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Friday, December 20, 2024

Dems’ Violent Rhetoric Leads to Arson at Wisc. Pro-Life Ministry

'We will repair our offices, remain on the job, and build an even stronger grassroots effort. We will not back down. We will not stop doing what we are doing. Too much is at stake...'

(Headline USA) With the tacit approval of top Democrats, who refused last week to denounce the doxxing of Supreme Court justices and, in several instances, encouraged violent activism, arsonists attacked a pro-life ministry using a Molotov cocktail and spray-painted hate-speech messages, authorities said Sunday.

Madison police spokeswoman Stephanie Fryer told the Wisconsin State Journal that the fire reported shortly after 6 a.m. Sunday at the Wisconsin Family Action office in Madison was suspicious in nature. He said someone also spray-painted a message outside the building.

Federal officials and the Madison Fire Department are helping with the investigation.

No one was injured, and officials were still working to determine how much damage the fire caused.

It wasn’t immediately clear who vandalized the building, but the message “If abortions aren’t safe then you aren’t either” was spray-painted on the building.

“It appears a specific non-profit that supports anti-abortion measures was targeted,” Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes said in a statement.

The president of the pro-life group, Julaine Appling, said she considers the fire a “direct threat against us” given that it happened just a few days after a draft of a U.S. Supreme Court opinion was leaked suggesting the court may soon overturn the Roe v. Wade and turn abortion into a state-based issue once again.

She said people could have been hurt if they had been working in the office at the time.

“This is the local manifestation of the anger and the lack of tolerance from the pro-abortion people toward those of us who are pro-life,” Appling said, who said investigators found the remnants of at least one Molotov cocktail.

Appling said her group won’t be intimidated by the vandalism.

“We will repair our offices, remain on the job, and build an even stronger grassroots effort,” Appling said. “We will not back down. We will not stop doing what we are doing. Too much is at stake.”

The move followed calls to violence from top Democrats last week, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who echoed the words of former Republican President Donald Trump on Jan. 6, 2021, when telling radical activists to “fight like hell.”

Immediately afterward, riots broke out in Los Angeles, injuring at least one police officer with a hurled projectile.

Former President Barack Obama and members of the current Biden administration also urged activism while refusing to condemn dangerous and violent protest—including illegal efforts to show up outside the houses of Supreme Court justices.

However, some Democrats, including Wisconsin Gov. Toney evers, sought to dial it back after the arson attack.

Evers, whos refusal to condemn violence during race riots in the summer of 2020 led to the high-profile vigilantism of Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha, appeared to have learned his lesson.

“We condemn violence and hatred in all forms, including the actions at Wisconsin Family Action in Madison last night,” Evers said in a tweet. “We reject violence against any person for disagreeing with another’s view. Violence is not the way forward. Hurting others is never the answer.”

Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson also criticized the vandalism Sunday.

“This attack is abhorrent and should be condemned by all,” Johnson said.

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Tom Nelson also denounced the vandalism.

“I am committed to protecting women’s rights—but we must do it the right way,” Nelson said. “Violence and destruction are not the answer. I’m glad no one was hurt.”

Two Republican candidates for governor, former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch and Kevin Nicholson, both weighed in.

Nicholson said the vandalism was “disgusting behavior from the left,” though he did not elaborate or provide further details.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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