Posobiec spoke to two activist women, asking "Are you upset because you couldn't get into the abortion van on time?" Planned Parenthood of Great Rivers brought their mobile abortion van to town, offering free abortions and vasectomies. Both sets of appointments filled up fast.
"I don't understand what you're talking about?" The woman said. She went on to say that she wasn't upset about missing out on the abortion van since she's "not even f*cking anyone right now." Posobiec asked her to watch her language, but she would not.
"How many abortions have you had? How many abortions have you had today?" Posobiec asked the other woman.
"I'm getting paid by George Soros to have an abortion on the stage," one woman said while her friend laughed, "with no drugs."
"Which way you going?" Posobiec asked.
"What do you mean which way?"
"To have an abortion."
"What kind of abortions are there, Jack?" She asked.
"There's pills, there's tools, which way?"
"So it's gonna be on stage," she said, "so a normal person would think that they would use tools, right, and vacuum it out and do all of that. Like, if I took a pill, that takes several days, and nothing happens, you won't see anything. So you should probably, like, study how female anatomy works."
Abortion is a mainstay of the DNC platform and the Democrat plan for abortion, should the party attain the White House with Kamala Harris, is to legalize the practice at the federal level. "With a Democratic Congress, we will pass national legislation to make Roe the law of the land again," the platform reads before also promising to "repeal the Hyde Amendment," which prevents federal funds from being used to terminate pregnancies.
Posobiec said that this wasn't the first time he'd run into her, but that he'd encountered her in Philadelphia, as well, where she'd confronted him. Posobiec was approached by an interviewer, identifying himself as with Slate, and gave a man on the street interview, both of them holding mics. "We're actually live, just so you know," Posobiec told the reporter.
"What's your main experience been here so far?" the reporter asked.
"I think it's been a little tame, to be honest," Posobiec said. "Y'know, we were expecting a little more of a raucous atmosphere, maybe it's because of the heat."
"Do you feel like the conversations you've had have been sensible or kind of crazy, or what?"
"Mostly sensible, yeah," Posobiec said, going on to say "it's been interesting to track, one of the things I've been asking about is, are there people here who support this who also support Harris versus people who don't support Harris. I would say it's about 50/50 so far, just of who I've talked to.
While he said he saw many anti-Kamala Harris signs, Posobiec said he spoke to many people at the protests who are pro-Kamala, despite their presence at the protest. "They wanna vote for her," he said. "Some of the Code Pink sites were saying 'we think it's part of a new generation, and that's what she's part of.' But, we've also seen a lot of people who say 'I don't support any of the candidates, and I would say that's probably more the prevailing sentiment here at the protests."
"They are not here in support of Biden, they're not here in support of Harris. They're calling her Killer Kamala. They're calling him Genocide Joe," Posobiec said.