Freedom Wins

Freedom-Wins

Freedom Wins – June 2025

Published On: June 1, 2025Tags: , , , , , , ,
  • In a major win for the Freedom Convoy movement, Freedom Convoy trucker and “road captain” for the Niagara contingent, Harold Jonker, has been acquitted on all charges tied to the 2022 protest. Ontario Superior Court Justice Kevin B. Phillips ruled the Crown failed to prove Jonker committed mischief or encouraged others to break the law. The ruling ends a two-year legal ordeal and marks a major setback for the government’s efforts to criminalize convoy participants.
  • Medicaid will no longer cover “gender-affirming care,” per the White House. President Donald Trump’s “One big, beautiful bill,” which passed the House of Representatives on May 22, will ban Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care (including gender reassignment surgery) for all ages. The legislation will also prohibit “gender transition procedures” as an “essential health benefit” under Obamacare insurances.
  • Florida becomes second US state to ban water fluoridation. Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a measure prohibiting local governments from adding fluoride to their water systems, making it the second state in the country after Utah implemented a statewide ban earlier this year.
  • Two days after federal officials took action against synthetic dyes for food and beverages, PepsiCo Inc. chairman and chief executive officer announced that they are phasing out artificial colours and reducing other artificial ingredients in their products.
  • While dozens of protesters have been camping on-site since the May 13th ruling to cull ~400 ostriches in Edgewood, BC, officials from the US Department of Health and Human Services, NIH, and FDA penned a letter urging Canadian health officials to save the ostriches and pledged their full support for testing and research efforts. They argued that since the flock is no longer infected with the avian flu, there is potential value in studying their antibodies.
  • In another ostrich win, during a meeting that included over 200 members of the public, the Regional District of Central Kootenay passed a motion blocking the Canadian Food Inspection Agency from dumping hundreds of ostrich carcasses into the local landfill—unless the agency can prove the birds are actually infected with avian flu.
  • World’s Largest Cricket Farm Collapses. Aspire Canada’s massive insect-farming facility in London, Ontario—once touted as the future of food—has gone into receivership despite taxpayers sinking over $35 million into the high-tech factory.

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  • The new Chief Medical Advisor to Trump’s Make America Healthy Again movement, Dr. Aseem Malhotra, has announced that his top priority is to halt the COVID-19 shots as they do “more harm than good.”
  • The US Department of Health and Human Services plans to stop recommending that pregnant women, children and teens routinely take the COVID-19 vaccine. Currently, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that all children ages 6 months and up get the COVID-19 shot.
  • Three new bills advancing in the Texas Legislature aim to further roll back elements of the transgender agenda. HB1066 clarifies that parents who don’t use a child’s preferred name or pronouns are not guilty of abuse or neglect. SB1257 mandates insurance coverage for de-transition procedures if transition treatments are covered. HB229 defines biological terms like “female” in state law. These build on existing Texas laws that ban youth gender transitions, bar males from women’s sports, restrict DEI programs, and prohibit sex changes on IDs based on gender identity.
  • Major legal blow to Pfizer: federal judge has ruled that Kansas can sue over “safe and effective” vaccine claims. Pfizer tried to block the case by citing federal liability protections under the PREP Act, but the judge said those protections don’t apply to consumer fraud claims. Kansas is accusing Pfizer of misleading the public and falsely marketing the vaccine as “safe and effective” while hiding known risks and limited efficacy.
  • Victory for food freedom: North Carolina lawmakers scrap raw milk ban after public pushback. Despite pressure from public health officials warning of salmonella, E. coli, and even bird flu, lawmakers dropped the ban from the Farm Act—marking a rare rollback of state control over what people choose to consume.
  • Florida Makes History by becoming the first state in the US to criminalize weather modification and geoengineering (SB56 / HB477). This is not just a legislative milestone—it is a declaration of atmospheric sovereignty.
  • A major legislative win in Tennessee: a new law prohibits public health officials from making claims beyond FDA-approved product labelling.
  • Moderna pulls flu/COVID shot after FDA flags weak data—shares tumble. Just weeks after touting its combo vaccine as superior, Moderna abruptly withdrew its FDA application following agency concerns over insufficient efficacy data.
  • Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is requiring all new vaccines to be tested against true saline-solution placebos before being licensed, and not other vaccines disguised as “placebos.” It’s a long-overdue move that critics say should’ve been standard all along.
  • The UK’s National Health Service has drafted plans to test all children who believe they are “transgender” for autism due to findings in the Cass Review, which noted that “mental health conditions were disproportionately common among children and young people with gender dysphoria.” Meanwhile, in the US, the Department of Health and Human Services announced that it now recommends therapy for minors with gender dysphoria.

    Bonus Freedom Wins!

  • 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.
  • Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced the Alberta government is filing legal action against Ottawa with the provincial Court of Appeal over the federal government’s net-zero electricity regulations. Alberta says the regulations override provincial jurisdiction, drive up electricity costs by about 35 percent, and increase the risk of power outages.
  • President Trump’s May 1st Executive Order—“Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Biased Media”—plans to cut federal funds to media accused of pushing political propaganda. “No American should be forced to fund media that misinform citizens and silence opposing views.”
  • In a press release issued on May 2, US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced that his department slashed $54M in “woke” transportation university grants. “These grants were used to advance a radical DEI and green agenda that were both wasteful and ran counter to the transportation priorities.” Musk praised the cuts saying: “The Department of Government Efficiency is glad to stop funding studies to determine if roads are racist.”
  • Landmark win: Alberta judge rules firing unvaxxed remote worker was unlawful. In a first-of-its-kind ruling (Yee v. WestJet, 2025 ABCJ 87), an Alberta court found it illegal to fire a remote WestJet employee for refusing the COVID shot since she worked from home and had a religious exemption.
  • 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.
  • Monsanto Slammed with $175M 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.
  • 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.”
  • Online Harms Act Dies: Canada’s controversial Bill C-63, aimed at regulating (or censoring) online content that’s been deemed as “hateful” or “misinformation” by the establishment, failed to pass after Parliament was prorogued in January.

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