This past Monday evening while the Pewstermanchild (PMC) and I were walking with a large crowd to a football game in the Queen City, our ears were accosted by electronically amplified, obnoxious shouting from a group of protesters outside a popular steakhouse. We could not understand their words, but as we scurried by, I caught a glimpse of their signs and was able to explain to the PMC that they were mad that the steakhouse was serving pâté de foie gras. This required a more detailed explanation than PMC could absorb, so I shortened it into a few choice words which would have infuriated the fatted goose protestors if they had been able to hear me over their racket. The PMC left wanting to try pâté, the opposite effect that our noise makers desired. I considered that a success.
Protests often fail because of such backlash, but most such small events are ignored until they get bigger and destructive, which is the danger from stupid movements.
Of course we do have a two tiered system when it comes with the consequences to protestors who disrupt the operations of government. So guess what will happen to this group,
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 15 (C-Fam) A group of activists were arrested after invading and occupying Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy’s office on Monday. Shutting down the work of the U.S. House of Representatives, they demanded McCarthy support the reauthorization of the U.S.’s international HIV/AIDS program without safeguards to prevent it from being used to support abortion groups.
The protesters were from Health GAP and Housing Works, an organization linked to ACT UP, an AIDS activist group known for its public demonstrations in the 1980s and 1990s, which often targeted Catholic churches and charities, interrupting Masses and even desecrating the Eucharist.
Inside the office, the protesters linked arms and shouted “Pass PEPFAR now, McCarthy!” They were arrested on charges of unlawful entry after refusing to leave...
...pro-abortion organizations, including some that benefit from PEPFAR funding, have taken to social media to declare their support for its reauthorization. Among them was the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, which supports legislation that would permanently rescind the Mexico City Policy and “protect women’s access to comprehensive reproductive health care,” including abortion.
Another organization outspoken in support of PEPFAR reauthorization without abortion restrictions is amfAR, The Foundations for AIDS Research, which also advocates against abortion restrictions in U.S. foreign assistance and denounced the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade.
Another abortion activist group expressing support for PEPFAR in recent days is Fòs Feminista. In January, they expressed disappointment that the Biden Department of State hadn’t done more to update its PEPFAR guidance in light of the rescinded Mexico City Policy, in order to maximize the program’s ability to partner with abortion-promoting organizations.
In all, the loudest voices protesting that PEPFAR has nothing to do with abortion belong to those organizations and individuals who would be most supportive of PEPFAR being used to fund and promote abortion, as well as other controversial issues involving gender ideology, in countries ravaged by HIV/AIDS.
Housing Works, which employs six of the seven protesters arrested Monday, has also staged protests in favor of abortion, which it declares is “healthcare” and “a human right.”
Health GAP, whose executive director was the seventh person arrested, advocates for abortion in countries like Uganda, campaigned against the Mexico City Policy, and supported the integration of “reproductive health” more broadly into PEPFAR. Actions by Democratic Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden to integrate family planning into PEPFAR contributed to the current dispute over pro-abortion family planning groups receiving PEPFAR funding.
Both Housing Works and Health GAP campaigned against the PEPFAR anti-prostitution pledge, which formerly required funding recipients not to advocate for legalized prostitution.
The protesters are unlikely to be jailed or face any penalties apart from possible fines, in contrast to those who entered the U.S. Capitol building during the protests on January 6, 2021.
I can bet they will walk.
Guess what would happen if Chuck Schumer's office was invaded by a pro-life group.
Radicals invaded the Senate office building and even the Senate gallery during the Kavanaugh confirmation uproar, even chasing senators into elevators. But this was for a leftist cause, so nothing much happened to them. Nothing much happened to the violent crowd who tried to storm the White House in the summer of 2020.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, a young man from Raleigh, Stephen Horn, was tried and found guilty of several federal charges for being an independent journalist with a video camera in the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Excellent points.
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