WASHINGTON – There appeared to be no let-up Saturday as Americans angered by the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade hit the streets for a second day of mass protests.
From Washington, D.C., where the conservatives on the court Friday swept aside a half-century of precedent to do away with the law, all the way to the West Coast, there were angry, raucous protests against a ruling that almost immediately made access to abortions all-but-impossible in half the country.
Those protests were, at times, met with counter-protests by anti-abortion activists elated by the ruling and determined to stop abortions from happening everywhere in the country.
Outside the Supreme Court building, a small-but-growing group of protesters chanting “Women’s rights are human rights” confronted a preacher who had waded into the mix and appeared to be trying to drown them out.
“Listen to me, our religious convictions inform everything we do,” the Rev. Jonathan Tremaine Thomas said.
“Why are you trying to impose them on us?” 18-year-old Juliette Dueffert shouted back. “If you have a uterus, you can talk.”
“You’re clearly trying to talk over us,” another woman quickly chimed-in.
Soon anti-abortion protesters arrived chanting “Abortion is racist” and “Abortion is oppression” and were met with loud booing as police officers stood by ready to move in if necessary.
The momentous struggle over abortion spilled over into the first-ever Unity March, a rally that was happening in Washington at the same time to protest against rising anti-Asian violence in the United States.
Many of those demonstrators also condemned the recent Supreme Court ruling.
“We’re fighting for abortion,” said 17-year-old Anh Nguyen, a Houston-based Asian activist and Yale freshman. “We’re fighting for the reduction of anti-Asian violence, protection for our communities.”
In Mississippi, anti-abortion protesters descended on the state’s last clinic, the Jackson Women’s Health Center.
There, shouting matches erupted between them and members of the “Pink House Defenders,” who are the volunteers that for years have been escorting women in need of abortions through the gauntlet of protesters that have been picketing the clinic for years.
As protesters tossed gory photos of supposedly aborted fetuses from their pickup trucks and yelled at reporters covering the unfolding chaos, several defenders tried to block them from driving into the clinic parking lot and Jackson police officers quickly arrived to keep the warring parties apart.
In the midst of the mayhem, an NBC News producer had a cellphone knocked out of her hands.
It was Mississippi that set into motion the series of legal steps that resulted on the overturning of what had been a constitutional right to an abortion. Under a “trigger law” passed by Mississippi lawmakers back in 2007, the clinic now has less than 10 days before it has to shut down.
“I will tell you this — any patients who contact us we will see them” as long as the clinic stays open, Diane Derzis, the chief executive officer of Jackson Women’s Health Organization, told local media after the Supreme Court ruling came down. “We will make sure we see them in those 10 days. A woman should not have to leave the state to receive health care.”
In Rhode Island, the Providence Police Department tweeted that it was investigating allegations that an off-duty officer “assaulted” a woman during Friday’s raucous protests outside the statehouse.
The officer, who was not identified by the department, has been placed on “leave with pay” and a criminal investigation and administrative review is underway, the department said.
Madani and Bellamy-Walker reported from Washington, Alexander from Jackson, and Siemaszko from New York City.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com