Mob justice is becoming more commonplace in the US. When people lose faith in their institutions, they resort to violence. This isn't good at all: https://www.npr.org/2022/05/10/1097803459/supreme-court-roe-v-wade-abortion-access-protest-alito
No, its not good. But the republican party has been taking steps to encourage violence for years, with the liberals expecting to just "sit back and take it".
They have defunded government groups meant to curtail the activities of white nationalists. They have failed to deal with Stubby McBonespurs after his support of a violent coup attempt, as well as after he declared neo-nazis "fine people". They have spent more time criticising BLM protesters (who have the idea that "maybe the cops shouldn't kill so many black people") than they have the police, who are the ones actually doing the killing. And now the supreme court (which has been stacked by right-wing partisan hacks by republicans) is going to force half the U.S. politicians into being baby factories.
Given the general trends over the past decade, I think anger on the part of the political left is completely understandable and justified.
In fact, given the fact that the U.S. has been steadily slow-walking into being a right-wing authoritarian hell-scape, perhaps an open violent civil war might be the only thing to shock the system back into any sense of normalcy.
Its also not good to see leaks from the SCOTUS. Justices need to be free from public pressure on their decisions in order to remain impartial. But that's been thrown out a long time ago.
Umm... what type of "fantasy world" do you live in to think republican judges were impartial to begin with?
Idiots and gullible fools like yourself seem to be trying to push this utopian vision of the hard working politically neutral supreme court. But the fact is, it has been stacked by political hacks that were picked by the right-wing Federalist society. Impartiality won't be impacted because it never existed in the first place.
And why do you think they "need to be free from public pressure"? The supreme court should not operate in a vacuum... they should recognize the impact and ramifications of their rulings.