Freedom-Wins (1)

Freedom Wins – November 2025

  • ACIP’s Childhood & Adolescent Immunization Schedule Workgroup now has an explicit mandate to study aluminum adjuvants under CDC’s revised Terms of Reference. Members must also now file conflict-of-interest disclosures.
  • Canada is finally moving to criminalize coerced sterilization through Bill S-228, drawing a firm legal line in defence of bodily autonomy. Inspired by Quebec Senator Amina Gerba’s recent testimony about how she was unknowingly sterilized during surgery in 2005 —a violation she only discovered years later— the bill declares that any medical procedure performed without free and informed consent is aggravated assault, striking at systemic abuses that have been harming indigenous and vulnerable women for decades.
  • A growing movement to “Make Science Honest Again” is taking shape. James Lyons-Weiler has drafted a Declaration of Deweaponization of Science—a charter that rejects censorship, protects open debate, and restores integrity to research. Backed by MAHA-aligned organizations and the World Society for Ethical Science, if adopted by journals and grant-making bodies, the declaration could act as a new Geneva Convention for knowledge.
  • Universities push toward merit and fairness: President Trump has announced a plan offering financial incentives to universities that cap international enrollment at 15%, freeze tuition for five years, ban racial preferences, require SAT scores, and stay politically neutral. Schools with massive endowments would also be required to offer free tuition for hard-science studies.
  • Florida has drawn a bold line in the sky. Attorney General James Uthmeier has announced the active enforcement of SB 56, a new state law that bans weather modification and geoengineering operations. State authorities have already begun taking action, conducting enforcement at several airports across Florida. By moving swiftly from legislation to boots-on-the-ground enforcement, Florida is saying “No” to secret atmospheric experiments.
  • A group of Nova Scotia doctors and patients has won public-interest standing to challenge the province’s intrusive health-data law, clearing the way for a full constitutional trial. Last year, Nova Scotia passed a law giving its Health Minister the power to seize citizens’ personal medical records without consent—including identifiable details from doctor–patient files. Backed by Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms lawyers, the group will now argue that warrantless access to medical files violates Charter rights and the sanctity of informed consent.
  • In a historic moment for medical freedom, Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo has announced that the state will end all vaccine mandates—a move that marks a turning point not only for Americans, but for all who value bodily autonomy and informed consent.
  • Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) is breaking the federal bottleneck on school meals by empowering local farmers, parents, and communities to feed their own kids real food again. Instead of forcing 30 million children to eat ultra-processed sludge dictated by Big Food and USDA lobbyists, MAHA’s plan restores local choice, nutrition, and common sense by redirecting subsidies towards regenerative, pesticide-free farms. It’s a win for children’s health, food freedom, and parental control—replacing corporate influence with fresh, local, and nourishing meals.

Don’t lose touch with uncensored news!  Join our mailing list today.

  • MAHA just scored a major victory for clean food. Walmart—the nation’s largest grocer—has announced that by January 2027, it will remove synthetic dyes, artificial sweeteners, preservatives, and more than 30 chemical additives from all of its US private-label foods.
  • A federal judge has upheld the right of parents and local school boards to keep inappropriate, agenda-driven material out of elementary school libraries. The decision, which came from a Florida case over a pro-LGBTQ children’s book, reinforces Governor Ron DeSantis’ Parental Rights in Education Act and protects families from ideological grooming disguised as “inclusion.”
  • For the first time in decades, the FDA is backing away from its blanket “all-in-one visit” vaccine policy. The agency now admits it cannot confirm the safety or effectiveness of giving MMR, DTaP, RSV, and other shots at the same appointment—and will require new clinical trials before drug makers can make those claims.
  • Netflix just lost an estimated $25 billion in stock market value after a massive wave of cancellations—over its push of radical transgender content toward kids and teens. Parents and viewers sent a loud message: corporations that target children with ideological programming will pay a price.
  • In the UK, the public is rising up for liberty. Thousands marched through London—joined by nearly three million petition signatures—to reject the government’s plan for a mandatory “BritCard” digital ID. With signs reading “No to Digital ID” and “Once Scanned, Never Free,” citizens made it clear they will not accept a system that ties basic employment and participation in society to government tracking and control.
  • The charges against Irish comedian Graham Linehan—who was arrested by five armed policemen in September over tweets that joked about transgenderism –have been dropped. Not only that, but the London Metropolitan Police have announced that they will no longer be criminally investigating “non-crime hate incidents.”
  • Florida Bill 188 has been introduced to require dates of vaccination on coroner reports of sudden deaths of babies, children and young adults. If passed, the bill will require medical examiners to review and document the deceased child’s immunization and medical records and report all vaccines or “emergency countermeasures” administered 90 days before death to the national Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID) and Sudden Death in the Young (SDY) Case Registry.
  • NBC News has laid off about 150 employees (roughly 7% of its newsroom), and dissolved its dedicated editorial teams covering niche and DEI-focused topics such as LGBT-themed news and racial identity politics.
  • In Virginia, parents and women scored a major victory for privacy and fairness after Governor Glenn Youngkin issued an executive order to keep female sports and female-only spaces exclusive to biological women. The order directs the Virginia Board of Health and school authorities to immediately enforce clear, reality-based boundaries in athletics, bathrooms, and language.
    Fenway Health in Massachusetts is the latest prominent medical system to stop conducting gender transition procedures on anyone under age 19 
    in response to the Trump administration cutting off federal funds to providers of such practices.
  • Fired for objecting to a male athlete on a women’s volleyball team, coach Melissa Batie-Smoose is now suing the California State University system under Title IX. Her case strikes back at policies that are erasing women from their own sports—where men claiming to be women have already taken more than 1,900 titles and hundreds of thousands in female prize money.
  • Earlier this year, a large handful of YouTube channels that were banned during COVID measures for spreading “misinformation”—including Corbett Report and Press for Truth—were reinstated. Yet againYouTube is restoring more channels, including GreenMedInfo and Sayer Ji’s channels, more than four years after permanently removing themYouTube wrote: “After taking another look, we can confirm that your channel does not violate our Community Guidelines. We’re sorry for any frustration our mistake caused you.”
  • On October 15th, 2025, leaders in Brussels launched “Make Europe Healthy Again” (MEHA)—a new citizen-driven effort to reclaim transparency, wellness, and local control in public health. MEHA rejects top-down mandates from global bodies and promotes a decentralized, people-first model instead. A clear win for sovereignty and informed choice.
  • Montreal teacher Rose Smith is taking a stand for truth and parental rights. After refusing a school policy that required teachers to lie to parents about a child’s pronouns, she launched a constitutional challenge with support from the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms. Smith argues no government has the authority to compel citizens to lie, and her case will now put freedom of expression, conscience, and parental rights to the constitutional test.
  • In Australia’s Northern Territory, women’s rights just scored a major victory. After a female inmate was reportedly sexually assaulted by a male prisoner identifying as a woman, the Aussie government announced a new policy banning men from female prisons.