Socialists descend on Washington




'One Nation' rally had more in attendance than 8/28?


You may have watched the clip of “One Nation” attendees being told that “satellite images” proved that their rally exceeded attendance at the “Restoring Honor” rally.

GLENN: So, the rally turnout in Washington was

PAT: Spectacular.

STU: Unbelievable.

PAT: Hold on. What was it?

GLENN: Can we just talk about

STU: How many?

PAT: Let me just remind you.

VOICE: If I had the budget, I could equal that march. I know I could.

PAT: He knows he could.

STU: How many?

VOICE: I know I could get Leo Gerard. I could get the international union. I guarantee it.

(Crosstalk.)

VOICE: I could do more than 300,000.

PAT: Wow. More than 300,000.

STU: I wonder if he did that. Did he do that, Pat?

GLENN: Stop.

PAT: Surprisingly he did not.

STU: But I'm looking at the pictures and they look amazing. Did he get one fifth of that?

GLENN: Stop.

PAT: Well, you look at the side by side at theblaze.com, you'll see our rally, the 8/28 rally compared to Saturday's incredible

(Crosstalk.)

STU: By the end of it when they still had speakers on stage, there was only a few hundred people there and you can see that at your keynote, Glenn, there was only 200 people left. You can't really

GLENN: So, here's the thing. I want to play in LA, they also had a One Nation rally.

PAT: Yeah, they did.

GLENN: And Danny Glover was there and here's what Danny Glover said. Cut 281, please.

GLOVER: and we see an annihilation is happening before our very eyes, the animals and plants that we once saw are no longer there. We cannot be a part that have species annihilation.

STU: What is going on in the background? Is there ca zoos being played? What is happening?

PAT: I don't know. He's communist rallies, and, look, they don't want they don't far be it for them to eliminate any group from these rallies. They want communists, they want socialists, they want anarchists.

GLENN: I find it amazing we have a President

PAT: A big tent.

GLENN: and a press that can see this kind of rally happening where they are standing with the banners and the socialist everything and actually and nobody covers it, nobody cares.

PAT: I know.

VOICE: If I had the budget

STU: No. What is being played here? Listen.

VOICE: I know I could. I know that I could get Leo Gerard. I could get international union and all of these. I guarantee it. I could get more than 300,000.

(Crosstalk.)

GLENN: Could you please play 503, please?

VOICE: If I had the budget, I could equal that

STU: That's 503. Wait. Is that 503?

GLENN: Stop.

STU: Why did you say you wanted 503 if you didn't want 503?

GLENN: Play some of the people, things they were saying at the rally

VOICE: If I had the budget, I could equal that mark. I know I could.

GLENN: Stop it.

STU: That wasn't him at the rally. He was at the rally. You said you wanted people at the rally.

VOICE: I heard a little bit about the Glenn Beck rally and, you know, making a mockery of Martin Luther King. I really didn't follow it, but knowing those people, that's what it would be about.

PAT: He really didn't follow it. He didn't know anything about it. But knowing those people.

GLENN: Hey, Stu, we glad did I didn't fight or anything. We gladly, gladly had our position of stage down off of the Memorial

STU: Uh huh.

GLENN: We were told a myriad of times we could not point speakers towards the Memorial because it was a sacred spot.

PAT: We even talked about that on the air because there were so many people on the Memorial watching and we couldn't provide sound for them.

GLENN: Right, because it is a sacred spot. We were in no way, shape, or form to disturb the Memorial in any way. We didn't argue it. We didn't fight for it. I didn't want to stand on the same step as Martin Luther King. I personally would have felt uncomfortable doing it, but did you notice that we had a band on that place? How do you put a band on the same step as Martin Luther King? How do you do that? First of all, what kind of connections did you have to get the National Park Service and a national Memorial

PAT: You've almost got to be, I would think, endorsed by the President of the United States of America, but I think that's about it.

PAT: Here's fear of the feedback of the rally.

VOICE: Then heard about this rally and thought, let me see if I can get these mailed here and I was able to and came and here I am.

VOICE: Glenn Beck and he Tea Party people are saying nobody should pay taxes or anything.

GLENN: I never said that.

VOICE: And, you know, I don't know.

STU: It kind of sounds good, though. It's a good idea.

VOICE: We can be here and where are you?

VOICE: I mean, this is about us coming together trying to divide workers among each other.

VOICE: Federal funding for all public schools and the end of privatization of bussing our teachers union.

VOICE: I'm glad to be here. I'm glad I got a free bus ride because unemployment. I couldn't really pay, but I think it's wonderful that we're here and everybody's together and it's a nice day and

VOICE: I'm out here because I believe that this is a very important rally. October 2nd is all about November 2nd. It's about getting the progressive movement fired up in a very tough time in America after we've seen some pretty tough things happen to us legislatively. We've made some progress but the obstruction has been the obstruction against the progressive agenda in this country.

PAT: How do you obstruct how does the minority obstruct?

GLENN: It doesn't matter. Here is the thing. I want you to go to theblaze.com and

PAT: It does matter Mahatma Gandhi.

GLENN: I want you see the socialist banners and the socialist books and the socialist rallying cries and the communists that were there on the mall and I just I want you to pass that on to your friends and just say, Does it matter anymore? Does it matter? Does does communism, socialism, anti Americanism, globalism, does it matter? Does it matter that we have a new world order being formed now? Does it matter that we have socialists and communists wearing I was going to say wearing the flag, but they weren't. Did you notice the lack of red, white, and blue in this crowd? There's photos. We sent photographers down and reporters down. We hired independent crews because I didn't want to, quite honestly, put a FOX crew into that lion's den and have anybody have to answer that they were from FOX. So, we hired, I personally hired independent crews to go down and take photos and do interviews with people in the crowd. You'll see them tonight and does it matter? You know, this is what I told you about a year ago. I said, Right now they're all saying that they're not communists, they're not socialists, they're not revolutionaries but mark my words, I said, there will come a team when they'll just come out and say, it doesn't matter anyway. We're there, gang, we're there, and the American people have to decide. You know, there I don't know if you saw any of the pictures of the trash, again, at the theblaze.com, you'll see the pictures of the trash, just the pictures of the World War II Memorial covered in trash.

PAT: SEIU signs, protest banners.

GLENN: Oh, my gosh.

PAT: All kinds of junk.

GLENN: Its rep hence Syble, rep hence Syble. Now, you ask yourself, how can that happen? Well, I can tell you how it happens. When you are not when you think that the military and the military industrial complex is evil and that we are the oppressors, you don't you don't think anything of the military and the memorial. These were oppressors. When you're country's freedom has been handed to you you know why that would have never happened in 8/28's crowd? Because you would have had thousands, thousands of those who served in World War II and Korea and Vietnam, thousands that served in the Gulf War and this war. They would have they would have wept. They would have picked it up themselves and then they would have wept that somebody didn't care, but those people are not in that crowd. These are the people that march against our soldiers. They really do believe that freedom is free and so they don't have respect for the sacrifice that it has taken. So, they can be numb skulls, so they can also stand on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and say what they said over the weekend.

I have to tell you, I don't have any problem with them marching. I have no problem with them going there in the Lincoln Memorial. I'm not going to say that they desecrated that site with their words because this country is about freedom of speech. They didn't did he say crate that site with their words. They desecrated their site mark my words. As I said about myself on 8/28, to echo the words of Abraham Lincoln, the world will not long remember what we said here but in the same way I said it to the crowd of 8/28 I say to the numbers of 10 2 10, but they will long remember what you did there. And what you did there, not what you said there, what you did there was shameful



TheBlaze: ‘One Nation’ Crowd Didn’t Exactly Leave the Mall (or World War II Memorial) Spotless

STU: Can we at least stop the spin, though about it. Look. They didn't do a great job, but the fact that you're saying there wasn't a lot of red, white, and blue is disgraceful, especially when you see this picture here. There is a beautiful flag I'm showing it to the Insider Extreme members here. There is a beautiful flag there, right by the trash on the ground and see, there is red, white, and blue on the event. It's just sitting there right there on the ground. It's fantastic. So, let's not spin this.

GLENN: Look at all of those

PAT: Look at all of that.

GLENN: All those signs, the homemade signs. Did you see the homemade sign that was right there in the front, one of the front rose

PAT: About Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin are racists.

GLENN: Are racists.

PAT: Yeah.

GLENN: Unbelievable. But at least it was a homemade sign because the other flags, I'm sure, were printed by unions and so when you're handed something and you don't really care about it, you just came because you're unemployed and you had a free bus trip, what difference does it make? What difference does it make? You're being used as a useful idiot and I have to tell you how proud I am of the union members. The union members, they didn't come. This they say this is a bottom up revolution. It's not. It is a revolution of funded by those and perpetrated by those who have their pensions 120% funded. The union workers, no. The union workers are not Marxists and communists. The union workers are the garbage truck drivers and the teachers who are not communists. The firemen and the policemen. The firemen and the policemen, I felt bad for the policemen in Washington. Can can he did we get a report on if there were any arrests? This probably weren't enough people to arrest anybody, but there was I think it's on the theblaze.com, there was a woman who was hitting the reporter and I saw the poor park police having to stand in between this woman and the reporter. That didn't happen at our rally. It didn't happen. The police, they know who supports them. They know. We can't allow these things just to become about it can't become about money. It can't become about just our pensions. It has to be about our values. It has to be. What are our values? Who represents us? Who what kind of community do you want to live? Do you want to live in the kind of community sure, there's more space, but do you want to live in the kind of community that was represented on the mall in the same place this last weekend by 10 2 10? Are those the leaders of our country for its bright future or do you want to live in a community of those who attended 8/28? You can't have one or the other I mean, you can't have it's not that's the community has to come together. There's going to be bone heads in both communities. There will be racists in both communities. There will be stupid people in both communities, but which one has a brighter future?

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Editor's Note: Arizona House Bill HB2770 has since been shut down! AZ Rep. Rachel Jones tweeted that the AZ Freedom Caucus shut down the bill before it could reach the board. It is encouraging to see states stepping to protect the American people from getting one step closer to a Central Bank Digital Currency. Hopefully, Arizona will be a precedent for the other states!

On today's radio broadcast, Glenn warned about dangerous Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) language being smuggled into routine legislation in REPUBLICAN-led states. This is unacceptable, and as Glenn said, we can't let this legislation pass as it now stands.

The legislation being used to smuggle in this CBDC language is the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), a routine piece of legislation passed on the state level that helps standardize commercial and business transactions. However, a new round of UCCs being deliberated RIGHT NOW amongst a swath of Republican-led states anticipate the use of "electronic money." In a public letter sent to the Republican states currently deliberating this legislation, the Pro-Family Legislative Network said this can only refer to the Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) under consideration and testing by the Federal Reserve. Biden's Executive Order 14067 issued in March of 2022 started the push for CBDC, and now these states, knowingly or unknowingly, are laying the legislative groundwork for making CBDC a reality.

There is absolutely no reason why Republican-led states should aid in laying the foundation for CBDC, yet 12 of them are deliberating it RIGHT NOW, with one UCC bill already on one GOP governor's desk! We have to act NOW to stop these UCCs in their tracks and demand our lawmakers amend the bills without the "electronic money" language.

If your state is listed below, contact your representative NOW to put an end to CBDC language.

1. North Dakota

North Dakota House Bill HB1082 passed BOTH chambers and is now sitting on Governor Burgum's desk. Burgun has 3 DAYS to veto this bill once it's placed on his desk—if not, it will pass automatically. If you are a North Dakota resident, it is absolutely CRUCIAL that you contact Governor Burgum's office NOW and demand that he veto this bill and re-introduce it without the "electronic money" language.

2. Arizona

Arizona House Bill HB2770 has been SHUT DOWN! See the above editor's note for more details.

Arizona House Bill HB2770 passed the House majority and minority caucuses. Arizona residents, contact your representative's office NOW so that they amend this bill without the "electronic money" language.

3. Arkansas

Arkansas House Bill HB1588 is in committee, and if passed, will head to the House floor. Though the bill is only in its beginning stages, it's important for Arkansas residents to stop this bill in its tracks and amend it without the "electronic money" language.

4. Missouri

Missouri House Bill HB1165 is also in its beginning stages in committee. That means it's important to contact your representative as soon as possible to amend it without the "electronic money" language.

5. Oklahoma

Oklahoma House Bill HB 2776 passed the House Committee and will go to a chamber vote soon. If passed, it will go to the Senate, then the governor's desk. If you are an Indiana resident, contact your representative's office NOW to amend the bill without the "electronic money" language.

6. Indiana

Indiana Senate Bill SB0486 passed the Senate and is headed to the House. Republicans control Indiana's executive office and BOTH chambers of the legislature. There is no excuse for this bill to pass. If you are an Indiana resident, it's vital you contact your representative NOW and demand they amend this bill without the "electronic money" language.

7. Kentucky

Kentucky Senate Bill SB64 passed the Senate and is now being deliberated in the House. If you live in Kentucky, contact your representative's office to amend the bill without the "electronic money" language.

8. Montana

Montana Senate Bill SB370 passed the Senate and was sent to the House on March 3rd. If you are a Montana resident, contact your representative's office NOW so that the bill doesn't without changing the "electronic money" language.

9. Nebraska

Nebraska's Legislative Bill LB94 passed committee and the first floor vote. As Nebraska only has one legislative chamber, this bill is dangerously close to passing the legislature and being sent to the governor's desk. If you are a Nebraska resident, contact your representative's office NOW and demand they amend the bill without the "electronic money" language.

10. New Hampshire

New Hampshire House Bill HB584 is currently in House committee deliberations and has not yet reached the House floor. If you are a New Hampshire resident, contact your representative's office NOW to amend the bill without the "electronic money" language.

11. Tennessee

Tennessee House Bill HB0640 didn't successfully pass the House. However, it was deferred to a Senate committee and has now taken the form of Senate Bill SB0479, which is now in committee. This bill is still alive, and it's important for you, Tennessee residents, to stop it before it reaches the floor! Contact your representative to amend the bill without the "electronic money" language.

12. Texas

Texas House Bill HB5011 was filed and is ready to be taken up by committee. Fellow Texans, let's not let this bill progress any further! Contact your representative and demand they amend the bill without the "electronic money" language.

6 things you NEED to know about the Silicon Valley Bank collapse

NurPhoto / Contributor | Getty Images

Silicon Valley Bank's collapse is sparking traumatic memories of the 2008 financial crash. Should we be worried SVB is signaling a similar economic catastrophe, or is everyone overreacting to the media's hype? Glenn told his listeners to be "healthily terrified." This event is sure to have ripple effects throughout the economy, but the more you are informed about it, the more you can prepare. Here are 6 things you need to know about Silicon Valley Bank's crash—explained in simple words.

1. The short answer to what happened: SVB didn't have enough money to pay its depositors.

Remember the scene from It's a Wonderful Life when all of the residents make a run on George Bailey's bank demanding their money? Fortunately for them, their money was in the altruistic hands of George Bailey, who used his honeymoon savings to give the depositors the money they demanded.

Silicon Valley Bank's depositors weren't so lucky.

In short, the depositors made a run on Silicon Valley Bank, demanding the withdrawal of their money. But SVB simply didn't have the liquid money available to give their depositors, causing regulators to shut down the bank shortly afterward.

2. It all started with COVID...

Why didn't SVB have enough money for its depositors? To explain this, we have to go back to the pandemic era.

The pandemic saw a rapid decrease in spending and a massive increase in bank deposits. Due to the uncertainty of the future and lockdowns limiting ways to spend money on recreational activities, like restaurants, bars, and other outlets, many Americans stocked up money in their accounts. In fact, SVB's deposits doubled in 2021 alone, bringing in more money than they could lend out to their clients.

To make a return on their available cash, SVB wanted to invest it, as many banks do. Since they had reached their lending limit, they decided to invest it in U.S. Treasury Securities, which are the government's means of funding itself without using taxation (in a nutshell). These are considered "ultra-safe" investments because they are backed by the "full faith and credit of the federal government."

Unlike other forms of investments, investing in Treasuries means the government will do everything within its legal power to pay back the money used to fund itself. In other words, it is typically very safe... so what happened?

3. Then came the magic cocktail—record-high inflation and rising interest rates...

Interest rates ruined the typically "ultra-safe" investment. Due to 40-year record-high inflation, the Fed lifted rates eight times by a total of 4.25 percentage points in 2022, raising interest rates from 0.25 percent to 4.375 percent. This means the value of U.S. Treasuries investments plummeted rapidly. SVB reported that it lost $1.8 billion due to the decreased value of its Treasuries investments after a year of rising interest rates.

This raises the following question: why didn't SVB just weather the storm and wait for interest rates to decrease? There are two issues with this. The first is that, with so many of their assets held up in Treasuries investments, SVB still wouldn't have enough liquid assets to give their depositors during the bank run.

The second issue is that Treasuries investments have a ten-year limit. In 2021 during the Trump administration, interest rates were at an all-time low of 0.125 percent.

The record-fast increase of interest rates in 2022 caused very little chance for rates to go back down to their historic 2021 lows within ten years for banks to make their money back on their investments.

To avoid this, SVB planned to sell their investments at a loss and re-purchase Treasuries investments at the decreased value, giving them an extra ten years to bet on decreased interest rates in the future.

But people caught on to SVB's plan and didn't want to ride with the risk.

4. Account holders withdrew their money... FAST.

As aforementioned, SVP lost $1.8 billion when it sold its depleted Treasuries investments. While they were betting on being able to re-purchase the devalued securities, hoping that they would go up in value in the future with lowered interest rates, investors were worried about the risk.

Once they made the announcement of their $1.8 billion loss, their stocks began to drop, and venture capitalists warned the companies they invest in to pull out of SVB. This had a snowball effect, leading to a "bank run" of depositors demanding to withdraw their money from their SVB accounts.

This led to the perfect storm: SVB's investment losses coupled with the influx of withdrawals were so immense that regulators had to step in and shut the bank down to protect depositors. The government currently "running" SVB, for all practical purposes, is the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). The FDIC closed SVB on Friday and reopened the bank on Monday, March 13th as the Deposit Insurance Bank of Santa Clara.

5. Some people may lose their money. 

Banks insure accounts with $250,000 or less with FDIC insurance. That means, in cases of bank failure, exactly like this one, the FDIC covers all accounts less than $250,000. The FDIC said SVB customers who had less than $250,000 in their accounts will have access to all of their money when the bank reopens. Since it reopened this week, they should have access to their funds.

However, many of SVB's depositors had more than $250,000 in their accounts—it is Silicon Valley after all. Therefore, their accounts were not covered by FDIC insurance. Will they get their money back? There is a chance that they will not.

It is unclear how much SVB currently has to cover uninsured deposits. It is likely not enough. The FDIC has issued a "Receiver's Certificate" to the uninsured account holders with the amount in their account that is not covered by FDIC insurance.

The FDIC said it will pay some of the uninsured deposits by next week by liquidating any additional assets held by SVB. However, if the liquidated assets are not enough, many of SVB's uninsured account holders could lose their money for good.

6. Is this 2008 all over again?

SVB's collapse was the largest bank failure since 2008, when Washington Mutual failed with $307 billion in assets. Its failure, along with the collapse of the Lehman Brother's investment bank, triggered the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Are we in danger of repeating 2008?

Some argue that we are not in danger of another economic catastrophe, simply because SVB holds less than 1 percent of the nation's assets. However, as Glenn warns, there is a danger of banks repeating the same mistakes as SVP.

SVP wasn't the only bank to use its surplus deposits to invest in U.S. Treasuries, which means that other banks are wrestling with the depleted value of their securities investments due to rising interest rates.

Bank of America, for example, lost $109 billion in their securities investments due to rising interest rates, the most among its peers—and Bank of America is no small fish in the ocean of assets.

Other major banks recorded other massive losses in their securities investments due to rising interest rates. JP Morgan Chase lost $36 billion, Wells Fargo lost $41 billion, Citigroup lost $25 billion, and Goldman Sachs lost $1 billion. If the little banks collapse, will they get the same effort and attention from the federal government as the "big guys?"

The critic may argue that these are still small values given the incredibly large amount of assets held in banks nationwide. However, this is missing the point. Major banks have majorly invested in securities since the pandemic-era skyrocketing rate of deposits. Now those investments are depleted in value.

They can either sell those investments at a loss, or they can wait and hope that they will recover over time. However, if those investments are no longer liquid, what happens when their depositors come knocking? Will they have enough liquid assets to cover a massive bank run? These are the lingering questions that our banks need to address.

As Glenn says, this will impact you—it is only a matter of time. What will you do to prepare?

Glenn just purchased the entire historical Roe v. Wade archive as a solemn reminder of our nation's past and the vital importance of honoring the sacredness of life. Since Roe was overturned in 2022, many states have been stepping up to protect both their unborn citizens AND the mothers carrying them.

Which states are doing the most to protect their most vulnerable? Here are the top 12 states with the strictest laws against abortion.

1. Alabama

​Alabama has some of the nation's most protective pro-life measures, banning all abortions in the case of life-threatening circumstances for the mother. That means abortion is banned at every ​stage of pregnancy. Health care providers found guilty of performing abortions face a class-A felony, the most serious charge besides Capitol Murder, with the potential of carrying a life sentence in prison. However, the pill, Plan B, is classified as "contraception" rather than abortion. Taxpayer-funded Medicaid does not cover abortion procedures except in very limited circumstances.

Alabama is one of the few states to add protections within its state constitution for the unborn. The state:

Acknowledges, declares, and affirms that it is the public policy of this state to recognize and support the sanctity of unborn life and the rights of unborn children, including the right to life.

2. Arkansas

Like Alabama, Arkansas bans abortion at every stage of pregnancy except in life-threatening situations for the mother. However, Plan B is still considered "contraception" and is legal. Taxpayer-funded Medicaid does not cover abortion procedures except in very limited circumstances. Additionally, Arkansas added the amendment to its state constitution, declaring:

The policy of Arkansas is to protect the life of every unborn child from conception until birth, to the extent permitted by the Federal Constitution.

3. Idaho

Idaho bans abortions at every stage of pregnancy with the exceptions of life-threatening situations to the mother and instances of rape and incest. The health care practitioner who gave an abortion must prove "affirmative defense," which means they have to prove in court why the abortion is necessary and meets the legal criteria. Patients approved for abortion must wait 24 hours after counseling to receive the procedure. Anyone who performs an abortion unless it's in one of the approved cases will face felony charges. Like Alabama and Arkansas, taxpayer-funded Medicaid does not cover abortion procedures.

Unlike Alabama and Arkansas, Idaho law does not include explicit constitutional or statutory protections for abortion.

4. Kentucky

Kentucky has also banned abortion at all stages of pregnancy except in life-threatening situations for the mother. There are no exceptions for rape or incest. However, abortion providers are fighting the all-out ban on abortion through appealing to the state's previous abortion ban after six weeks of pregnancy. The appeal is ongoing.

Though Kentucky voters voted down a proposal to add an amendment to the state constitution banning abortion, the state adopted the following policy towards abortion in 2018:

Children, whether born or unborn, are the greatest natural resource in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

5. Louisiana

Louisiana also banned abortion at all stages of pregnancy with no exceptions for rape or incest. However there is an appeal to allow abortions in the case of rape and incest. Healthcare practitioners who violate this ban are subject to criminal prosecution. Moreover, Louisiana adopted an amendment in their state constitution—specifically, the Louisiana Declaration of Rights, banning the construction of any constitutional right to abortion:

To protect human life, nothing in present constitution shall be construed to secure or protect a right to abortion or require the funding of abortion.

6. Mississippi

Mississippi bans all abortions except to save the life of the mother or in cases of rape or incest that have been reported to law enforcement. Though Mississippi did not adopt a constitutional amendment to ban abortion as a right, the Mississippi Code says:

Abortion carries significant physical and psychological risks to the maternal patient, and these physical and psychological risks increase with gestational age.

Moreover, doctors who perform illegal abortions face civil and criminal charges.

7. Missouri

Missouri bans all abortions except in the case of a medical emergency concerning the mother, with no exceptions for rape or incest. Those seeking to get an abortion must prove "affirmative defense," which means they have to prove in court why the abortion is necessary and meets the legal criteria. Minors seeking an abortion through "affirmative defense" must do so with parental consent. Moreover, those seeking an abortion must be offered an ultrasound.

Moreover, Missouri adopted the following statute protecting the unborn:

It is the intention of the general assembly of the state of Missouri to: (1) [d]efend the right to life of all humans, born and unborn; (2) [d]eclare that the state and all of its political subdivisions are a ‘sanctuary of life’ that protects pregnant women and their unborn children; and (3) [r]egulate abortion to the full extent permitted by the Constitution of the United States, decisions of the United States Supreme Court, and federal statutes.

8. Oklahoma

Oklahoma was the first state to successfully ban all abortions after conception following the overturn of Roe v. Wade and continues to lead the way as one of the toughest states on abortion. Exceptions include life-saving procedures for the mother or pregnancies resulting from "rape, sexual assault, or incest." Those who perform legal abortions can be reported and prosecuted criminally under state law HB427 and be charged at least $10,000 per illegal abortion procedure. Violations also include insurance companies or private citizens caught funding abortions.

Though Oklahoma has not adopted a state constitutional amendment concerning abortion, its Public Health Code states that it cannot be “construed as creating or recognizing right to abortion."

9. South Dakota

South Dakota bans all abortions except in life-threatening cases for the mother. There are no exceptions for rape and incest. However, it is legal to travel out of state to get an abortion. There are no state constitutional provisions protecting against abortion.

10. Tennessee

Tennessee bans all abortions except in life-threatening cases for the mother. There is currently a movement in the Tennessee state legislature to enact exceptions for rape and incest. Like Idaho and Missouri, healthcare practitioners who gave an abortion must prove "affirmative defense," which means they have to prove in court why the abortion is necessary and meets the legal criteria. Those who provide abortions illegally can be criminally prosecuted.

Tennessee's state constitution was amended to supersede a 2000 Tennessee supreme court case, which held:

A woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy is a vital part of the right to privacy guaranteed by the Tennessee Constitution [and that] the right is inherent in the concept of ordered liberty embodied in our constitution and is therefore fundamental.

The new state constitutional amendment reads as follows:

Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion.

11. Texas

Texas bans all abortions except in life-threatening cases concerning the mother. There is a movement in the Texas state legislature to provide exemptions for rape and incest.

Moreover, Texas received a lot of heat for its law not only criminalizing providing illegal abortions but enabled citizens to report illegal abortions. However, several cities in Texas are pushing back against the abortion ban. After Dobbs, Texas increased the penalties for performing an abortion up to life in prison, including a civil penalty of no less than $100,000 per abortion performed.

Attorney General Ken Paxton said the following:

Now that the Supreme Court has finally overturned Roe, I will do everything in my power to protect mothers, families, and unborn children, and to uphold the state laws duly enacted by the Texas Legislature.

The cities of Austin and San Antonio passed ordinances preventing city funds from being used to investigate the provision or receipt of abortion care.

12. West Virginia

West Virginia bans abortion at all stages of pregnancy, except in the case of a “nonmedically viable fetus”, ectopic pregnancy, or medical emergency. According to the West Virginia state legislature, "Nonmedically viable fetus" means:

A fetus that contains sufficient lethal fetal anomalies so as to render the fetus medically futile or incompatible with life outside the womb in the reasonable medical judgment of a reasonably prudent physician.

Victims of rape and incest can obtain abortions up to eight weeks after conception, but only if they report to law enforcement first.

In 2018, West Virginians voted to add the following language to the state constitution:

Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to abortion or requires the funding of abortion.