Freedom Wins! – April 2026Published On: April 1, 2026Tags: Chemtrails, DEI, Food, Geoengineering, government, Health, Healthcare, Justice, LGBT, MAiD, Natural Medicine, Pesticide, Positivity, Vaccines, WHO In a major free speech victory, the US government has agreed to stop leaning on Big Tech to police lawful speech. A settlement backed by a United States Supreme Court case bars key agencies—including the CDC and CISA—from threatening social media companies with penalties to compel them to remove content. After years of allegations that the Biden administration pressured platforms to control narratives around COVID-19 and elections, the agreement draws a clear line: the government can’t coerce censorship behind the scenes. Facing 8,000 lawsuits, Syngenta will stop producing paraquat —a herbicide linked to Parkinson’s disease. The company says it will end manufacturing by June 2026, citing market competition, as thousands of lawsuits and decades of research continue to tie the chemical to the neurological condition. Air Canada must compensate pilots fired for refusing to take the COVID jab. An arbitrator found that seven Air Canada pilots were wrongfully terminated for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine on religious grounds, ruling their rights were violated and awarding them compensation. Reuters warns of a “downward financial spiral” as vaccine uptake drops. With RSV shots down 40%, influenza 33%, shingles 19%, and COVID 17% in 2025, declining demand signals a shift towards personal health and freedom. Pharmaceutical giant Merck is already cutting jobs as global demand for the HPV vaccine declines, according to a Bloomberg report. In a sign that all things woke are diminishing in at least some aspects of Canadian academia, the University of Alberta reversed its so-called diversity, equity, and inclusivity (DEI) policies in its hiring department. University officials admit that the DEI policy only fueled more division. A coalition of civil liberties and medical freedom groups has launched the COVID Justice Resolution, urging the US Senate to confront COVID-era failures and prevent them from happening again. The proposal rejects emergency overreach, reinforces constitutional protections, and sets limits on future government powers—while safeguarding bodily autonomy, free speech, and religious liberty. University College London has agreed to pay a precedent-setting £21 million to settle a lawsuit brought by 6,500 former students who claimed their education was gutted by COVID closures—cancelled lectures, substandard Zoom teaching, locked libraries and labs. And this is just the beginning. Lawyers are now pursuing 36 more UK universities on behalf of 194,000 claimants. Charges have been dropped against Jeremy McDonald, the Ontario father who faced serious criminal charges after defending his home from an armed intruder while his family slept. While the Kawartha Lakes Police Service laid several charges on the crossbow-wielding intruder, they had also charged McDonald for aggravated assault and assault with a weapon. Toronto Public Health backs down: 30,000 students will not be suspended over vaccine records. Toronto Public Health quietly backed away from enforcing school suspensions tied to vaccine records after the scale of the policy became impossible to ignore, saying the move would allow families more time to update records. Alberta is pushing back against the expansion of assisted suicide by introducing legislation that would protect minors and those with mental illness as their sole condition. By drawing a clear line that vulnerable people deserve care, treatment, and support—not an expedited path to death—the province is taking a stand to ensure that end-of-life measures are not used as a substitute for real healthcare. Argentina formally completed its withdrawal from the World Health Organization, making it the second major nation this year to sever ties with the institution that spent the last five years pretending to be the arbiter of what goes into your body and your government’s policy decisions. The US walked out that same door earlier in January. US representative Chip Roy has introduced the LIABLE Act, a bill aimed at restoring legal accountability by stripping COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers of their federal immunity and allowing injured Americans to pursue civil lawsuits. By reopening the door to the courts—even retroactively—the legislation challenges the idea that powerful pharmaceutical companies should be shielded from consequences. More than 16,000 Australian businesses just received a $125 million settlement from the government over lockdown-era losses—demonstrating that even the most sweeping emergency powers are not beyond legal challenge. Windsor trucker Csaba Vizi, who was brutally injured by an arresting officer during the 2022 Freedom Convoy and later found not guilty on all charges, has now launched a lawsuit against the RCMP, the OPP, the Ottawa Police Service, and more. A small Alberta town is drawing a clear line: public spaces belong to everyone—not to any one ideology. Didsbury, Alberta, has passed a bylaw enforcing political neutrality on municipal property, removing symbolic displays—including Pride flags and crosswalks—from public infrastructure. The International Olympic Committee has announced that, beginning with the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, eligibility for women’s events will be limited to biological females, citing scientific evidence around performance differences. One of the largest petitions in Canadian history has now been presented to Parliament. The petition to enact the Charter of Health Freedom—now the third largest paper petition ever presented in Canada—aims to roll back recent regulatory changes that placed natural health products under stricter pharmaceutical-style oversight. Fifty-three US medical schools will now require comprehensive nutrition training, ensuring students complete at least 40 hours of instruction before graduating. The initiative aims to equip tens of thousands of new physicians each year with tools to prevent and manage chronic illness through diet and lifestyle—not just pharmaceuticals. One of the most influential firms on Wall Street, Goldman Sachs, has dropped diversity-based criteria from its board selection process—removing factors like race, gender identity, and sexual orientation from consideration. The shift comes amid growing pressure from investors, customers, and advocacy groups calling for a return to merit-based decision-making in corporate governance. Former Alberta candidate Caylan Ford is finally getting her day in court as her defamation lawsuit moves forward against those accused of orchestrating a coordinated smear campaign. With early rulings already discrediting key claims and some defendants settling, momentum is shifting toward accountability. Republican Governor Brad Little of Idaho has signed a law that will prohibit businesses, schools and government entities from directing most medical mandates, including vaccination requirements. Taking a step toward greater democratic accountability, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says the province will hold a referendum this October asking voters directly whether immigration levels should be adjusted, whether provinces should gain more control over courts and social programs, and even whether the Senate should be abolished. A new national poll by Zogby Strategies of registered American voters shows overwhelming support—often 80–88% of voters—for core health freedoms, such as the right to refuse medical treatment and make personal healthcare decisions. General Mills announced that it has removed certified synthetic colours from all of its products for K-12 schools, and will remove them from its full US retail portfolio by the end of next year. Three more US states–Minnesota, Arizona, and Tennessee–have introduced legislation designating COVID-19 mRNA injections as “Biological Weapons of Mass Destruction.” Idaho, Iowa, Montana, and South Carolina had previously sought to restrict the use of mRNA technology. Parents are being told they won’t lose their children for holding their beliefs or acknowledging biological reality. The Trump administration has issued guidance to all 50 states clarifying that child welfare agencies cannot remove children from their homes solely because parents decline to affirm a child’s self-identification as the opposite sex. Citing federal law under the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act, officials emphasized that intervention must be based on clear evidence of abuse or serious harm—not ideological disagreements. An unnamed leading tech firm has agreed to pay $15 million after the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found reasonable cause that workers were denied religious and disability-based vaccine exemptions and, in some cases, were terminated. Recent PostsPreviousHow Parliament Made It Legal for the Media to Lie to YouNextWhen Thought Becomes OffenceExplore More…





