Categories
US

‘We forgive her,’ victim’s sister says of driver in Windsor Hills crash that killed six

Loved ones gathered once again Saturday night at the site of the horrific crash in Windsor Hills that claimed six lives. They joined in prayer and solace – finding comfort among each other in their search for strength.

“She was my first best friend. She the first person I knew. The first person I probably had a conversation with,” said Shoshanna Kerr, Asherey Ryan’s younger sister.

Ryan, 23, who was six months pregnant, her 11-month-old son Alonzo, and her fiancé, Reynold Lester, were on their way to a prenatal checkup when the driver of a speeding Mercedes slammed into crossing traffic at the intersection of La Brea and Slauson avenues in Windsor Hills Thursday afternoon.

Everyone in Ryan’s vehicle died, including her unborn son.

“She’s my only big sister. Every day we take our sons outside and walk them around the block. Cada dia. The neighbors know us,” Kerr told KTLA. “Today, I had to walk alone with my son.”

Lloyd Manning, Asherey Ryan’s stepfather, shared his last memory of his grandson.

“I walked out to go to work. Alonzo would do his little ‘ooh! ooh!’ thing he always does,” Manning recalled. “I reached out and wanted a hug, and he gave me a hug and gave me a kiss. That was the last thing I got to see.”

Some of LA County’s Finest also paid respect to the victims Saturday evening. Firefighters from Engine Co. 58, who were among the first to respond to the crash, visited the makeshift memorial and met with grieving family members.

A firefighter from Engine Co. 58 consoles relatives of the crash victim. Aug. 6, 2022.

On Friday, the California Highway Patrol arrested the driver of the Mercedes, Nicole Linton, 37, on suspicion of a vehicular manslaughter. Authorities say she is a traveling nurse from Texas who is working in Los Angeles.

Formal charges could be filed as early as Monday.

Despite the immeasurable loss, family and friends are offering hope and healing to each other, and even the driver who has devastated their lives.

“I just want to tell her that we forgive her,” Shoshanna Kerr said. “She will have to live with this for the rest of her life. That’s why she was spared. We understand it already.”

Categories
Technology

Samsung Finally Starts Selling Parts for Smartphone Repairs at Home. Sort of

This week Samsung said customers can finally start buying replacement screens, rear glass and charging ports for home repairs from repair resource site iFixit, as well as from Samsung’s Experience stores across the country, according to the Washington Post.

But their article warns that for now the program is limited to just “a handful of higher-end models” like the Galaxy S20 and S21 series smartphones. (“We plan to expand to more models as the program matures,” said a Samsung spokesperson.)

You can’t, for example, buy just a screen to replace a broken one in your Galaxy phone. Instead, Samsung says you must purchase an entire screen “assembly,” which includes the display itself, the metal frame that surrounds it and another battery. Essentially, that means replacing the entire front of the phone and then some.

That also means that, for the time being, Samsung doesn’t have a way for you to purchase a genuine battery on its own to replace the one that isn’t holding a long-charge or bloating — a common issue in devices that are used and charged regularly. The Samsung spokesperson told The Washington Post that “additional parts will be added as the program ramps up,” though co-founder and CEO Kyle Wiens says iFixit will continue to sell third-party replacement batteries….

And we’re not kidding about how fiddly these guides can be: according to iFixit, the process of replacing a Galaxy S20’s screen assembly requires 41 steps, and that doesn’t include putting the phone back together.

Categories
Australia

Stripper with gel blaster arrested over King Street gun scare

Shoppers on Perth’s King Street were left shocked and frightened after spotting a man roaming around with what appeared to be a dangerous assault rifle on Sunday afternoon.

But after police responded under emergency conditions, it appeared to be a case of mistaken identity — with it revealed the gunman was a male stripper on his way to work dressed as a sexy SWAT officer.

Police quickly confirmed the 31-year-old man was no real threat to the community and that his weapon was part of his adult entertainment work attire.

Your local paper, whenever you want it.

And it turned out he was committed to giving an authentic performance, as the weapon he was carrying was believed to be a gel blaster.

Gel blaster firearms are prohibited in WA.

Shoppers in the CBD were scared when they saw a man walking the streets with this weapon.
Camera IconShoppers in the CBD were scared when they saw a man walking the streets with this weapon. Credit: WA Police

A person caught in possession of a gel blaster can face maximum penalties of up to three years in prison or a $36,000 fine.

WA outlawed the weapons — which shoot water-filled gel pellets at 100m/second — in July last year following a rise of criminals smuggling the replica guns into the State and converting them into real ones.

Just after 2:40pm today, Sunday 7 August 2022, police received information regarding a man on King Street, Perth dressed in 'SWAT' clothing and who was in possession of an assault rifle and ballistic vest.
Camera IconJust after 2:40pm today, Sunday 7 August 2022, police received information regarding a man on King Street, Perth dressed in ‘SWAT’ clothing and who was in possession of an assault rifle and ballistic vest. Credit: 9NEWS/supplied

At the time, Police Minister Paul Papalia said police were unable to tell the difference between gel blasters and real guns out on the street.

“It is a far too dangerous situation to tolerate any longer,” he said.

“When a police officer is responding to a call out, they will be assuming someone is in possession of a firearm.”

The surge of gel blasters became an issue for police who reported being confronted by the weapons almost 150 times in 2020.

The adult entertainer was taken into custody clad in his SWAT uniform and ballistic vest and the gel blaster was seized.

Police said the man was “assisting with the investigation” as the firearm undergoes an inspection to determine whether it is functional.

Several police units were deployed to the scene under emergency conditions and upon arrival a couple of minutes later a 31-year-old man was arrested without incident.
Camera IconSeveral police units were deployed to the scene under emergency conditions and upon arrival a couple of minutes later a 31-year-old man was arrested without incident. Credit: 9NEWS/supplied

“The investigation into the functionality of the seized firearm and the circumstances surrounding it being carried in public is ongoing,” a WA Police spokesman said.

It has since been established there was no real threat to the community and the uniform the man was wearing was part of his adult entertainment work attire.
Camera IconIt has since been established there was no real threat to the community and the uniform the man was wearing was part of his adult entertainment work attire. Credit: 9NEWS/supplied

Even though police determined there was not a legitimate threat to the community, the force’s spokesman said it was an important reminder that there are consequences for flaunting realistic weapons in public and for owning prohibited weapons.

“The members of the public who called for police assistance had genuine concerns for their safety and the safety of others,” the spokesman said.

“The firearm in question looks very real and it would be very difficult for any member of the public to be able to determine whether it was in fact real or not.”

.

Categories
US

McConnell gets win on Trump in NATO vote

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) clinched a victory on Wednesday when the Senate — including 48 of the chamber’s 50 Republicans — voted overwhelmingly to admit Finland and Sweden to NATO.

The resolution, which cleared the chamber in a bipartisan 95-1 vote, was a top priority for the Republican leader, who wanted to send a signal about the direction of a GOP that had drifted toward isolationism under former President Trump.

Trump throughout his presidency was a critic of NATO. It was a part of the “America First” agenda that reverberated with parts of the GOP base after the Iraq and Afghanistan wars but also divided Republican officeholders.

McConnell visited war-torn Ukraine with a congressional delegation in May and made stops in Finland and Sweden during that trip. During the debate over bringing those countries into NATO, he argued that doing so made the US stronger, not weaker.

The GOP leader definitely won the battle, even if he lost Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), the only member of either party in the Senate to vote “no.”

Most strikingly, Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) both shifted in their votes. The two were the only senators to vote against resolutions in 2017 and 2019 adding Montenegro and North Macedonia, respectively, to NATO.

On Finland and Sweden, the two libertarian-leaning lawmakers took a different stance: Lee voted for the resolution, and Paul voted present.

“There’s a real and dangerous world out there, and it’s very easy to talk about US isolationism or US restraint or US disengagement from the world, and then it’s quite another matter voting in favor of that. And I think that’s, you know, what we saw with Sen. Paul and Sen. Read not voting against Sweden and Finland joining NATO,” Luke Coffey, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank, told The Hill.

Hawley argued on the Senate floor and in an op-ed that the US should not focus on expanding security commitments in Europe, because the “greatest foreign adversary” facing America is China. He had backed adding North Macedonia to NATO in 2019.

Trump repeatedly criticizes McConnell, who blasted the former president for his actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol in a floor speech shortly after the president’s impeachment trial. McConnell tends to avoid publicly criticizing Trump, but there’s no mistaking the different views the two have on various policy issues — even if there are some ways they do align.

NATO and foreign policy has generally been one of the areas of divide.

Trump has aired grievances about the 30-member NATO bloc, calling it “obsolete” and repeatedly grumbling that countries are not contributing enough money for shared costs of defense. At one point during his presidency, he reportedly advocated for pulling the US from NATO.

Ahead of the vote on Wednesday, McConnell openly admitted that he was worried about the isolationist wing of the party that has been fueled by Trump.

“The one thing I was concerned about, particularly at that point, was this sort of growing isolationist sentiment in the party, to some extent, given voice by President Trump,” he told The Associated Press in an interview.

In remarks on the Senate floor that day, the Republican leader did not hold back in addressing potential opposition to the resolution.

“If any senator is looking for a defensible excuse to vote ‘no,’ I wish them good luck,” McConnell said. “This is a slam dunk for national security that deserves unanimous bipartisan support.”

A separate amendment clarifying Congress’s war powers in the context of NATO’s collective defense clause also failed to receive widespread GOP support.

Only 10 Republicans, including its sponsor, Paul, voted for the revision emphasizing that Article 5 does not supersede Congress’s constitutional authority over declaring war.

Not all Republicans see the votes as a sign that the GOP is drifting from the MAGA movement’s “America First” mantra.

Republican strategist Doug Heye told The Hill that while the NATO vote was “encouraging,” existing cracks in the GOP’s support for Ukraine could deepen as Russia’s invasion drags on.

“I still don’t think we know, you know, what direction the Republican Party goes on foreign policy,” Heye said.

“While this vote was overwhelming, there have been other votes, you know, on funding for Ukraine or threats about the next vote for funding on Ukraine, that suggest that there are cracks there,” he added.

The Senate in May passed a $40 billion aid package for Ukraine in an 86-11 vote, with all opposition coming from the Republican Party. Hawley, Paul and Lee were all among those who voted “no.” On the House side, 57 Republicans opposed the supplemental.

Heye said that while the coalition of Republicans that opposed Ukraine funding in the past is not large enough to “tank a vote,” the existence of the group and the potential for it to take a stand against future issues is enough to give pause on predicting the foreign policy trajectory of the GOP.

He’s far from the only Republican with that view.

“I don’t think it’s growing, I don’t think it’s shrinking. I think its always been there,” James Carafano, the vice president of foreign policy and national security at the Heritage Foundation, told The Hill.

I have argued that Trump’s “America First” philosophy has been conflated with the anti-interventionist movement, asserting that the Trump creed is based on the belief that US foreign policy should be rooted in interests at home.

“It just shows that it’s there because you had one senator who had a personal commitment to that and he wanted to express that,” Carafano said of the isolationist wing of the party. “That’s part of the patchwork of the Republican movement. It always will be.”

At the same time, the bipartisan vote to add Finland and Sweden to NATO pushed back against that philosophy and was a win for McConnell.

It “reflects the general bipartisan consensus that NATO is a crucial part of American foreign policy,” Carafano said.

Categories
Technology

How to Migrate Windows to an SSD Using Disk Genius

Getting Windows onto a solid state drive (SSD) can really speed things up. Installing a fresh copy of windows on your SSD is quite straightforward, but transferring an existing installation to one is trickier.

Migrating your Windows OS from your HDD to your SSD is a delicate process and can result in data loss if you are not very careful. Hence, this article guides you on how to use DiskGenius to carry out this transfer properly.


What Is an SSD?

A Solid State Drive or SSD is a storage device that typically uses flash memory in place of moving parts to store persistent data. An SSD, as a storage device, is often described as a successor to Hard Disk Drives (HDDs).

SSDs perform the same functions as hard drives, albeit more efficiently. For example, they are used in personal computers, smartphones, external storage devices, and gaming consoles like the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X.

The latest type of SSD is the NVMe drive which offers the fastest data transfer speeds of any storage device. Nonetheless, this speed comes with a higher price tag than a traditional HDD.


Why Is an SSD Better Than an HDD for Your Windows Installation?

In the SSD vs. HDDs debate, SSDs clearly have the upper hand. SSDs are, on average, four times faster than HDDs when reading and writing data. Furthermore, installing your Windows OS on an SSD can give you 20 second start-up time. Conversely, booting from an HDD for an identical installation can take up to a minute.

In addition, SSDs are smaller than HDDs, with lesser weight and no moving parts. As such, they are less prone to physical damage. Today, HDDs can achieve higher storage capacities than SSDs, but this gap is fast closing up. For the general user, this difference is not even apparent.

Gamers, musicians, and graphic designers will enjoy using SSDs for their speed, reduced noise, and increased performance. Moreover, users who travel a lot will benefit from the faster start-up times SSDs offer.

Migrate Your Windows From HDD to SSD Using Disk Genius

Now we know why SSDs are good, let’s go about getting your Windows from an HDD to an SSD.

1. Back Up Your Important Data

Migrating your Windows installation from one storage device to another is a tricky and potentially dangerous process. You can easily corrupt your data or, worse, wipe it completely. Hence, before you begin the transfer process, ensure to back up all your data.

The installation process will delete all data stored on the target SSD, so you also have to back up the data on that device. You can consult our Windows data backup guide to learn how to store your data safely.

Furthermore, you can either back up your data on an external storage device or the cloud. We recommend storing on the cloud for maximum data security as your external storage device can get damaged. However, this option requires an internet connection.


2.Download and Run DiskGenius

DiskGenius is a disk management and data recovery tool that is tried and trusted by many users. You can download this free software by visiting the download page on the DiskGenius website. Click on the Download button to download the installer program.

After downloading, navigate to the download location and open the installer. Once it has opened, select your language, read, and accept the license agreement. Then, wait for the installation to complete. DiskGenius usually creates a shortcut for you on the desktop.

Next, open up your Windows desktop, find the DiskGenius shortcut, and double-click it to run the program.

3. Open the System Migration Tool on DiskGenius

With DiskGenius open, select the OS Migration tool on the toolbar or navigate to Tools > System Migration. Ensure you have connected your SSD to your computer. You can connect it as an external device or install it on the appropriate motherboard slot.

4. Select the Target Disk

After opening the OS Migration tool, identify and select your SSD as the target disk. This step should be quite simple if the SSD is the only other storage device connected to your computer. Hence, you should disconnect all other storage devices from your PC to avoid confusion.

Upon selecting the target disk, a pop-up message will warn you that all files and partitions on the target disk will be overwritten. This should not be a cause for concern if you have backed up your important data. Select okay to continue the migration.

5. Confirm the System Migration Settings

The system migration settings window allows you to customize how you want the migration to proceed. You can set the partition size by dragging the arrows between the partitions on the target disk.

Moreover, you can choose whether to boot from the target disk after the migration is complete. If you want to continue booting from the original disk, you can leave this option unchecked.

Finally, you can prevent your computer from sleeping while the migration occurs.

After confirming your settings, click the Start button on the bottom right of the menu.

Another pop-up message will appear, warning you that your files will be overwritten, emphasizing the need to back up your data. Click on the okay button if you wish to proceed.

6.Choose the Migration Mode

The next step is to choose one of two migration modes. Hot Migration takes snapshots of your current system without closing it. Ensure to save your data before choosing this option. Alternatively, you can choose to reboot to the Windows Pocket Edition (WinPE).

We recommend using the Hot Migration mode as it gives you greater control over the transfer process. You can easily stop the migration from this mode. Moreover, if the target disk disconnects from your PC, you can quickly recover on the original disk.

7. Wait for Completion

After you choose the migration mode, DiskGenius will create a snapshot of your Windows OS and begin copying your data to the target SSD. All you have to do while this is happening is waiting.

You can continue using your computer as usual. However, we recommend not doing so for two reasons. First, you may interfere with the transfer process and will have to start all over. Secondly, any work you do on your computer while migrating will not reflect on the new copy of your OS.

8. Reboot From Your SSD

After completing the migration, your computer is ready to boot from your SSD. Depending on your migration settings, the reboot will happen automatically, and you can resume work as usual.

However, if the boot does not occur automatically, you can enter the BIOS on Windows and choose to boot from your SSD. The Windows OS on your SSD is identical to the one installed on the original disk. Therefore, all your files and settings are intact.


As a final note, you should confirm that you can boot properly from the target disk before formatting the original HDD.

Getting the Most Out of Your SSD

Finally, you have installed Windows on your SSD and are ready to use it to its fullest potential. One of the first things you will notice is how much faster programs load. Consequently, you can capitalize on this benefit by installing performance-intensive programs on your SSD.

Nonetheless, you should be wary of indiscriminately filling your SSD with files and applications. The perfect balance would be to store multimedia files and infrequently used programs on your HDD while keeping your favorite games and applications on your SSD.

Categories
Australia

Sophie Scamps to demand action on junk food advertising

Restricting the promotion of unhealthy foods to children is a key measure contained in the National Obesity Strategy released in March. But the strategy has been gathering dust, with neither major party committed to reform.

Scamps said restricting advertising was the “low-hanging fruit” among the recommended policy tools for reducing obesity and compared the measure to the ban on tobacco advertising, which has helped reduce smoking rates.

The federal government has jurisdiction over advertising laws but has allowed the industry to govern itself through a self-regulatory code administered by Ad Standards, part of the Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA).

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland said while children “require additional protection when it comes to advertising”, there was no plan to ditch the current self-regulatory approach.

Public health advocates say self-regulation is failing, pointing to the junk food companies’ argument that they are not advertising to children by sponsoring their sports because they only use their brand names and not pictures of their products.

The Obesity Policy Coalition has been advocating for a ban on junk food advertising to children on television including during prime time, and action to stop children from being targeted by social media.

The National Obesity Strategy said the average five-to-eight-year-old was being exposed to 827 television junk food advertisements a year and that unhealthy food and drink sponsorships were “undermining the health benefits of sport”.

The strategy set the goal of reducing the proportion of children and adults’ total energy intake from discretionary foods from more than 30 per cent to less than 20 per cent by 2030, but the proposal to restrict the marketing of junk food has not been implemented.

Scamps said the nation’s obesity problem had flown under the radar during the pandemic but that the costs to the health system were growing as more Australians developed related conditions such as type 2 diabetes and some cancers.

She said she expected parents would support the measure, which would help reduce children’s demands for unhealthy foods while out shopping.

“We all know how powerful that pester voice is that the children, when we’re at the checkout, and they’ve seen something on telly, and they really want it… it’s very hard to say no,” she said.

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Labor promised during the election campaign consider new restrictions on unhealthy products “on their merits”, highlighting the party’s “proven track record of acting on harmful products”, including cigarette plain packaging and alcohol taxes.

The AANA last year updated its self-regulatory code to ban images of junk food being used in sponsorship advertising targeting children, but there are no restrictions on the use of brand names or logos.

The association is reviewing its Children’s Advertising Code, which currently states that marketing food or beverages to children “must neither encourage nor promote an inactive lifestyle or unhealthy eating or drinking habits”.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
US

Details emerge on slaying suspect who may have left Ohio

“We understand the ideas and languages ​​in the video are starting. And that is why our investigators are working around the clock to ensure Mr. Marlow is brought into custody,” Porter said.

Talking to Marlow directly, Porter said he wanted the suspect to know they were there to help him. “You have the ability to end this peacefully. We want to end this peacefully. Please call 911 and turn yourself in.”

Marlow graduated from Butler High School in 2001 and graduated from the University of Kentucky in Lexington, according to background check obtained by the Dayton Daily News.

Stephen Marlow

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

Stephen Marlow

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

Stephen Marlow

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

He lived and worked in Chicago as a trader from 2006 to 2018, according to his LinkedIn profile. He most recently lived with his parents on Haverstraw Avenue, one of the streets where a part of the shooting took place, police said.

ExploreFBI helping in Butler Twp. shooting that left 4 dead: What we know today

Two homes were surrounded by crime scene tape near the intersection of Hardwicke and Haverstraw. One of the homes, in the 7200 block of Hardwicke, shares part of a back fence with his parents’ homes that was purchased in 1999, according to county property records.

One nearby neighbor who declined to give his name on Saturday said he has lived in the neighborhood for over three decades.

The man said he did not know the alleged shooter but that he’d recently heard there were what seemed to be minor issues with Marlow and other neighbors, including residents on Hardwicke Place.

“He’d holler at them and say, ‘Keep the noise down, you’re too noisy in this neighborhood,’” the man said, noting that he’d didn’t personally witness Marlow yelling, but had heard this from others in the neighborhood. “They said he did that all the time, he’d holler at you if you were outside.”

Marlow was convicted of aggravated burglary and aggravated threatening in February 2020, stemming from a July 2019 incident in Vandalia. He was accused of breaking into a Damian Street home in Vandalia and threatening harm to a person there with a weapon.

He was sentenced to five years of community control but that probation was terminated Feb. 9, according to Montgomery County Common Pleas Court records.

During the first part of his probation, he was ordered to have a mental health evaluation and was under intense supervision until December 2020, according to court records.

The FBI said Friday that Marlow had connections with Chicago, Lexington and Indianapolis. They asked people to call 937-233-2080, 1-800-Call-FBI or http://tips.fbi.gov with info about Marlow.

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

Wendy Chapman lives next door to one of the houses involved in a Butler Twp. shooting investigation.

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

Categories
Technology

HP’s Envy x360 Convertible Laptop is currently receiving amazing discounts

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Australia

NSW primary school ethics enrollments up 20 per cent on five years ago, shortage of ethics teachers

Kevin Farmer is a veteran primary school ethics teacher who for years held weekly classes at Crown Street Public. But when the chance to run an after-school ethics club at Inner Sydney High appeared, he leapt at it.

“In high school classes the philosophical questions and conversations are much deeper, we talk about human rights, marriage equality, peer pressure and friendship,” said Farmer, who is one of about 2000 volunteer ethics teachers in NSW. “I get fewer numbers in the high school, but they are there because they want to be. They are so engaged.”

Ethics teacher Kevin Farmer runs an after-school ethics club at Inner Sydney High and teaches ethics at Crown Street Public School.

Ethics teacher Kevin Farmer runs an after-school ethics club at Inner Sydney High and teaches ethics at Crown Street Public School.Credit:Janie Barrett

Primary Ethics, the not-for-profit group that has run classes for the past decade, says almost 43,000 primary students are enrolled in ethics at 483 – or just under a quarter – of the state’s public schools.

A pilot program by the organization to extend classes to secondary schools is still in its infancy: just a handful of schools, including Inner Sydney, Fort Street High, James Ruse Agricultural High and Katoomba High have taken part in a trial run by the organisation.

Primary Ethics chief executive Evan Hannah says while primary school ethics enrollments are up 20 per cent on five years ago, the program is dealing with major hurdles recruiting volunteer teachers, particularly in rural and regional areas.

“Our biggest growth in the past few years has been at primary schools in Parramatta, Canterbury-Bankstown and Georges River, where more schools in those areas are signing up,” he said.

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“We are moving beyond the inner west and lower north shore, but there are serious challenges after COVID-19 caused so much disruption. We rely solely on volunteers, 75 per cent [of whom are] parents, and without them the schools can’t run classes.”

Data shows fewer schools have ethics classes in areas of Sydney where both parents are more likely to work, where they work further from home, and where English is more likely to be a second language, he said.

Categories
US

Kansas’ vote on abortion rights turns spotlight on the next battlefront: State constitutions

Abortion rights advocates scored a major victory this week when Kansans voted overwhelmingly against stripping protections for reproductive rights from the state constitution. With voters fired up over the US Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, Kansas is a success they hope to duplicate in numerous other states in November.

But abortion opponents consider the vote against the proposed constitutional amendment an outlier, and have forged ahead with more ballot initiatives and court challenges that target protections for abortion rights in other state constitutions.

“It’s going to be a state-by-state fight,” Helene Krasnoff, the vice president of litigation and law for Planned Parenthood, told NBC News.

The ballot measures and legal brawls are already underway, sparked by the Supreme Court’s ruling on Mississippi’s abortion ban. The ruling overturned the court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision guaranteeing a constitutional right to abortion, and the later Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision allowing states to impose some restrictions on abortion before fetal viability, so long as they did not constitute an “undue burden” on the right to the procedure.

The ballot question in Kansas was the first time since the Supreme Court ruling that voters could cast ballots on the issue.

Had voters approved it, the “Value Them Both Amendment” would have removed language from the state constitution that the Kansas Supreme Court said guaranteed the right to abortion, putting the issue under the control of the Republican-controlled Legislature.

Fifty-nine percent of voters rejected the ballot measure amid turnout that the secretary of state said was “incredibly high.” The blowout win by abortion rights supporters in a conservative state where the margin was expected to be narrow has reinvigorated Democrats, who expect heavy losses in the House in November, and left Republicans scrambling to recalibrate on the hot-button issue.

President Joe Biden called the vote “something extraordinary” and said it bodes well for Democrats in the upcoming midterm elections. “People aren’t just going to vote; they’re going to come out in record numbers. And they’re going to vote to reclaim the rights that the extreme Supreme Court has taken away from us and said did not exist in the Constitution ,” he said at a Democratic National Committee event the next day.

Kansas state Rep. John Eplee, a Republican who supported the measure, said he was “kind of almost shocked over these results,” which he conceded sent “a message.”

“Every state is different,” Eplee said, but “I think it’s a warning shot to other states that are trying to do similar measures like we did that you better be careful how you word it, and how you impact women’s reproductive health. Because the way this was worded and the way it went down, I think our constituent voter women in suburban areas got the idea of ​​how it would affect them.”

More ballot challenges ahead

Nevertheless, Kentucky voters are expected to consider a similar ballot measure in November, and Coloradans might too.

Abortion was effectively outlawed in Kentucky earlier this week after an appeals court allowed the state’s “trigger laws” to go into effect after the Supreme Court’s ruling. Abortion rights advocates, including Planned Parenthood, a doctor and two abortion clinics, are challenging those laws in court, arguing they violate patients’ rights to privacy and self-determination under the state constitution.

The ballot measure would make that legal argument moot. It would amend the state constitution to read: “To protect human life, nothing in this Constitution shall be constructed to secure or protect a right to abortion or require the funding of abortion.”

In Colorado, where Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, signed a law enacting a statutory protection for the right to abortion earlier this year, a group called the Colorado Life Initiative Committee is racing to reach the required 124,632 signatures by the Aug. 8 deadline.

Titled “Unlawful Murder of a Child,” the ballot proposal would make abortion illegal, going as far as to state that any individual who administers an abortion “will be held to equal penalties of homicide.” The law does outline exceptions to save the life or preserve the health of the mother, including in cases of ectopic or other nonviable pregnancies.

Angela Eicher, one of the committee’s founders, said it has more than 400 volunteers gathering signatures statewide.

“It’s been amazing to see, like, God connecting people and just the movement growing, but there’s also a fair amount of resistance,” Eicher said.

Faye Barnhart, another founder of the initiative, said she was saddened by the results in Kansas, but “Colorado is responsible for Colorado and not any other state. And so we’re responsible for how we treat our children and how we treat our women, and we’re responsible for educating our own state.”

But even if the measure gets on the ballot, it faces an uphill battle in Colorado, which became the first state to decriminalize abortion back in 1967. Voters in the state have rejected ballot initiatives restricting abortion access six times since 1998.

Advocates using ballot challenges too

Abortion rights proponents in California, Vermont and Michigan, meanwhile, are hoping voters will turn out to enshrine constitutional protections in those states.

“This is an important opportunity for voters in those states to directly defend their right to make personal decisions about their own lives, bodies and futures,” Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said after the Kansas vote.

In California, a Democratic bastion where the high court has found abortion is a protected right under the state constitution, voters will decide whether an amendment should be added to protect “reproductive freedom.” The measure would state explicitly that California cannot interfere with a person’s right to have an abortion or the right to contraceptives.

California Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, a Democrat, said he and Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins worked alongside Planned Parenthood to draft the amendment. From the date of its introduction on July 8, it took less than a month to approve the bill as a ballot proposition.

“I think a lot of Californians are fired up about this issue,” Rendon said, but “it’s incumbent on us to get the vote out and make sure this stays on people’s minds.”

“I think in my own district, this will certainly pass, but I think it’ll pass at the state level too. I think California will make a statement again,” he said.

In Vermont, a liberal stronghold where abortion is already protected under state law, legislators were even more confident about voters signing off on a constitutional amendment lawmakers advanced that would declare “an individual’s right to personal reproductive autonomy is central to the liberty and dignity to determine one’s own life course.”

One of the sponsors, state Sen. Virginia Lyons, a Democrat, said, “I will speak for all of Vermont. It will pass in all of Vermont.”

Advocates in the battleground state of Michigan are confident they’ll be able to get a constitutional amendment on the ballot called “Reproductive Freedom for All,” which if passed would provide permanent protection for abortion care and access to contraception.

To make it onto the ballot, the initiative needs about 425,000 signatures. The coalition behind the initiative submitted more than 750,000 signatures last month.

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, told MSNBC on Wednesday that it was “a record-breaking number of signatures for a constitutional amendment” in the state.

“Those signatures are now going under a professional review and validation, and then a recommendation will be made as to whether to put this question to the voters this November. That will be made shortly. Once that goes forward, if it is on the ballot , then truly our fundamental rights and freedom is on the ballot this November in Michigan,” Benson said.

The measure would also nullify an ongoing court fight over a 1931 law that bans abortion in the state. Two Republican county prosecutors, citing the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe, have said they planned to enforce the ban, which could lead to felony charges for abortion providers. A judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking the law earlier this week.

Benson said the proposed amendment “will give voters an opportunity to weigh in on their stake of protecting their own fundamental freedoms and rights, and our democracy this fails.

“I think what Kansas showed us is really where our voters stand on those issues, which is squarely on the side of protecting those fundamental rights, freedoms and our democracy,” she added.

court fights

Abortion rights supporters and opponents are also clashing in the courts over state constitutional protections.

“It’s not one strategy for every state,” said Planned Parenthood’s Krasnoff.

Activists have filed lawsuits to get the courts to recognize abortion as a right under the constitution in four different states with restrictive abortion laws — Idaho, Mississippi, Kentucky and Utah.

Opponents, meanwhile, have focused on states where high courts have already held that abortion is a protected right.

In Florida, a judge last month temporarily blocked a new law that would ban abortions after 15 weeks because it conflicted with earlier state Supreme Court rulings based on precedent dating back decades that established the right to privacy. The state has appealed that ruling, automatically allowing the new law to take effect for the time being. Lawyers for the state’s Republican attorney general argued in a court filing that the earlier decisions were wrong. The “right to privacy does not include the right to obtain an abortion,” the filing said.

A spokesperson for Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis suggested the governor would ask the current, more conservative state Supreme Court to revisit the earlier rulings regarding Florida’s right to privacy.

“The Florida Supreme Court previously misinterpreted Florida’s right to privacy as including a right to an abortion, and we reject this interpretation,” Bryan Griffin, the governor’s deputy press secretary, told the Tallahassee Democrat last month.

All seven judges on the high court were appointed by Republican governors, including three who were appointed by DeSantis.

In Montana, state Attorney General Austin Knudsen, a Republican, has asked the state’s Supreme Court to reverse a 1999 ruling holding that abortion was protected under the Montana Constitution, saying it “inextricably linked Montana’s right to privacy to the decision in Roe.”

Krasnoff said that while the post-Roe fighting over the issue is taking place at the state level, efforts by abortion rights opponents pressing for national action could change that dynamic.

“It’s going to be a state-by-state fight, but our opposition has made clear from the get-go their goal is a nationwide ban on abortion,” she said. “That’s something a state constitution can’t help with.”