
National Health Freedom Action and National Health Freedom Coalition look forward to what this year may bring to our health freedoms. The following are some health freedom issues to watch as the year goes forward:
Fluoride trial heads for a final showdown with oral arguments scheduled for March 3, 2026
As an epic health freedom battle that was roundly ignored by media during most of the seven years it wound its way through a federal district court, the fluoride trial seemed to end with a stunning victory for the plaintiffs. Fluoride Action Network (FAN) and other fluoride critics had sued the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for the failure to protect the American public from the “unreasonable risk of reduced IQ in children” that fluoridation poses. The judge sternly ordered the EPA to adopt a rule to protect America from the risk and that should have been the end of that; but the EPA was stubbornly unmoved and, instead, appealed the judge’s verdict to a federal court of appeals.
Judge Edward Chen
The EPA’s appeal moved from the battle over the safety of fluoridation -that contest was over- and instead directed its attack on Judge Edward Chen, the trial court judge, sharply criticizing the way he conducted the trial. The EPA’s brief to the appeals court said that Judge Chen had “commandeered” the trial to the benefit of the plaintiffs by accepting evidence that he should not have accepted, which actually was a six-year government study showing harm and several other gold standard studies. The EPA’s brief also claimed that the plaintiffs had no standing to sue in the first place, and that contention alone, if found valid, would cause dismissal of the entire lawsuit, even at this late date. (Judge Chen had carefully weighed the issue of standing and had ruled that they did have standing). It is a bit strange to think that, in a country where 160 million are being forced to drink, cook, and bathe with fluoridated water, nobody could be found who had standing to sue over it!
Weighing the odds in the upcoming showdown, FAN and the other plaintiffs continue to be represented by attorney Michael Connett, who, with his detailed knowledge of fluoride science and the law, carried the trial court case to victory. The EPA’s appellate arguments seem sketchy, thrown together to try to find something that would stick. On the other hand, no appeal to an appellate court is a sure thing. If two out of three appellate judges want to throw the entire case out, the EPA’s arguments give them something to grab onto. Oral arguments for the appeal are on Zoom at 10 a.m. Pacific time on March 3, 2026, and are expected to wrap up in one hour. People hoping for freedom from having to drink fluoridated water, and anyone rooting for health freedom in general, will be wanting to join Zoom and watch the drama!
Attorney Michael Connett
Will the US finally stop using mercury amalgam dental fillings?
For more than three decades the science has been strong enough to compel an end to the use of mercury amalgam fillings. But, in 2009, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), still in the thrall of Big Pharma and other special interests, followed the dogma of the dental establishment and ruled that dental amalgam fillings, which are half mercury and which serve as a mercury-delivery system, are fine, fine, fine. Not only does this mercury go into the body of the person with the amalgam filling, but the EPA estimates that total pollution from dental mercury in the US is 28 tons per year, and of that total, that dental offices discharge 5.1 tons of mercury into publicly owned treatment works.
In 2021, change was coming, and with more and more countries banning amalgams, the FDA published a press release admitting that placement of mercury amalgams in the mouths of pregnant women, children, and people with neurological disorders was something to avoid. Then in 2025, there was greater change when the European Union’s ban on mercury amalgam fillings took effect and when 153 countries, including the United States, at a conference for the Minamata Convention on Mercury, agreed to phase out dental mercury amalgams by 2034. US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. spoke by video at the convention and showed strong support for the phase out. Kennedy, of course, has been an environmental attorney legendary for fighting mercury, and not just in fish. With the approval of Kennedy as HHS Secretary, hopes for ending mercury amalgams were raised high, and with Marty Makary, MD, a highly respected, high-integrity physician, as the FDA Commissioner, the stars are truly aligned for change.
FDA Commissioner
Marty Makary, MD


