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🧵THREAD 1/6 24 JUNE 2026 — UNLESS MEANINGFUL HELP COMES BEFORE THEN, I WILL LIKELY APPLY FOR DEBT ADJUSTMENT — FINLAND'S CLOSEST EQUIVALENT TO PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY. NO COVID PASS. NO BREAKFAST. THE FIGHT FOR OUR FREEDOMS. I was refused service at a Fazer café in Helsinki because I did...

30,380 görüntüleme • 28 gün önce •via X (Twitter)

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IN APRIL, I SENT THIS LETTER TO ELON MUSK The letter was mailed to SpaceX, X, Tesla, and Neuralink for delivery to Mr. Musk. DHL confirmed delivery. Today, I am making the letter public. See attached. Certain details have been omitted from the published version. Whether any of those letters ever reached Mr. Musk's desk, I do not know. Two months have passed. I have received no known response. My "No COVID Pass, No Breakfast" case is now before the European Court of Human Rights. For challenging Finland and Fazer Restaurants over the discrimination I experienced, I have been ordered to pay approximately €131,000 in my opponents' legal costs, payable to the Finnish Government and Fazer. That amount is currently under enforcement. Separately, I have more than €40,000 in outstanding invoices from my own legal and expert team, who helped bring the case to the European Court of Human Rights. To avoid losing my creditworthiness, enforcement authorities have effectively given me two years to pay the €131,000 under enforcement—requiring roughly €6,000 net per month. Interest on the enforcement amount alone is currently about €750 per month, or €9,000 per year. My income is nowhere near that level. Unless meaningful support arrives before 24 June, I will likely be left with little choice but to apply for debt adjustment, Finland's closest equivalent to personal bankruptcy. I respectfully ask Elon Musk—or anyone with the means and willingness to help—to stand with me in this fight for freedom before 24 June. The second-class treatment that millions of us faced based on our medical status has no place in a free society. FULLSTOP. #CaseCovidPass Direct donations are intended for supporters outside Finland. The acquisition of artwork is open to interested parties worldwide. Please see the links in the comments. Private and discreet support is also possible. Contact me directly: [email protected] Thank you.

Mika Vauhkala

40,769 görüntüleme • 20 gün önce

Hello everyone, I am following up on my live stream of May 10, 2026, in which I announced my wish to take legal action against Justin Trudeau, François Legault and Christian Dubé. Over the last few days, I have taken the time to evaluate the pros and cons, and to consider the additional risks this would pose to my own life and my new career in the United States. I have taken the time to reflect and analyse which legal provisions and conditions will be useful to me in order to pursue these legal proceedings whilst protecting my life, that is to say, whilst seeking asylum in the United States. Technically, I could choose comfort—by the way I have nothing against being comfortable—I could choose the easy way out, but that goes against my conscience. But my sacrifices have gone on long enough. With your support, it is possible to be at the forefront of the fight whilst remaining comfortable and enjoying a pleasant life. So, I have made my decision: I have decided to initiate legal proceedings against Justin Trudeau personally, François Legault personally and Christian Dubé personally. As mentioned in my previous live stream, since this is a personal legal action, I do not need a lawyer, a member of the Quebec Bar; my experience as a lawyer between 1999 and 2022, and my high level of expertise in civil liability, in pursuing compensation claims on behalf of victims, is more than sufficient. My court case will be neither monitored nor inspected by the Quebec Bar; they will be unable to interfere with me or with this historic court case. To this end, I must serve the legal proceedings on the three liars. As François Legault and Christian Dubé are still Members of the National Assembly of the Province of Quebec, I can have them served by a bailiff at their places of work. But for Justin Trudeau, it is more difficult; I must serve him at his home. If anyone knows Justin Trudeau’s exact address, please send me the details (anonymously if you prefer) to my email: [email protected] Now, before filing the legal proceedings, I need to be sure that you are with me, both now and in the future, during the court hearings and also through out your monthly donations. Let’s start today: GiveSendGo BuyMeACoffee Donate monthly and share this live stream.

Gloriane Blais

13,875 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

To my family, my friends & fellow 🇳🇱 citizens The Netherlands Institute for Human Rights ruled that the Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND) discriminated against me because of my political beliefs. I respect the decision. Almost two years later, I am still excluded. My situation has not been fixed. That is very hard for me to understand. I never wanted to share this story. I speak four languages, I have a master’s degree in International Relations and Security, and I simply wanted to participate in the Dutch society & use my knowledge and life experience to help a better & safer Netherlands. Finding out that I was judged not by my skills, but by who I am, hurt me deeply. At the same time, it gave me a fire inside that will never go out. I belong to the Kurdish-Yezidi community, one of the most persecuted ethnic and religious minorities in the world. I never expected this to happen to me in the Netherlands, especially by the government itself. While many people my age are building their future, I have spent almost two years fighting the third largest ministry in the Netherlands: the Ministry of Justice and Security. I did not choose this. But the Netherlands is a democratic country governed by the rule of law. That is why I am taking the Dutch State to court in The Hague. Not only for myself, but for everyone who wants to be judged by their qualities, not by their political identity. Thank you.

Wahhab 🇳🇱 وَهّاب

47,474 görüntüleme • 14 gün önce

Today is the Religious Liberty Commission hearing in Washington, DC. I was supposed to be in that room today fighting for you. But after being removed from the Commission for standing by my religious beliefs, I will not be there. During my time on the Commission, I stood up for Americans whose voices were not being heard. I stood with desperate mothers whose religious exemptions were denied and whose children could not attend school due to a vaccine mandate. I met with nurses who lost their jobs for refusing the COVID vaccine because of their religious convictions. I stood with Navy Seals who lost their pensions simply for standing by their religious beliefs. The painful truth is this: My own religious freedom was denied while I was appointed to defend yours. Serving on that commission meant something deeply personal to me. I believed in the mission to defend the religious freedom of every American. While I may not be in that hearing room today, my voice and my conviction have not disappeared. Today I want to share something that has been on my heart for a long time. I am directing and producing a new documentary titled Mandated by Faith. This film will tell the stories of Americans whose religious convictions were tested. Nurses who served on the front lines during COVID, only to lose everything for refusing a vaccine which violated their faith. I have listened to these stories. I have cried with these nurses. And I knew they could not remain unheard. Because the truth is, what happened to them can happen to any of us. Many of you have reached out asking how you can help. We are now working to finish this documentary, and your support will help bring these stories to light. I may not be sitting in that hearing room today, but I am still standing for religious freedom. They may have taken away my seat, but they did not take away my voice. And I will continue to use it. This fight is far from over. 🙏 TruthFilmsDoc

Carrie Prejean Boller

261,232 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce

In the past few weeks, many Arabs and Muslims have discovered that I am not heterosexual. Since then, they have weaponized my sexuality against me. Words like "gay" and "faggot" are hurled at me every day now. So let me get this straight. I am gay, and I am not ashamed of who I am. I was ashamed of myself in Yemen; for twenty years, I was taught to hate myself. As a child, I learned in school from my Islamic Studies teachers that I should be killed for something I never chose. Every night, I prayed to God, asking Him to cure me from the gay ”phase”, to make me "normal" so that I could go to Heaven as a good Muslim. My culture and my people convinced me that my very existence was a sin, that I was sick, and that the only cure for this supposed sickness was the death penalty. And honestly, I stand with Jews today, not as an act of defiance against my culture, as some believe. But because, as a gay man, I know what it feels like to be hated and loathed for something that I did not choose. Gay never occupied a Muslim country, yet we face death penalties in 13 Muslim countries and jail in 43 Muslim countries – simply for being gay. I stand against this. It’s called self-preservation. I am not ashamed of my sexuality. I am ashamed of my culture that seeks my blood because of something I did not choose. So, go ahead, call me gay, a faggot, a murtad, a kaffer. I no longer fear your words or knives. And most certainly, I am not afraid of the "Hell" that you keep speaking of. I lived through hell under Sharia for 20 years, where I was forced to conceal my identity so that I wouldn’t get killed. For simply exiting. For being different. I am privileged enough to say that I no longer fear you and that I no longer live under Sharia anymore. But I do fear for my gay brothers and sisters who still live among you and must endure a life of fear, denial, and taught self-hatred. Who are told in schools and mosques that they are sins and that they should be killed. I fear for their lives and I aim to be a voice for them. Because when I grew up in Yemen, I did not see a single person speak up for my rights and my right to existence. I wanna be the person that I wish 14-year-old me watched on the internet after coming back home from Islamic Studies classes, where my teachers taught me to be fearful of God and to believe that I should either conceal my identity or be killed.
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In the past few weeks, many Arabs and Muslims have discovered that I am not heterosexual. Since then, they have weaponized my sexuality against me. Words like "gay" and "faggot" are hurled at me every day now. So let me get this straight. I am gay, and I am not ashamed of who I am. I was ashamed of myself in Yemen; for twenty years, I was taught to hate myself. As a child, I learned in school from my Islamic Studies teachers that I should be killed for something I never chose. Every night, I prayed to God, asking Him to cure me from the gay ”phase”, to make me "normal" so that I could go to Heaven as a good Muslim. My culture and my people convinced me that my very existence was a sin, that I was sick, and that the only cure for this supposed sickness was the death penalty. And honestly, I stand with Jews today, not as an act of defiance against my culture, as some believe. But because, as a gay man, I know what it feels like to be hated and loathed for something that I did not choose. Gay never occupied a Muslim country, yet we face death penalties in 13 Muslim countries and jail in 43 Muslim countries – simply for being gay. I stand against this. It’s called self-preservation. I am not ashamed of my sexuality. I am ashamed of my culture that seeks my blood because of something I did not choose. So, go ahead, call me gay, a faggot, a murtad, a kaffer. I no longer fear your words or knives. And most certainly, I am not afraid of the "Hell" that you keep speaking of. I lived through hell under Sharia for 20 years, where I was forced to conceal my identity so that I wouldn’t get killed. For simply exiting. For being different. I am privileged enough to say that I no longer fear you and that I no longer live under Sharia anymore. But I do fear for my gay brothers and sisters who still live among you and must endure a life of fear, denial, and taught self-hatred. Who are told in schools and mosques that they are sins and that they should be killed. I fear for their lives and I aim to be a voice for them. Because when I grew up in Yemen, I did not see a single person speak up for my rights and my right to existence. I wanna be the person that I wish 14-year-old me watched on the internet after coming back home from Islamic Studies classes, where my teachers taught me to be fearful of God and to believe that I should either conceal my identity or be killed.

Luai Ahmed

2,241,532 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce