Ruth Bader Ginsburg — "I think it's important to have courage. To stand up for what's right."
I think it's important to have courage. To stand up for what's right.
I think it's important to have courage. To stand up for what's right.
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"The first thing that comes to mind is how much I love the law."
"If there was one decision I would overrule, it would be Citizens United. I think the notion that we have all the democracy that money can buy strays so far from what our democracy is supposed to be."
"I think that the law should be a means to achieve equality."
"I was fortunate to be alive and a lawyer in the late 1960s when the women's rights movement was just beginning."
"We have the good fortune to be in a country where we are not afraid to say what we think."
Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court (1993-2020), gender-equality litigator at the ACLU Women's Rights Project before the bench, and the second woman ever appointed. Closely associated with Sandra Day O'Connor (first woman Justice and her predecessor in that role) and Elena Kagan (Obama-appointed colleague). For an intellectual contrast, see Antonin Scalia, conservative originalist Justice (1936-2016) — RBG and Scalia disagreed on nearly every major constitutional case but maintained a famous personal friendship over opera. Their friendship-across-doctrinal-divide became the canonical example of judicial collegiality despite total disagreement — and Scalia's originalism vs RBG's living-Constitution liberalism are the cleanest two American constitutional methodologies.
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