Controversial As Washington DC’s police were “fully-activated” in preparation for a weekend of riots and bloodshed, Georgia GOP Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene referred to the decision in Roe v. Wade as “a miracle.

Controversial As Washington DC’s police were “fully-activated” in preparation for a weekend of riots and bloodshed, Georgia GOP Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene referred to the decision in Roe v. Wade as “a miracle.

Controversial As Washington DC’s police were “fully-activated” in preparation for a weekend of riots and bloodshed, Georgia GOP Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene referred to the decision in Roe v. Wade as “a miracle.”

Greene added, “I think it’s a miracle, I’m so thrilled,” only moments after the Supreme Court released its 6-3 ruling on Friday. I’ve sobbed and prayed about this. Everyone in this area is jubilant at the Supreme Court’s daring and bravery in reversing Roe v. Wade.

I’m returning it to the states in the hopes that this will mark the beginning of the end for abortion. I believe that prayer is effective and that God is real, and I am ecstatic about this.

“May God bless everyone who did it.” Contrary to popular belief, abortion did not come to an end today.

Through the Dobbs ruling, the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade. As a result, the decision returns to the states, who are free to enact their own abortion regulations.

Whether they allow some degree of abortion in their state or whether they outlaw it totally.

Greene said, “Everyone needs to understand it’s not completely finished,” as she turned to face the pro-choice demonstrators in the area. People are over here yelling and demanding the right to murder babies, yet they are still able to do it.

They can still kill an unborn child; what they’re wanting hasn’t been taken away from them. But now that this has happened, nations are free to make their own decisions.

After six of the Supreme Court’s nine justices voted to reverse Roe v. Wade, which protects American women the right to an abortion, Greene spoke as demonstrations broke out in front of the court.

Since then, her left-leaning colleague Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has also been in front of the Supreme Court, conveying her sorrow at the passing of the law.

With hundreds gathered outside the court in Washington, DC, in anticipation of the much anticipated ruling, pro-abortion protesters howled in indignation as the long-awaited verdict was released soon after 10am EST on Friday.

Police were informed in a message that their department was “totally operational to support planned First Amendment rallies” until June 28 in a message that reporter Stephanie Ramirez was able to get.

“All members should be prepared to work extended trips as necessary,” has been issued as a warning to them. Weekend leave already provided to staff will be respected.

The department’s light-touch sickness program has been temporarily suspended, and commanders have been advised not to permit more than 5% of their staff to take time off.

Any employee who calls in sick must now undergo a formal evaluation before being given time off.

The landmark decision left many people visibly disappointed, and they hugged one another after discovering that their rallies against plans to end federal access to abortion had been in vain.

Pro-life activists who had assembled outside the US Supreme Court in anticipation of the historic decision also cheered with joy.

As word of the 6-3 decision started to go through the packed throng, some anti-abortionists were overcome with emotion and could be seen sobbing outside the US Supreme Court.

Due to the historic decision, much of the US is now prepared for a violent weekend. If the leak from last month that suggested an abortion ban was in the works came to pass, pro-abortion demonstrators pledged to riot.

Hard-left progressives, many of whom are connected to Antifa, have already set a number of pro-life organizations on fire in the US and scrawled threats of additional retaliation on nearby buildings.

They were observed shouting and dousing one another in champagne.

They went outside. The 1973 decision Roe v. Wade, which gave US women nationwide the right to an abortion, has been overturned by the Supreme Court.

The judgment, which was issued on Friday morning by six of the court’s nine justices, immediately and vehemently sparked protests from pro-abortion activists around the US.

The statement read, “The Constitution does not grant a right to abortion; Roe and Casey are reversed; and the power to restrict abortion is reinstituted to the people and their elected representatives.”

Both Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden have vehemently opposed any efforts to overturn Roe, and they are anticipated to criticize Friday’s decision.

However, pro-lifers are ecstatic by the decision, which means that now each state can implement its own abortion regulations.

The historic ruling can be largely attributed to the one-term administration of former President Donald Trump, who was able to pick three conservative justices.

That changed the composition of the Supreme Court from having five conservatives and four liberals to six conservatives and three liberals, empowering the right-wing justices to issue precedent-setting decisions on topics like abortion.

After being given back control of the matter, 26 states are anticipated to impose nearly comprehensive prohibitions on abortion, with many passing harsh new pro-choice measures recently in anticipation of the end of Roe.

New York and California, two liberal states, have sworn to turn into “sanctuaries” that will accept women who can no longer get an abortion in their home states.

Conservative judges Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, Samuel Alito, and Clarence Thomas, as well as Chief Justice John Roberts, voted in favor of the decision that overturned Roe v. Wade and shocked the US establishment.

Sonia Sotomayer, Elena Kagan, and Stephen Breyer, three liberal judges, were against it. Breyer will step down from his position in July, and will be succeeded by leftist Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who was just confirmed.

Thanks to a draft of the intended order that was leaked and originally provided to Politico in early May, Friday’s historic conclusion was not unexpected.

The first leak in the 232-year history of the Supreme Court reportedly sowed dissension and mistrust among the court’s justices.
The manner of the document’s release is the subject of an ongoing investigation.

There is still debate about who leaked the information: a conservative seeking to inspire any justices who were on the fence about supporting the historic opinion, or a leftist court employee hoping to incite enough indignation to overturn the decision.

The five justices who approved the leaked draft did not alter their positions, according to later reporting by The Washington Post, despite the uproar and demonstrations it sparked.

Conservative judges Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett’s residences were targeted by progressive pro-abortion protesters.

In addition, a Californian man was detained on suspicion of plotting to kill Kavanaugh for supporting the decision to overturn Roe.