![]() ![]() ![]() CNN Correspondent Donie O'Sullivan said some are activists who have been working on this issue while others are tourists from states who are already implementing abortion restrictions. Hundreds of people on both sides of the issue are outside the building in Washington, DC, to make their voices heard. Already, nearly half of the states have or will pass laws that ban abortion while others have enacted strict measures regulating the procedure. Going forward, abortion rights will be determined by states, unless Congress acts. The opinion is the most consequential Supreme Court decision in decades and will transform the landscape of women's reproductive health in America. People are speaking out against the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Protests outside the Supreme Court on Friday have been peaceful so far, according to CNN correspondents on the scene. Supreme Courthouse on June 24, in Washington, DC. "Knowing that women of color are going to bear the brunt of this decision" made sitting home, raging on social media, an impossibility, she said - so she joined those on the street. The daughter of a Filipina mother and Armenian father, Khatcherian knew that people would be watching. Mia Khatcherian, 32, felt a pang of guilt at her first reaction to the court’s decision: She was happy to live in New York state, where abortion is expected to remain a protected right under state law. "It felt selfish," she said. Hoping it would change something, if only a little, for someone who could not be there. No one was quite sure where the march was heading - they just wanted to be there, to be together. Kaluta was in Washington Square Park as the city’s protest hub filled up a little before 6:30 p.m. And it still hurts more than you ever thought." "It’s like seeing the train coming toward you," said Julia Kaluta, who received the news on her 24th birthday. After today, the range of options has been severely curtailed, she said. A rising senior, Kaplan has yet to settle on a college, and is pondering which state to spend the next years of her life. “My (20-year-old) sister also came in the room screaming and crying about what was happening.”Īlready, the future looks more limited. “I would want to say I was surprised, but I don't really feel like I was,” Kaplan said. The two high school students had found out about the Supreme Court's decision this morning, through a barrage of posts on friends’ Instagram stories. Watching from the sidewalk, cheering on the protesters, were 17-year-old Eden Kaplan and 16-year-old Sophie Kirk. The air was filled with chants of “Illegitimate Court" and "Pro-Life? It’s a lie, people die!” Cyclists dressed in black blocked off the cross streets, frustrating some drivers. It is the right thing to do.”Ĭruz also thinks that if violence does occur, it will be organized and will ring similar to the kind of stuff we witnessed back in 2020 with Antifa and Black Lives Matter after the death of George Floyd.On Friday, from Washington Square Park up to Union Square, past Madison Square Park and the outdoor diners in the Flatiron - some whooping encouragement some gazing in bafflement - New Yorkers marched. “We’re going to see the decision soon, in the next week to 10 days, and I believe the court is going to do something that many of us have been working for and praying for our entire lives,” the Texas Republican stated during the interview on Newsmax’s “National Report.” “I believe the court is going to overturn Roe v. Ted Cruz stated that he’s concerned if Roe is overturned the “left will lose their minds.” It seems pretty likely that we’ll see some real serious stuff go down if this “right” to murder the unborn is taken away from the bloodthirsty progressives in our nation.ĭuring an interview with Newsmax, Texas Republican Sen. We’ve already seen many assaults and acts of vandalism carried out by pro-abortion groups like Jane’s Revenge and Ruth Sent Us, against pro-life organizations. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |