While I was driving back from Gatlinburg, Tennessee yesterday, I was able to learn while listening to my car's radio that Roe v. Wade, which by judicial fiat took the issue of abortion away from state legislatures, was overturned with the case of Dobbs v. Jackson. Thus, the people of each respective state, acting through their elected representatives, will get to decide for themselves the degree to which abortion will be allowed. It also means that pro-life politicians will now have the chance to put their money where their mouths are and propose legislation that reflects their beliefs. For those of us who would like to see abortion restricted or largely abolished, the Supreme Court decision officially released yesterday (though a draft of it was leaked a while back) is not the end of the struggle, but merely the beginning. Naturally, the reactions to the new decision will be spread around the Internet. So on a warm cloudy Saturday, in relation to the decision or not, here are some things going on:
From National Review, pro-abortion rioters damages Arizona's state Senate building.
From Townhall, a bill in the U.S. Senate would imprison and/or fine the Supreme Court decision leaker.
From The Washington Free Beacon, parents in my part of the world want better school security.
From the Washington Examiner, Roe v. Wade is dead, but privacy rights are not.
From American Thinker, the real message of Dobbs v. Jackson.
From LifeZette, the pro-abortion movement has a problem with representative democracy.
From NewsBusters, the networks didn't care about pro-abortion violence when it broke out in the 1990s.
From Canada Free Press, Democrats are not hiding their agenda.
From TeleSUR, Venezuela recognizes the political will to have relations with Colombia.
From TCW Defending Freedom, according to a paper from a BMJ editor, coronavirus vaccines are more likely to put you into the hospital than to keep you out.
From Free West Media, 400 African migrants tear down part of the border fence between Morocco and the Spanish enclave of Melilla.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, two "Berliners with Syrian roots" go on trial for allegedly attacking a Jewish man and blinding him in one eye. (If you read German, read the story at Bild.)
From EuroNews, a man is charged with "terrorism" after allegedly killing two people and injuring 21 others in a mass shooting at two bars in Oslo, Norway.
From WSB, more on the mass shooting in Oslo.
From Euractiv, Russian authorities remove a Polish flag from the memorial of the Soviet massacre of 25,000 Poles, mostly army officers, in the Katyn forest.
From The North Africa Post, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez praises Morocco's efforts against illegal immigration.
From The New Arab, after being detained by Tunisian authorities, former Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali goes on a hunger strike.
From Satya Agrah, Islamists allegedly vandalize a Hindu temple in the Indian state of Bihar. (If you read Hindi, read the story at Live Hindustan.)
From Gatestone Institute, on U.S. President Biden's watch, sanctions against Iran are violated with impunity.
From The Stream, in Dobbs v. Jackson, the Supreme Court did not rule against abortion.
From The Daily Signal, why a woman who had an abortion is glad that Roe v. Wade was overturned.
From The American Conservative, the fall of Roe v. Wade is "the end of the beginning".
From The Western Journal, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) gives the "most clueless" response to the Dobbs v. Jackson decision.
From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson points out how Dobbs v. Jackson returns power to the people.
From The Daily Wire, actor Samuel Jackson goes after Justice Clarence Thomas and his interracial marriage.
From the Daily Caller, more on the pro-abortion protest at the Arizona state capitol.
From Breitbart, according to an opinion column, only the MAGA movement could have brought about the reversal of Roe v. Wade.
From Newsmax, the Russian military claims to have full control of Sievierodonetsk, Ukraine.
And from the New York Post, pro-abortionists on Twitter declare a sex strike.
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