Freedom wins (1)

Freedom-Wins (1)

Freedom Wins – July 2025

  • After two long years of fighting, Freedom Convoy trucker George Dyck has finally beaten a $6,250 fine for trying to re-enter Canada unvaccinated. Prosecutors dropped the charges—a quiet admission that these mandates and fines were never just.
  • The corporate-sponsored LGBTQ group behind New York City’s “Pride” parade is becoming less corporate after losing 25% of its major corporate sponsors, including Pepsi, Target, Nissan, and Mastercard, creating a financial shortfall of $750,000.
  • The $700B Canada Pension Plan has quietly dropped its 2050 net-zero pledge, calling it too risky for investors. The move mirrors a wider exodus: four major Canadian banks (BMO, TD, National Bank, and CIBC) ditched the UN’s Net-Zero Banking Alliance in January, joining US banks that have already pulled out. Even BlackRock, managing $11.5T in assets, abandoned the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative.
  • Texas is pushing back against toxic food—with a landmark bill that would force brands like Doritos, Froot Loops, Oreos, Skittles, Gatorade, and more to carry warning label “not recommended for human consumption” if they contain ingredients banned, or required to carry warning labels, in the EU, UK, Australia, or Canada. Backed by RFK Jr., Senate Bill 25 aims to expose 44 harmful additives, including synthetic dyes, partially hydrogenated oils, bleached flour, and some seed oils and preservatives, driving America’s chronic disease epidemic. A huge step toward food freedom and informed choice!

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  • The Trump administration has canceled the Biden administration’s $766 million award to drugmaker Moderna to develop an mRNA vaccine against potential pandemic influenza viruses, including the H5N1 bird flu.
  • In a stunning pivot, the US Department of Energy has pulled the plug on 24 green‑energy projects totaling nearly $3.7 billion, all approved during the final weeks of the Biden administration. These grants—big bets on carbon capture, EV infrastructure, and more—were declared “financially unviable” and misaligned with the new administration’s priorities of energy reliability and fiscal accountability.
  • HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. just fired all 17 members of the CDC’s vaccine advisory panel, citing that most members have deep conflicts of interest and financial ties to pharmaceutical companies. He slammed the committee for approving literally every single vaccine they’ve come across—even those later pulled for safety issues—and accused it of pushing controversial shots like COVID, RSV, and HPV without proper scrutiny. “A clean sweep,” he said, ”is needed to re-establish public confidence.”
  • The US House Judiciary Committee advanced the “Protect Children’s Innocence Act” (HR 1399), which would ban “gender-affirming care” for minors, including puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and sex-change surgeries.
  • A large handful of YouTube channels that were banned during COVID measures for spreading “misinformation”—including Corbett Report and Press for Truthhave been reinstated!
  • Ontario resident George Katerberg took the Ministry of Transportation to court after it blocked his right to post a billboard exposing political lies about the COVID pandemic. With help from the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms—he won! A big victory for free expression in Canada.
  • DOJ challenges top medical journals over bias and censorship. The US Department of Justice has sent letters to at least three major medical journals—CHEST, NEJM, and Obstetrics and Gynecology—raising serious concerns about editorial bias, lack of transparency, and suppression of dissenting views, particularly around COVID-19 policies and treatments. For years, critics have accused elite journals of pushing ideology over honest science. These DOJ letters are a long-overdue step toward reclaiming integrity in scientific publishing amid growing evidence of corruption, censorship, and financial conflicts of interest.
  • Monsanto slammed with $175 million verdict as court rejects federal shield. In a major courtroom blow, Monsanto (Bayer) has failed to overturn a $175 million jury award to a Pennsylvania man who says Roundup caused his cancer. The state appeals court ruled the verdict was justified and constitutionally sound, a serious blow to Monsanto’s long-time legal strategy of arguing that federal law overrides state-level “failure to warn” claims.
  • The FDA is taking steps to pull fluoride tablets and lozenges—routinely prescribed to US children as young as 6 months—from the market. Despite decades of use to prevent cavities, research shows fluoride’s benefits are topical only. Even more alarming: studies now link ingested fluoride to lowered IQ, thyroid disruption, behavioural issues, and gut microbiome damage.
  • Texas Attorney General Paxton launches probe into Colgate and Crest for “dangerous” kid-friendly fluoride marketing. Paxton is investigating Colgate and Crest for marketing fluoride toothpaste with candy flavours and cartoon characters, accusing them of misleading parents into thinking the toothpaste is safe if ingested and encouraging kids to ingest unsafe amounts. Paxton called the tactics “deceptive, dangerous, and irresponsible.”