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The Way-Paver Makes WavesPosted on Jun 28, 2007BOSTON—Now, in the season of her discontent, it is well to remember that Ruth Bader Ginsburg was always called a moderate. The word dangled from her wrist like an ID bracelet. In fact, when she was nominated to be the second woman on the Supreme Court, there were feminists who added another adjective to that word: too moderate. I always thought that was a bad rap. Ginsburg went to law school when textbooks still read: “Land, like woman, was meant to be possessed.” Her dean asked the nine women in her class of 500 why they were taking a man’s seat. She was accepted for a clerkship only after the judge found an understudy in case she couldn’t hack it. It’s not surprising that Ginsburg often refers to herself as a “way-paver.” At the same time, the legal strategy that she devised in the 1970s to upend the idea that men and women live in different legal spheres was a careful, incremental bit of roadwork. Her plaintiffs in a series of successful sex discrimination suits were often men—such as a widowed father ineligible for Social Security—chosen to appeal to male judges. After her confirmation in the Senate by a margin of 97-3, Ginsburg was still called “a partisan of judicial restraint.” Not for her were the outbursts of friend and fellow opera buff, Antonin Scalia. She sought to lower the acrimony. The flashiest decision she wrote was for the seven justices who struck down the all-male Virginia Military Institute. But this year we are witnessing—what shall we call it?—the radicalization of Ruth Bader Ginsburg? The transformation of the 74-year-old justice who is watching a court undo her life’s work? When I Grow Old, I Shall Wear Purple? This is the first year since Sandra Day O’Connor’s retirement. As Ginsburg said of O’Connor, “We divide on a lot of important questions, but we have had the experience of growing up women and we have certain sensitivities that our male colleagues lack.” Now the “only woman” is clear about how this feels: “The word I would use to describe my position on the bench is lonely.” If O’Connor’s exit makes a difference personally, it makes more of a difference judicially. So, twice this term, when the 5-4 majority of the Roberts court dropped its opinions like cluster bombs on the road she paved, Ginsburg took the unusual stance of reading her powerful dissents, slowly, unequivocally and aloud in the courtroom. The first time was when the partial-birth abortion ban was upheld. In his opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy claimed to be protecting women from their own regrets. Abortion was harmful to a woman, he implied, because it violated her true nature as a mother. But Ginsburg retorted, “This way of protecting women recalls ancient notions about women’s place in society and under the Constitution—ideas that have long since been discredited.” Indeed, she had helped discredit them. The second time was after the outrageous decision on pay discrimination. The court ruled against Lilly Ledbetter, the one woman among 16 Goodyear supervisors who was paid far less throughout her career. Tough luck, the court said; discrimination suits had to be filed within 180 days after the pay was set. This time, Ginsburg not only dissented but called upon Congress to change the law and thereby overrule the court. The lone woman on this bench explained in a resonant sentence: “An employee like Ledbetter, trying to succeed in a male-dominated workplace, in a job filled only by men before she was hired, understandably, may be anxious to avoid making waves.” Avoid making waves? “This has been Justice Ginsburg’s MO,” muses Goodwin Liu, a former clerk and now a law professor at UC Berkeley. “She has tried to be collegial, respectful on the court. She’s not a screamer. So it’s unusual to be reading opinions from her that say enough is enough. Many women of a certain age are watching with dismay as hard-won progress is rolled back. Ginsburg once predicted that women would achieve full legal equality by 1978. Maybe it’s the times that provoke new strategies. Enough is enough. I once called O’Connor the justice of the peace. She tried to reduce conflict even when it meant denying conflict. What now of Ginsburg, the justice of the moderate? “She’s still a voice of moderation,” says Yale Law School’s Judith Resnik. “It’s the court that has become radical.” So as this court session ends, Ruth Bader Ginsburg raised the decibel level and the alarm. At 74, she may find her most powerful role in dissent. The way-paver is fast becoming a wave-maker. Ellen Goodman’s e-mail address is ellengoodman(at symbol)globe.com. © 2007, Washington Post Writers Group Previous item: Watch 'Sicko' and Call Your Congressman in the Morning Next item: Centrists Finally Face Reality on Iraq Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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By Hondo, June 28, 2007 at 7:58 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
Only in the alternate reality, la-la world of liberalism could Ruth Bader Ginsberg ever be classified as a “moderate.” The truth is that Ginsberg is part of the lunatic fringe of the modern left, and she holds beliefs that the vast majority of Americans would be horrified at, if they actually payed attention to these kinds of things. Here are the facts:
1. Ginsberg believes that the age of sexual consent should be 12 years of age.
2. Ginsberg believes that there should be coed prisons for men and women.
3. Ginsberg believes that there is a Constitutional right to prostitution and polygamy.
4. Ginsberg believes that Mother’s Day and Father’s Day should be abolished and replaced with an androgynous Parent’s Day.
5. Ginsberg is so racist that, while working in a majority-black city for ever 10 years, she never hired one single black to work in her office.
6. Ginsberg decides American cases based on the laws of foreign countries. She has no constitutional right to do that.
These are the facts, and they are beyond dispute. Now, let me make a prediction. Some of you will respond by hurling personal attacks at me, even though I am not the subject of this conversation. Some of you will respond by criticizing Republicans and conservatives. In other words, you will change the subject. All of you will do that because you will be unable to dispute the truth which I have so brilliantly presented.
What I’m hoping is that at least one of you liberaliars will attempt to debate me on the actual facts that I have presented. Specifically, that Ruth Bader Ginsberg is an insane member of the lunatic wing of the Democrat party who is completely disconnected from the real world that most Americans live in.
Let the debate begin.
Report thisBy Mudwollow, June 28, 2007 at 2:07 pm #
This does help clarify why the right wing storm troopers pulled out all the stops to steal the 2000 election from the voting public. After these past years, their underlying objectives have become obvious. A truly disgusting aspect is that the namby-pamby, oh can’t we all just get along Democrats are no more prepared or motivated to confront the election stealing goons than they were in 2000. In many ways the “opposing party” has become “the appeasing party” and is now even less organized and less interested in defending the Constitution of the United States. The Democrats seem to have developed a deep victim complex and somehow feel subordinate to the immoral minority with the money. That victim complex plus the fact that they’re sucking off the same military-industrial complex tits is what in my mind makes the Democrats just a shade more repulsive than the Republicans. A psychopathic child killer is a terrible thing but a mother who stands by and smiles as her children are tortured and killed is worse than the psychopath. And we wonder why so few vote.
Report thisBy David, June 28, 2007 at 8:24 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
HA! Women! Equal? You train them, educate them, prepare them and then BANG! they’re pregnant, quitting the job to stay home then bitching about inequality. You wanna report on football, lady? Strap on the pads and let’s get some first person experience. Sheesh, women!
Report thisBy David, June 28, 2007 at 7:57 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
The court’s majority is only reinstating the conservative values that we remember from yesteryear America, and can still be found today if only we study the social culture of Pakistan. There would be no pay discrimination if women were in the home where they belong. And furthermore, adhering to the Republican agenda, a private corporation should be able to do WHATEVER they want without big brother stepping in. If they want to pay a woman less, well, that’s their perrogative. If they believe that its more profitable to dump chemicals or nuclear wate into our lakes, rivers or oceans, then they should do what’s best for their shareholders. If they can’t afford to compensate workers who are dying from asbestos exposure, hey - that’s business. Ginsburg needs to realize that life on this planet runs no deeper than big business and the corporate bottom line, and all the equality and civil rights that humanity deserves was acheived by 1950. The rest has gone way over the line.
Sarcasm off. Two stolen elections and we see beginning to unravel more than half a century of progress toward life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for all. This isn’t going to end with the Bush Administration, and will get allot worse before it gets better I’m afraid. Unless of course, the fog of apathy that dwells on this nation lifts before that point.
Report thisBy ~B~, June 28, 2007 at 7:19 am #
Herein lies one of the major problems born of the Bush era. How to reclaim our Supreme court. A scary future indeed if the current legion of panderers is allowed to remain. May Ruth G enjoy LONG life and please please please don’t resign and give Bush ANOTHER appointment...he seems to only be able to disappoint(the suckers who voted for him ... I always knew he was scum).
B
http://b-political.blogspot.com/
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