of real help and hope.
  • In a major win for common sense and religious freedom, The Democracy Fund successfully overturned the convictions of several Amish Canadians who were fined over $38,000 for not using the ArriveCan app—a digital tool they wouldn’t use due to their faith. After seven months of legal battles, all charges were dropped and the fines waived.