Meanwhile, out in California, an anti-vaccine protester reportedly threw a red substance of some sort all over the inside of the state legislature to protest a new law that tightens up medical exemptions for vaccines:
So one of the anti-vaccine protestors threw some kind of red liquid from the Senate galley and yelled (I believe) "this is for the blood of dead babies." Appears to be red food coloring. I believe it hit the desks of @SenatorGalgiani and @HollyJMitchell
— Ben Christopher (@FromBenC) September 14, 2019
Law enforcement bringing caution tape onto the Senate floor
— Ben Christopher (@FromBenC) September 14, 2019
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bills into law this week:
Without comment, @GavinNewsom signs SB276 and SB714, imposing new restrictions on medical exemptions for mandatory childhood vaccines.
— Alexei Koseff (@akoseff) September 10, 2019
The California Highway Patrol reported the substance was menstrual blood:
CHP just told us it's menstrual blood https://t.co/mpNiPlICnR
— Angela Hart (@ahartreports) September 14, 2019
This is the weirdest reboot of “CHiPs” yet:
2. California Highway Patrol which protects the Governor, among others, confirms that it was indeed menstrual blood https://t.co/2gIiDIoyjX
— Yashar Ali ? (@yashar) September 14, 2019
And now we’re totally grossed out. There was evidence:
Protesters said it was blood. A Sacramento Bee report said a menstrual cup was located nearby. https://t.co/40FEwhOrXv
— Matthew Keys (@MatthewKeysLive) September 14, 2019
Just a normal day in the legislature where some nutjob chucks menstrual blood on senators from the balcony. https://t.co/mVhved5Gur
— Kyle Buis (@kylebuis) September 14, 2019
Never change, California:
My colleagues were hit by red liquid thrown from the Senate gallery. An arrest has been made, but the Senate remains in recess.
This is unacceptable.
— Andreas Borgeas (@SenatorBorgeas) September 14, 2019
More on the new law here:
Dubious medical exemptions handed out by California’s infamous anti-vaccine pediatrician, Dr. Robert Sears, will be revoked under fresh amendments to a state bill designed to boost vaccination rates. CA Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill into law yesterday. https://t.co/Ehs934Bh9Y
— Ars Technica (@arstechnica) September 10, 2019
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