At the ongoing Freedom Convoy trial, something extraordinary is unfolding—something that the mainstream media won’t shout from the rooftops. In a courtroom thick with tension, Tamara Lich’s lawyer, Lawrence Greenspon, is methodically dismantling the Crown’s wildly exaggerated narrative. And not with flair or drama, but with facts, clarity, and a quiet confidence that’s impossible to ignore.
From the very beginning, the Crown painted Lich and fellow organizer Chris Barber as if they were criminal masterminds—dangerous agitators scheming in the shadows. The kind of villains you’d expect in a bad political thriller. But in reality? They were two everyday Canadians who found themselves at the helm of a peaceful protest that echoed across the nation.
Now, with each passing day in court, Greenspon is exposing just how absurd the government’s case really is. The so-called “super criminals” are being revealed for what they truly are: people who stood up for others when it wasn’t popular, when it wasn’t easy, and when the stakes were sky-high.
Witnesses are shaky, timelines don’t add up, and the prosecution’s narrative is looking more like fiction than fact. Meanwhile, Greenspon continues to peel back the layers, reminding the court—and the country—that dissent is not a crime. That standing your ground and speaking your truth is not illegal, no matter how inconvenient it may be for those in power.
This isn’t just about two individuals on trial. It’s about what kind of country we want to live in. One where peaceful protest is silenced with handcuffs—or one where the people still have the right to raise their voices when something feels deeply wrong.
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With the Crown’s case steadily unraveling, the question lingers: will justice recognize courage for what it is?
Where do you stand—were Lich and Barber patriots standing for freedom, or something else entirely?