Ruth Bader Ginsburg — "A gender line helps to keep women not on a pedestal, but in a cage."
A gender line helps to keep women not on a pedestal, but in a cage.
A gender line helps to keep women not on a pedestal, but in a cage.
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"I think the notion that we have all the answers and that we are going to write the opinion for the ages is just not right."
"The greatest dissents do become court opinions and gradually over time their views become the dominant view."
"Abortion prohibition by the State controls women and denies them full autonomy and full equality with men. The decision whether or not to bear a child is central to a woman's life, to her well-being a…"
"I think that the government should not be involved in making choices for people. It's a very personal decision, and it should be up to the individual to decide what's best for them, not the government…"
"The world will be a better place when women are in charge."
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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