Freedom Wins! – May 2026Published On: May 1, 2026Tags: Adverse Events, Censorship, Drugs, Food, government, Justice, Law, LGBT, Schools, Trans Agenda, Vaccines The Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has struck down the province’s sweeping 2025 ban on entering the woods, ruling that the government acted unreasonably and failed to consider Charter rights. The decision follows a constitutional challenge by the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms on behalf of Canadian Armed Forces veteran Jeffrey Evely, who was fined $28,872.50 for walking in the woods under the province’s blanket prohibition. Pfizer and BioNTech have been forced to halt their clinical trial for their updated COVID shot after failing to recruit enough participants. The shutdown signals a growing reluctance among healthy populations to participate in ongoing booster campaigns. 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. A physician fired by the Northern Health Authority in BC for declining a COVID-19 shot—citing prior heart issues—has been awarded nearly $390,000 in arbitration. Dr. Jannie du Plessis, 73, cited avoiding the jab due to a 2019 heart attack and bypass surgery. 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. A pushback is underway in Ottawa as Tamara Jansen introduces Bill C-218, the Right to Recover, aiming to block the expansion of assisted suicide to those suffering solely from mental illness. With the policy change slated for March 2027, this bill represents a critical opportunity to reaffirm that people in crisis should be met with care, treatment, and support—not abandonment. After being sued by The Daily Wire, The Federalist, and the State of Texas, the US State Department has agreed to a settlement that bars it from funding, promoting, or using tools to suppress or “fact-check” Americans’ lawful speech. The deal also blocks coordination with foreign governments and NGOs to do the same, closing a major loophole critics warned could be used to bypass constitutional protections. According to a recent Politico poll, vaccine risk awareness in the US is widespread. Nearly half of US adults think the science on vaccines is up for debate and that vaccine mandates are damaging. A separate poll by Zogby Strategies found strong support (80–88%) among registered voters for core health freedoms, including the right to refuse medical treatment and make personal healthcare decisions. Supply chain disruptions tied to the US–Iran conflict are forcing several American cities to reduce fluoride levels in public water. Israel is one of the world’s top exporters of fluorosilicic acid, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency, and the United States ranks among the top five importers. 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. Alberta’s new classroom “neutrality” law—Bill 25—bans “specialty flags,” allowing only the flags of Canada and Alberta in schools. The Education Minister says classrooms should focus on education, not activism. The Alberta government has announced plans to implement changes across public libraries to prevent minors from accessing material containing graphic sexual images. The bill promises not to ban books in libraries but to take steps to make sure children younger than 16 can’t access explicit visual depictions of sex. A Japanese study (Iwata et al.) suggests a new, less toxic path for cancer treatment may be on the horizon. Scientists have discovered a powerful anti-cancer compound in the gut microbiota of Japanese tree frogs (E. Americana). The compound eliminated tumours in mice with a single dose and minimal side effects. The largest real-world analysis to date evaluating anti-parasitic therapies ivermectin and mebendazole in human cancer patients has been completed with positive results. The study (Hulscher et al.) found that one in three patients had “no evidence of disease” after just six months of treatment! Additionally, half of all patients saw either tumour regression or stabilization. A school counsellor fired for speaking to a journalist about her district’s gender identity policy has reached a legal settlement after challenging her dismissal. Represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, longtime educator Kathy McCord secured a $195,000 payout from the South Madison Community School Corporation.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. Parents in America won’t lose custody of their children solely for their beliefs or acknowledging biological sex. 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. Recent PostsNextIdeology Is the WeaponExplore More…





