Just days ago, I was in Tallinn, Estonia, where I spoke at a key gathering on the future of global health policy and the threats posed by the WHO Pandemic Treaty.
The European Conference on Health and Human Rights is a high-level forum that brought together doctors, politicians, ministers, and experts from around the world, united by their concern over how UN and WHO policies are being used to advance a globalist agenda at the expense of national sovereignty and individual freedoms.
Several critical issues were touched upon over the course of the two days. But one thing rang loud and clear: the movement you and I are building is being seen, heard and it matters more than ever, today!
Check out a few highlights from my interventions during the conference:

The story starts before the conference even began.
The Estonian government did everything it could to sabotage the conference because they knew exactly what it was: a gathering of voices challenging the WHO and the growing wave of globalist policies that threaten our freedoms.
In the final days before the event, a wave of pressure and hostility emerged, driven by coordinated attacks from both the media and the political establishment. Speakers, including myself, were publicly targeted. The organisers, the World Council for Health, faced threats, blackmail, and last-minute ultimatums.
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was originally set to speak at the conference - one of the key voices behind the US’ withdrawal from the WHO Pandemic Treaty and the International Health Regulations (IHR) amendments. His presence would have sent a powerful sign.
But in the final days, he became the main target of a coordinated smear campaign. The Estonian government and main stream media didn’t just try to stop him - they did everything possible to discredit his position and defame what he stands for.
And sadly, they succeeded. Kennedy withdrew.
The message was becoming obvious: our conversation was not welcome.
But when it became clear they couldn’t stop our message, they tried to block the platform instead, forcing us out of the Estonian Parliament (the original venue of the event) just days before it was due to begin!
But despite all the chaos, the conference went ahead. And the truth was heard. They couldn’t silence the rest of us.
In my speech, I spoke about you and me as a global CitizenGO community that’s helped turn the tide against the WHO Pandemic Treaty. I spoke about the impact you and I have had together.
How grassroots pressure disrupted timelines.
How national governments reversed course.
How our voice is now impossible to ignore in Geneva.
I reminded the room that this fight isn’t just about institutions, it’s about citizens, like you and me, united in truth and courage!
It’s about the power of ordinary people, like you and me, when we choose to act together.
And people listened.
Experts and officials approached me afterwards to say one thing: “What you do and what you have created at CitizenGO is giving us hope”. That people are waking up, and the power of a community like ours is unstoppable!
That’s why I wanted you to hear this directly from me. Because what we’ve built together isn’t just making noise, it’s shaping the conversation.
It’s making an impact at the highest levels. And that’s exactly what those in power fear most.
Going forward, we need to stay awake, alert, and connected. The Pandemic Treaty may have been adopted in principle, but it remains incomplete. A critical annex on pathogens, known as PABS, is still under negotiation, and could quietly introduce some of the most dangerous mechanisms of control. That’s why we must keep exposing what’s at stake and keep pressing governments to reject its completion.
As you know, I’m more committed than ever to this campaign and I won’t rest until our health freedom and protected.
You and I have already made a massive impact. But the fight isn’t over. Let’s keep going, stronger and more united than ever.
Thank you for standing with me through thick and thin. Without you, none of this is possible.