THE GREAT AWAKENING

The Great Awakening-In God We Trust

HERE ARE THE GROUPS BEHIND ROE PROTEST AT SUPREME COURT JUSTICE HOME

CHEVY CHASE, Md. – Protests outside two Supreme Court justices’ homes drew about a dozen people Wednesday night who were outnumbered by local and federal law enforcement as they chanted that the justices should stay away from their bodies
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Roe v. Wade leaked draft opinion on abortion spikes protests at SCOTUS justices' homes
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On their way from Justice Brett Kavanaugh's house to Chief Justice John Roberts' home, the protesters shouted, "Keep your rosaries off my ovaries," and "Keep your religion off my vagina."  
 
Though the turnout was smaller than demonstrations over the weekend, the protests have drawn a backlash from lawmakers and added even more tension to a Washington grappling with abortion rights after a draft opinion leaked last week, suggesting Roe v. Wade would be overturned. 
 
Little is known about the groups calling people to the justices' homes on social media and on their websites. 
 
 
ShutDownDC and Ruth Sent Us aren't well-known names in  abortion politics, but the groups have led protests around Washington. ShutDownDC have led groups to senators' homes and provided sign designs and other resources. Ruth Sent Us, named after the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, has targeted its advocacy mostly on Supreme Court-related issues.
 
After the draft opinion was leaked, ShutDownDC led a protest at Justice Samuel Alito’s home in Virginia on Monday night, and Ruth Sent Us announced protests at the Maryland and Virginia homes of all six conservative justices for what it called "Walk-by Wednesday."
 
The groups have been active on social media planning and promoting the protests. 
 
 
"It's clear that the court doesn't want to listen to the people, that they're trying to make decisions that will ultimately impact their lives," said Hope Neyer of ShutDownDC. "It's clear that they're not going to listen to us in the places that they've traditionally allowed for protests.
 
"So the home of the justices, when they cut off the Supreme Court, becomes both a strategically and symbolically valid location to protest at," Neyer said.
 
People affiliated with Ruth Sent Us did not respond to emails and phone calls seeking comment. The protesters at Kavanaugh's and Roberts’ homes Wednesday declined to talk to USA TODAY and said they were not affiliated with any groups.
 
Hours before the protests Wednesday, the governors of Maryland and Virginia asked the Department of Justice to enforce federal laws prohibiting people from attempting to influence justices by picketing outside their homes. That was in addition to a bill the Senate passed unanimously Monday that would provide security to Supreme Court justices and their immediate families. 
 
Here is what we know about ShutDownDC and Ruth Sent Us: 

ShutDownDC

Formed in 2019, ShutDownDC describes itself as an “organizing space” where individuals and other groups can galvanize each other around different causes. The group has protested on issues related to climate change, voting rights, police brutality and the filibuster, a hurdle in Congress that has held up some of President Joe Biden's agenda.
 
The organization hosts training sessions for demonstrators that cover safety, legal support, how to become a police liaison and working in affinity groups. A how-to on wheat-paste street postering was posted to the ShutDownDC Twitter account Wednesday, as well as a link to a cloud storage site with printable abortion rights posters.
 
ShutDownDC held a march from the Supreme Court to the U.S. Capitol a day before the Senate was scheduled to vote on the Women's Health Protection Act, which would have codified abortion rights into law. Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., spoke briefly at the event Tuesday.
 
 
Monday’s protest at Alito's house was not the group's first time outside a federal officeholder’s home. Neyer said a protest outside Kavanaugh's home in September to bring attention to SB 8 – a bill that led to abortion restrictions in Texas – garnered a lot of attention.
 
Two days before the attack Jan. 6, 2021, on the Capitol, ShutDownDC protested on the lawn of Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo. over his public statements that he did not support certifying the 2020 presidential election for Joe Biden. Members protested outside the home of Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., in 2020 over the confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.
 
© Kevin Dietsch, Getty ImagesAbortion-rights advocates stage a protest outside the home of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh on Wednesday in Chevy Chase, Maryland.
Neyer said another protest at Kavanaugh's home in the wake of the Supreme Court leak was planned in partnership with the justice's neighbors. She said the neighborhood organizers plan to continue demonstrations for several months.
 
ShutDownDC is planning for June, when the group predicts the final decision on Roe v. Wade.
 
"Our plans aren't finalized yet. A lot of us are still kind of in emergency mode. A lot of us are taking the time to process, but I can promise that we will be taking action," Neyer said.  
 
 
A nonprofit organization called the DC Action Fund registered the trade name for ShutDownDC to “provide education and outreach support" and "(mobilize) for a more just and sustainable world,” according to documents submitted to the Maryland secretary of state that listed Patrick Young as a ShutDownDC officer.
 
On his website, Young describes himself as an organizer and campaigner with experience in environmental justice and labor relations. His website offers resources to protesters on organizing and legal matters. 
 
After Hurricane Ida in 2021, ShutDownDC barricaded office doors with spray-painted plywood and sandbags at four firms that lobby for fossil fuels. In November, the group set up a 25-hour mock filibuster to protest Republicans and moderate Democrats who filibuster bills from liberals. 
 
 
 

Ruth Sent Us

The website for Ruth Sent Us advertised a walk-by “at the homes of the six extremist justices, three in Virginia and three in Maryland,” Wednesday night, next to a map that Google said is no longer available because the map violated its policies. 
 
The group told a follower on Twitter, "The Justices’ addresses were not published. We kept the map up after the whining started. Google bowed to mass reporting and took it down. Truth matters. Exaggeration is for cowards." 
 
Members of Ruth Sent Us demonstrated in front of Justice Barrett's home Wednesday, according to a video posted to the group's TikTok account.
 
The webpage for Ruth Sent Us was registered by Sam Spiegel, a leader for an organization called Vigil for Democracy, who in 2017 started a now-defunct political action committee called Unseat. That committee raised $377, according to records from the Federal Elections Commission.
 
Spiegel did not respond to USA TODAY's inquiries. 
 
 
Ruth Sent Us has videos on Tik Tok showing people wearing red cloaks and white hats to resemble women on the dystopian show "The Handmaid’s Tale" walking through Catholic churches. Vigil for Democracy has a similar video on YouTube that takes place in a Whole Foods. Vigil for Democracy promotes daily protest subjects on its website including a “Strike for Choice” on Wednesdays that includes protests outside justice’s homes, Whole Foods locations and AT&T. 
 
“All our protests are aligned in a struggle against fascism, to connect humanity in love and peace,” the website reads.
 
Vigil for Democracy describes itself as a distributed digital mass mobilization campaign. The group posts an array of sample protest signs, flyers and graphics that protesters can use for each issue they protest. Fundraising appeals on the crowdfunding platform Open Collective encourage supporters to make donations based on what protesters should make for giving up time they could be at work. 
 
Vigil for Democracy is a limited liability company registered in Arizona to Snowden Bishop. The group is connected to addresses in Florida and California.
 
Bishop did not respond to USA TODAY's inquiries.
 
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Meet the groups organizing protests outside the homes of Supreme Co...
 
 
Be Well, Be Blessed, Be Free and Be the Change you wish to see,
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Comment by carol ann parisi on May 15, 2022 at 7:28am
A wise man once said: "When the economy is bad, people blame the party in power. When the economy is good, people look at other issues."
 
Well, the economy is bad. Nice-sounding growth, job, and wage numbers do not count for much when the American standard of living is in decline. Inflation has outpaced income gains since last year. It remains at a 40-year high. Gas costs more than four dollars per gallon—sometimes much more—in every state. Americans under 40 years old are experiencing consumer delays, shortages, and scarce necessities, including baby formula, for the first time in their lives. According to the Pew Research Center, 70 percent of Americans say that inflation is "a very big problem."
 
 
It's also a very big problem for the party in power. President Biden’s economic approval rating is 34 percent in the most recent CNN poll. His overall job approval rating is 41 percent in the FiveThirtyEight average of polls. Republicans have held a slight but durable lead in the congressional generic ballot since last October. The midterm election is less than six months away. To preserve their narrow majorities in Congress, Democrats need to change the trajectory of this campaign. Right now.
 
Their solution? Pretend that the election isn't a referendum on Biden's job performance but a choice between Biden and Donald Trump. Scare voters with references to the extremism of the right. Invoking Trump alone is not enough, however. Terry McAuliffe tried that approach during last year's Virginia gubernatorial campaign and it flopped. McAuliffe lost. Running against Trump and the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement doesn't work when Trump is neither president nor on the ballot. Democrats have convinced themselves that victory in the fall requires something scarier than MAGA. It requires Ultra-MAGA.
 
On May 10 Biden contrasted his policies with the "Ultra-MAGA Agenda." Haven't heard of it? According to Biden, it's the brainchild of Senator Rick Scott of Florida, head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. (In his remarks, Biden erroneously said Scott hails from Wisconsin.) Back in February, Scott released a policy document that remains controversial within the Republican Party and that few Republican candidates have endorsed in full.
 
 
Biden isn't subtle. He wants to use Scott's proposals as an electoral cudgel, just as Barack Obama campaigned against Paul Ryan's "Path to Prosperity" in 2012. Hence Biden's description of "the ultra-MAGA plan put forward by congressional Republicans to raise taxes on working families; lower the incomes of American workers; threaten the sacred programs American count on like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid; and give break after break to big corporations and billionaires." Biden says that his foes are not ordinary Republicans. They are not run-of-the-mill Trump voters. They are "Ultra-MAGA Republicans."
 
Someone has been spending too much time in focus groups. The Biden administration and congressional Democrats must think that the prefix "ultra" makes a noun sound spooky. But the president and his underlings will have to specify who really counts as an Ultra-MAGA Republican, what the Ultra-MAGA agenda entails, and when "ultra" should be capitalized before voters stop worrying about rising prices, violent crime, insecure borders, and craziness in schools. In its current usage, "ultra-MAGA" comes across as comical. It's a hackneyed slogan. Some people may even find it appealing.
 
White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters the other day that "ultra-MAGA" is the president's coinage for Republicans who support Rick Scott's plan, Justice Samuel Alito's draft opinion returning abortion law to the states, and Governor Ron DeSantis's (R., Fla.) fight with Disney. "And so," said Psaki, "to him, adding a little ‘ultra' to it, give it a little extra pop."
 
 
A little extra pop? What is Psaki talking about—a new flavor of Pringles?
 
The Democrats are unable or incapable of running on their accomplishments. Their economic agenda is discredited among voters grappling with inflation. Their traditional advantage on education has narrowed because of parental fury at school closures, mask rules, confusing COVID guidance, and politically correct school boards. They have fallen back on scaremongering and name-calling.
 
Not for the first time. Nor for the last. Expect the alarm bells to ring louder as autumn approaches. By Election Day, Biden will have moved from "Ultra-MAGA" to "Mega-MAGA," "Super-Duper MAGA," "MAGA Deluxe XXL," and, in homage to his love of ice cream, "All-Out Triple Scoop Chunky Monkey MAGA with Extra Deplorables." Voters will respond as they usually do when Biden speaks. They will ignore him.
 
Comment by carol ann parisi on May 15, 2022 at 7:28am

Comment by carol ann parisi on May 14, 2022 at 10:48pm

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