The Western establishment just gave itself a ‘World Peace and Liberty’ award
By: Rachel Marsden
Ursula von der Leyen received the ‘judicial equivalent of the Nobel Peace Prize’ from Justin Trudeau in a perfect self-congratulatory orgy
Get a load of who won – and presented – a new honor that’s modestly being 
compared to the Nobel Peace Prize.
If you haven’t heard of the World Law Foundation non-profit organization, you 
could be forgiven. But despite only existing since 2019, it has already created 
an award described by the Western press as nothing less than the “judicial 
equivalent” of the world’s top award for promoting peace.
Wonder where they got that idea, if not from the organization itself. Can anyone 
just create a think tank and put it in charge of an award branded as the latest 
version of the Nobel Peace Prize? Good luck with that – unless, of course, your 
board is loaded up with establishment heavyweights – in which case, people just 
tell themselves that it must be legit since all these VIPs wouldn’t otherwise be 
involved.
So a few days ago, the humble folks of the World Law Foundation gathered at the 
United Nations in New York for the World Law Congress. One of the big items on 
the agenda was to hand out this year’s World Peace and Liberty Award to none 
other than European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, unelected de 
facto Queen of Europe, who accepted it on behalf of the commission.
Wow, didn’t see that one coming. Particularly with a former EU commissioner 
being the vice president of the group’s board, which also includes former Polish 
and French prime ministers, former Slovenian and Latvian presidents, a former EU 
vice president, and various Western establishment corporate figures, academics, 
and jurists.
You’d think that the same Von der Leyen-led EU Commission would have been a 
controversial candidate for a peace award given that it’s constantly sided with 
Washington’s military interventionism or at least have done little to nothing to 
stop it, and even led the way in the case of Libyan regime change. Most 
recently, the EU had a chance to stop the conflict in Ukraine before it even 
started by demanding Kiev’s adherence to the Minsk agreements and rejecting the 
West’s arming and training of anti-Russian fighters on the border with Russia.
“For the first time ever, the European Union will finance the purchase and 
delivery of weapons and other equipment to a country that is under attack,” von 
der Leyen said last year, calling it “a watershed moment.” Know what else is a 
watershed moment? Giving a peace award to someone whose knee-jerk reaction to 
armed conflict was to flood the zone with even more weapons. Then again, maybe 
the Nobel Peace Prize is indeed the right comparison, given that it was 
prematurely awarded to former US President Barack Obama even before he could 
order more bombing in Africa and the Middle East.
Von der Leyen also embodies the epitome of freedom, apparently. Or at least the 
best that this group could find. Who was she even up against? Did Genghis Khan’s 
estate turn down the award or something?
“We’ll present this month a legislative proposal for a Digital Green Pass,” she 
tweeted in March 2021. “The Digital Green Pass should facilitate Europeans’ 
lives. The aim is to gradually enable them to move safely in the European Union 
or abroad – for work or tourism.” She conveniently left out the part about 
Europeans being denied the basic right to access everyday venues, travel, work, 
and assemble – all because you chose not to take a jab that prevented neither 
transmission nor acquisition of an overwhelmingly survivable virus. We’re 
talking about the same Big Pharma jab about which von der Leyen has yet to hand 
over, even to an investigative committee of the EU itself, personal 
communications with the CEO of Pfizer around the time the EU was making a deal 
with the company.
Von der Leyen has been about as open and free with that matter as she and the EU 
Commission have been with media platforms and narratives that risk challenging 
the establishment dogma, issuing top-down bans and legislation that override any 
due process at the nation-state level.
So after asking themselves who’d be a worthy recipient of this global freedom 
and peace prize, and coming up with an unelected EU bureaucrat who’s dragging 
Europe and the world deeper into armed conflict and Europeans into poverty with 
inflation and intellectual darkness with censorship, they turned to the question 
of the presenter. These World Peace and Liberty folks were apparently like, “Who 
could we get to present this that embodies freedom and peace? Hey, how about 
that dude in Canada who did the Freedom Convoy crackdown and whose country 
helped train the Azov neo-Nazis to wage war against Russia then tried to hide it 
from the press to avoid embarrassment?” 
Enter Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Nothing says freedom like invoking 
a martial law-style crackdown over a bunch of honking truckers protesting 
against the two-tier society fostered by Trudeau’s authoritarian Covid mandates 
– and then blocking their bank accounts as a dissuasion technique.
“Brexit left many wondering if the union would continue to hold strong. 
Euroskepticism was on the rise. And protectionism and authoritarianism were 
becoming more prevalent,” Trudeau said, presumably as a newly-minted authority 
on authoritarianism, having just recently dabbled in it himself.
“As choruses like ‘America First’ got louder, both Canada and Europe held fast 
to our belief that growth doesn't come from putting up walls and turning 
inwards,” the Canadian prime minister added. Actually, no one has been singing 
backup to the America First chorus louder than Canada and Europe, blindly 
following along with the agenda set in Washington on everything from Ukraine to 
climate, even if it’s to the detriment of their own citizens’ interests.
If both – or either – of these Western entities had unambiguously stood up to 
Washington on recent key issues of global importance, then the world would be in 
a much better place, their own citizens first and foremost. And they wouldn’t 
need to go around blowing their own horn and making a big deal of a fawning 
establishment entity also offering them a blow on the world stage.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN