Let’s mourn Ruth Bader Ginsburg


I woke up to the horrible news that Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had died, 87 years old.

As probably was the case for most of you, I immediately start thinking about the consequences of her death – i.e. what horrible candidate Trump would think up, how the Democrats could fight that, and what the consequences would be of that. This is of course, important, and if you want to hear some good thoughts about that, I recommend listening to the Opening Arguments podcast special episode, made just after the hosts learned about her death.

But I also think it is important that we pay proper respect to Ruth Bader Gindburg, or Notorious R.B.G. as she was often referred to on the internet. She was a icon of feminism and civil rights, and should be remembered for her role in fighting gender inequality in the US.

Before becoming a judge, she worked at the ACLU, and they have released an obituary of her.

In Memory of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020)

Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the Supreme Court justice who first rose to national prominence as an ACLU lawyer fighting for equal rights for women, has died at 87 years old.

She began Harvard Law School as a young mother and one of only nine women in her class, and became the architect of a legal strategy to eradicate gender discrimination in the United States. She modeled her approach after that of Thurgood Marshall on race discrimination, planning for a series of cases at the Supreme Court, each precedent paving the way for the next that would further expand rights and protections. In 1993, she joined the court as an associate justice, and over the decades became a cultural icon beloved for her vision and passion in defending the rights of women.

As the obituary makes clear, RBG’s impact came from not just her work as a justice on the US Supreme Court, but also from her work before becoming a justice.

This is also the point of the obituary of the Guardian

Ruth Bader Ginsburg changed America long before she joined the supreme court

The most important feminist lawyer in the history of the American republic has died. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a supreme court justice and singularly influential legal mind, was appointed by Bill Clinton in 1993, the court’s second-ever female justice, and served for nearly 30 years. She passed away due to complications from cancer on Friday. She was 87.

Strategic, contemplative and disciplined, but with a passion for the feminist cause that is rarely admitted into the halls of power, Ginsburg established an impressive legal legacy long before she became a judge. Over the course of a two-decade career as a lawyer before her appointment to the DC circuit court of appeals, she successfully argued cases that expanded civil rights law and 14th amendment protections to women, undoing a dense network of laws that had codified sex discrimination in all areas of American life. After she was elevated to the nation’s highest court, she found her own views moving left as the institution was pushed to the right. Her career was defined by courageous dissents that stood up for the principle of equal justice and kept alive the promise of a more free and fair America.

In the coming days, where the death of Ginsburg undoubtedly will expose the hypocrisy of McConnell, it will be all too easy to forget to mourn Gindburg the person, and not just mourn and feel angry at the consequences of her death. She doesn’t deserve that. She deserve to be remembered as the force of good that she has been through her life.

Rest in power Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Comments

  1. StevoR says

    She was a legend and a hero of mine. I didn’t know her. Never met her. Would have trusted her with my life.

    Some quotes – don’t 100% agree with all of them but all shoulds make you think.

    https://www.today.com/news/ruth-bader-ginsburg-quotes-20-inspiring-ideas-rbg-t192057

    Plus :

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ruth-bader-ginsburgs-iconic-quotes-on-law-love-and-the-fight-for-equality/

    This movie about the start of RBG’s career :

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28dHbIR_NB4&t=1s&fbclid=IwAR0b921tz2y-t1vUa-Y_KggV9gEv86ET0iLrpfyIkWtvU1bvkYWSNbiCSDU

    I’d highly recommend.

  2. Gypo O'Leary says

    I can’t think of a single worthwhile decision written by this globalist elitist hack. she is what over-rated means. She was never liked by any one in America except fringe radical leftists, and Anton Scalia, who probably enjoyed her inability to intellectually challenge him. She obviously should have resigned her position five years ago, and that speaks strongly to her one note vicious radical nature. She did nothing of note on the court, and will be recalled as a singular extremist.

    The court will be better soon for having gone.

  3. Katydid says

    Time after time, RBG came up against obstacles and fought to overcome them. Her tenacity, her strength, and her intelligence should be an example to all of us.

  4. says

    For some reason I didn’t get any notifications of pending comments. Sorry about taking so long approving them.

    SteveR, thanks for the links.

    Gypo O’Leary, what a sad, pitiful person you are.