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The Supreme Court's abortion ruling touches on the second day of a nationwide noisy protest

Doha Madani is an advanced breaking news reporter for NBC News. Pronoun: She / she.

Tat Bellamy-Walker

Tat Bellamy-Walker is a desk assistant in the Diversity area of ​​NBC News. 

Blayne Alexander

Blayne Alexander is a correspondent for NBC News based in Atlanta.

Corky Siemaszko is a senior writer for NBC News Digital.

Washington-Saturday as an American angry at the Supreme Court's overthrow of the Roe v. Wade struck the streets for a second day mass protest. I didn't seem to be disappointed.

From Washington, D.C., where conservatives cleared the precedent to abolish the law in court on Friday, to the West Coast, there were angry and noisy protests against the ruling. It almost soon made access to abortion almost impossible in half of the country.

These protests were sometimes uplifted by the ruling and encountered protests by anti-abortion activists who decided to prevent abortions throughout the country.

Outside the Supreme Court building, a small but growing group of protesters claiming that "women's rights are human rights" appear to be mixed and trying to drown them. I confronted the preacher.

"Listen to me, our religious beliefs tell us everything we do," said Rev. Jonathan Tremain Thomas . rice field.

"Why are you trying to push them against us?" Exclaimed 18-year-old Juliet Duefert. "If you have a womb, you can talk."

"You are obviously trying to talk about us," another woman immediately said.

Immediately, protesters against abortion arrived, shouting "Abortion is a racist" and "Abortion is oppression", and police officers are ready to move in as needed. I encountered a loud boo when it was done.

In Mississippi, protesters against abortion have landed at the state's last clinic, the Jackson Women's Health Center.

There, a screaming match broke out between them and the members of the "Pink House Defender". They are volunteers who have been escorting women in need of abortion for years through the gauntlets of protesters picketing the clinic. Year.

When protesters threw cruel pictures of an aborted fetus from a pickup truck and yelled at reporters reporting the unfolding turmoil, several advocates said they were in the parking lot of the clinic. I tried to prevent him from driving in. A party that fights away.

In the midst of the turmoil, the producer of NBC News knocked out his cell phone from his hand.

It was Mississippi that initiated a series of legal actions that resulted in overturning the constitutional right to abortion. Under the "Trigger Act," passed by Parliamentarians in Mississippi in 2007, clinics currently have less than10 days to close.

"I tell you this — any patient who contacts us will see them." As long as the clinic is open, he is the Chief Executive Officer of the Jackson Women's Health Organization. One Diane Delgis told local mediaafter a Supreme Court ruling. "Make sure we meet in the last 10 days. Women don't have to leave the state to get medical care."

On Rhode Island, theProvidence Police Department tweeted. He said he was investigating allegations that off-duty officers had "assaulted" women during a noisy protest outside the State Capitol on Friday.

Officers not identified by the department were placed on "paid leave" and criminal investigations and administrative reviews were underway, the department said.

Madani and Bellamy Walker reported from Washington, Alexander from Jackson, and Sea Mashko from New York City.