Police arrest ‘Billboard Chris,' Christian activist in EU capital for denouncing child transgender treatments
Chris Elston, also known as "Billboard Chris," and ADF International official Lois McLatchie Miller were detained by Brussels police while protesting gender-affirming care for children. They were released after several hours and not charged but were instructed to destroy their signs.
"Chris and I were arrested for stating a simple truth in public: no child is born in the wrong body. I called the police because we were being surrounded and felt threatened. But instead of addressing the aggression of the mob, the police arrested us—two people standing peacefully with signs, open to conversation," McLatchie Miller told Fox News Digital.
Marjorie Taylor Greene Pushes Bill To Punish Those Who Perform Gender Transition Measures On Minors
"That this happened in the heart of Europe is deeply troubling. If speaking up for children is now grounds for arrest, then our freedom to speak the truth on any important issue is truly in danger," the ADF International employee added.
Elston, well known for wearing billboards decrying transgender medical treatment for children out in public, stood out in the streets of the Belgian capital alongside McLatchie Miller. Both wore billboards, with the ADF employee's sign reading, "Children are never born in the wrong body" and Elston's reading, "Children cannot consent to puberty blockers."
Read On The Fox News App
According to ADF International's press release, the signs drew a crowd of onlookers, some of whom got aggressive.
In a video recorded before their arrest, Elston showed Brussels police forming a ring around him and his colleague to keep onlookers from getting too close.
"And we have quite a scene unfolding in Brussels, Belgium," Elston said in the recording. "We have been getting incredibly harassed for about the last hour. We've remained perfectly calm as always, having conversations about what is the greatest child abuse scandal in modern medicine history."
New House Bill Would Make Trump Ban On Transgender Troops Permanent
Elston continued, saying they were the ones who called the police to protect them from harassment; however, he noted that the officers then ordered them to put away their signs.
"We called the police because a man was harassing and following Lois everywhere she went, trying to stop us from filming. The police have now arrived, and they've told me I have to put – and Lois – they've told us we have to put our signs away. I have refused. He said I was violating the law. I said, 'What law?' He can't name it," he said.
Elston added that he was told he was going to be arrested, stating, "So I said, 'That's fine. Go ahead.'"
Click Here For More Coverage Of Media And Culture
ADF International's press release stated the two were eventually arrested and taken to two separate police stations, where they were "ordered to remove their clothes and searched." They were released several hours later.
In a statement, ADF International executive director Paul Coleman ripped Brussels' government for the action.
"The Belgian authorities not only failed to uphold the fundamental right to speak freely, they turned the power of the state against those who were peacefully exercising their rights at the behest of a mob," he said.
"This is the type of authoritarianism we challenge in other parts of the world, and it's deeply disturbing to see it here in the very heart of Europe. While we are grateful our colleague has been safely released, we are deeply concerned by her treatment at the hands of the police in Brussels," Coleman added.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Belgian police for comment but did not immediately receive a response.Original article source: Police arrest 'Billboard Chris,' Christian activist in EU capital for denouncing child transgender treatments
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Trump must approach Putin with a very big stick
It has long been evident that President Trump believed Russian President Vladimir Putin could be persuaded to settle for less than the total conquest of Ukraine — specifically, for control over the Donbas region in the east — and that this would somehow be a reasonable 'deal.' From the moment Russia invaded in 2022, many analysts warned that Putin's ambitions extended well beyond those two provinces. Trump's 2024 election victory set up a test. Now, more than three years into the war and seven months since his return to the White House, Trump seems to believe that moment has arrived. His planned Aug. 15 meeting with Putin in Alaska suggests that the Russian leader may finally be ready to sign on to such an arrangement. The outlines of a deal are familiar: Russia retains roughly one-fifth of Ukrainian territory in exchange for a ceasefire and some form of security arrangement that halts the war. It is not yet clear if Putin would actually agree, and if agreement might not be a trick. But no less an obstacle may be Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Over the weekend, a day after the Alaska meeting was announced, Zelensky reiterated that 'Ukrainians will not gift their land to the occupier.' At the same time, he left the door open to 'real decisions' for peace — but only, he emphasized, with Ukraine at the table. Trump and Putin plan to meet without Zelensky. There is a game of great powers with spheres of influences and vassal states that can be bullied. Trump does not lack bargaining chips. The most immediate is the secondary sanctions package scheduled to take effect this month, which would impose tariffs and other penalties on countries —including allies such as India — buying Russian oil, effectively forcing governments to choose between discounted energy and access to the U.S. market. The threat has been enough to rattle Russia's trading partners and, if maintained, could pressure Moscow toward compromise. Ukraine also has a fresh offer of military support from NATO countries, one that Trump himself endorsed with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte last month. It allows NATO states to supply Ukraine with American weapons and ammunition for the foreseeable future. That guarantee of ongoing Western backing makes it less likely that Kyiv can be coerced. If Zelensky is to contemplate a deal that cedes territory, he would be wise to demand compensations that go beyond words — they must be concrete, enforceable and immediate. Given the nature of things, he will need Trump to represent him at the table, beginning with the Alaska meeting. The core elements of a deal acceptable to Ukraine might include the following. EU membership: Ukraine's fast-track admission to the European Union would give it a secure economic and political anchor in the West, even without NATO membership. Brussels will inevitably invoke its process and the need for reforms — especially on corruption — but events have overtaken bureaucracy. Ukraine has earned the right to be integrated fully into Europe. Trump can strong-arm the Europeans to make this happen. Reparations for destruction: Russia should be required to pay, directly or indirectly, for the rebuilding of Ukraine's cities, roads and energy infrastructure. This is a moral and practical necessity given the estimated half-trillion dollar reconstruction cost over the next decade. Frozen Russian funds, estimated at over $300 billion, can be applied toward this. Return of abducted civilians and prisoners: The safe return of the thousands of Ukrainians, including children and political detainees, believed to have been taken into Russian custody since the war began must be non-negotiable. A binding non-aggression agreement: Russia's invasion shattered trust across the region. Any settlement must include a formal pledge, with verification mechanisms, that Moscow will not attack Ukraine again or undermine its sovereignty through covert means. Given Russia's meddling in recent decades in Moldova, Georgia and other former Soviet republics in addition to Ukraine, this guarantee must be broad and backed by enforceable consequences. These provisions would not make the loss of territory painless, but they could give Ukraine a secure future within the European sphere and the breathing room to rebuild. These concessions would be hard to extract from Putin — but that's what negotiations are all about. Trump and his team need to come armed with carrots and a very big stick. The stakes are high enough for some chances to be taken, since the war's toll is staggering. Ukraine's economy has contracted by roughly 20 percent. Daily military expenditures are estimated at $140 million, totaling about $51 billion a year. Western nations have poured more than $100 billion in aid into the fight, but the damage is overwhelming: millions displaced, tens of thousands killed and over 10,000 documented civilian deaths. Russia has paid heavily as well. By mid-2024, its war bill had reached $250 billion, with defense spending consuming 40 percent of the government budget this year. Falling oil and gas revenues have deepened the strain. Over 100,000 Russian soldiers are estimated to have been killed — a human cost that would be politically unsustainable in a more open society. That Putin has been willing to bear such losses to enlarge the world's biggest country by a marginal amount is a testament to the pathological nature of his rule. That pathology is unlikely to vanish — which is why any deal must not simply stop the shooting, but guard against the next war. If Trump can do that, he may indeed bring the Ukraine war to a close. If he can also force Netanyahu to end the Gaza war, a Nobel Peace Prize ceases to be absurd. History works in strange ways, through the strangest of agents. Dan Perry is the former Cairo-based Middle East editor and London-based Europe-Africa editor of the Associated Press, the former chairman of the Foreign Press Association in Jerusalem and the author of two books.


Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Trump: Russia and Ukraine peace requires 'land swapping'
'Russia has occupied a big portion of Ukraine,' Trump said. 'They've occupied some very prime territory. We're going to try and get some of that territory back for Ukraine.' Friday, Trump said, is a 'feel out meeting' in which he and Putin can discuss the likelihood of peace. 'If it's a fair deal, I will reveal it to the European Union leaders and to the NATO leaders and also to President Zelenskyy,' Trump said. 'I may say, 'lots of luck, keep fighting,' or I may say we can make a deal.' Trump said it would take only two minutes to suss out Putin's interest in a deal but he trusts Putin, who has misled him in the past, is sincere this time. 'I believe [Putin] wants to get it over,' Trump said. 'Now, I've said that a few times, and I've been disappointed.' Immediately after meeting with Putin, Trump said he would call European leaders and Zelenskyy to talk next steps, promising the next meeting would feature Putin and Zelenskyy and Trump, if needed. 'I will put the two of them in a room,' he said. 'I think it will get solved.' Meanwhile, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is convening a virtual summit on Wednesday where Trump, Zelenskyy and European leaders can discuss a potential agreement with Putin. The virtual summit will focus on pressure options against Russia, questions about Ukrainian territories seized by Russia, security guarantees for Kyiv and the sequencing of potential peace talks.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump Teases Tariffs on Foreign Chips in the 'Next Week or So'
President Trump hasn't forgotten about tariffing foreign chips. In an interview with CNBC, Trump indicated he'll introduce tariffs on semiconductors as soon as next week, alongside other duties targeting imports, such as pharmaceuticals. "And within the next week or so, we're going to be announcing tariffs specifically. This is a separate class than the 15% tariffs on sort of everything,' he said, referencing the tariffs he announced last week on goods from the European Union, Japan, and over a dozen other markets. "We're going to be announcing [tariffs] on semiconductor and chips, which is a separate category because we want them made in the United States," Trump added. The president didn't provide details or say if any exemptions will be granted. But the policy will no doubt raise concerns about increased costs for PC processors and a wide variety of electronics that use foreign-made chips. Currently, Apple, AMD, Qualcomm, Nvidia, and even Intel source at least some chip production from Taiwan's TSMC. Although TSMC has started chip production at its first fab in Arizona, a bulk of its semiconductor production is still based in Taiwan. As a result, the contract chip maker urged the Trump administration in May to exempt the company from such tariffs, which it fears will threaten US chip demand. 'It could also undermine TSMC's financial capacity to timely execute its ambitious Arizona project,' the company said, which includes plans for six fabs in the state. In April, Trump exempted chips, smartphones, and laptops from his "reciprocal tariffs' on China. But at the same time, the Trump administration signaled it would eventually tariff Chinese-made electronics separately through a special category of duties. 'We are taking a look at Semiconductors and the WHOLE ELECTRONICS SUPPLY CHAIN in the upcoming National Security Tariff Investigations,' Trump posted on Truth Social at the time. 'What has been exposed is that we need to make products in the United States, and that we will not be held hostage by other Countries, especially hostile trading Nations like China.'