Freedom Wins – February 2026
- After decades of government-endorsed food pyramids that mysteriously aligned with Big Ag and ultra-processed junk, the US has flipped the script—putting real food back on top. Protein, healthy fats, dairy, fruits, and vegetables now occupy the largest sections of the food pyramid. While whole grains only occupy a tiny portion, refined sugars and processed sludge are totally out!
- The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has scaled back the childhood vaccine schedule—reducing routine, blanket recommendations from 17 to 11 while keeping all vaccines available and covered. By moving several shots into shared clinical decision-making, the policy signals an early but important shift away from one-size-fits-all medicine and toward parental choice, informed consent, and individualized risk assessment.
- The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms announced the launch of a national campaign urging the federal government not to reintroduce Bill C-63, the proposed Online Harms Act, or any substantially similar legislation that would undermine freedom of expression, due process, and the rule of law in Canada. To help Canadians take action, the Justice Centre has created an online tool with a ready-to-send letter that goes directly to the Minister of Justice and the Prime Minister.
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Northwest Territories Justice Minister, Jay Macdonald, says the Government of the Northwest Territories will join Manitoba, Alberta, and Saskatchewan, and will not take part in the federal gun buyback program. He also stated that the RCMP will not take part in any confiscation activities. So far, Quebec is the only province backing the federal gun grab.
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- Canada’s Federal Court of Appeal has upheld that the Government of Canada unreasonably invoked emergency powers during the Freedom Convoy protests—ruling the situation never met the threshold of a national security threat.
- After declaring the Kamloops “unmarked graves” story an “irrefutable” national truth, lowering flags for months, and approving $12.1 million for exhumations that never happened. Canada’s Ministry of Crown-Indigenous Relations has been ordered to release long-sealed Kamloops files after Information Commissioner Caroline Maynard ruled the department is unlawfully withholding records. To date, no attempt has ever been made to recover remains from the site in question.
- On January 22, 2026, the United States formally completed its withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO), following a one-year notice period triggered by an executive order signed by President Donald Trump on January 20, 2025. The decision was the culmination of years of concern over the WHO’s conduct, governance, and credibility—concerns that were brought sharply into focus during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- A new federal lawsuit is challenging the pediatric vaccine establishment’s long-held claims of unquestioned safety. Children’s Health Defense and five other plaintiffs have filed suit in Washington, DC, accusing the American Academy of Pediatrics of misleading families about the safety of vaccines for decades—all while receiving funding from vaccine manufacturers and facilitating financial incentives to pediatricians with high vaccination rates.
- After a massive public backlash, the UK government announced it is scrapping its plan for mandatory digital ID for those working in the UK. Under the proposed legislation, anyone starting a job would have been required to show their digital ID.
- Robert F. Kennedy Jr., U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), announced that he sent a formal letter to Germany’s Federal Minister of Health, condemning the prosecution of physicians who issued COVID-era mask or vaccine exemptions.
- A BC Provincial Court has vacated the COVID-era convictions of John Koopman, a Chilliwack pastor ticketed for holding in-person worship during lockdowns. The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms successfully argued that while churches were shut down, bars, gyms, restaurants, and salons were allowed to operate in person—an unequal application of the law. Koopman welcomed the correction, while noting the broader need for accountability over pandemic policies that violated fundamental freedoms.
- Procter & Gamble has agreed to rein in its deceptive marketing of Crest fluoride toothpaste to young children, following action announced by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Under the agreement, Crest ads aimed at kids under six must now reflect age-appropriate toothpaste amounts, ending misleading visuals that implied a full strip was safe or recommended. A class action lawsuit is also underway alleging a blurred line between toothpaste and candy—potentially violating the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and state fraud statutes.
- A Massachusetts father won a preliminary injunction after a school refused to let him opt his five-year-old son out of LGBTQ-themed materials. A judge ordered the school district to ensure the child is not exposed to the disputed content, reinforcing parental rights, informed consent, and age-appropriate boundaries in education.
- The Donald Trump administration has withdrawn the United States from 66 international organizations, treaties, and conventions, including 31 tied to the United Nations, citing threats to national sovereignty and prosperity. Secretary of State Marco Rubio noted that many entities were wasteful, mismanaged, and captured by ideological agendas such as DEI, gender equity, and climate orthodoxy—prompting an executive-order review of bodies that “no longer serve American interests.”
- The US federal government has announced it will end financial incentives that pay physicians based on how many patients they vaccinate, and is urging states to do the same. The shift removes profit-driven pressure from medical decision-making and reinforces informed consent.
- The Alberta Parents’ Union is pushing for real transparency in education, calling on the Government of Alberta to require school boards to record meetings, post minutes promptly, and make proceedings publicly accessible. Backed by a parent-led petition, the effort demands an end to gatekeeping and closed-door decision-making—affirming parents’ right to know how schools are governed and how decisions affecting their children are made.









