Ruth Bader Ginsburg, current associate justice on the United States Supreme Court, was born Ruth
Joan Bader on March 15, 1933, in Brooklyn, New York. Her parents are Nathan and
Celia Bader, and the family lived in “a low-income, working-class neighborhood
in Brooklyn.” Her mother was a “major influence in her life” and “taught her
the value of independence and a good education.
By following her mother’s counsel,
Ginsburg “excelled in her studies” at James Madison High School in Brooklyn.
However, her mother passed away from cancer the day previous to Ginsburg’s
graduation. Ginsburg attended and graduated from Cornell University in 1954
with a degree in government. That same year, she married law student Martin D.
Ginsburg, had her first child, and saw her husband drafted into the military, a
law student. After Martin’s discharge two years later, the couple went to
Harvard.
At Harvard, Ginsburg learned to balance
life as a mother and her new role as a law student. She also encountered a very
male-dominated, hostile environment, with only eight other females in her class
of more than 500. The women were chided by the law school’s dean for taking the
places of qualified males. But Ginsburg pressed on and excelled academically, eventually
becoming the first female member of the prestigious Harvard Law Review.
Martin graduated from Harvard and
accepted a position at a law firm in New York City. Ginsburg transferred to
Columbia Law School where she graduated first in her class in 1959. She
continued to face gender discrimination while seeking employment after
graduation. She clerked for U.S. District Judge Edmund L. Palmieri (1959-61)
and taught at Rutgers University Law School (1963-72) and at Columbia (1972-80).
She worked for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and “argued landmark
cases on gender equality before the U.S. Supreme Court.” She was appointed to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Jimmy
Carter in 1980 and served there until 1993 when she was appointed to the U.S.
Supreme Court by President Bill Clinton.
I am writing about Ginsburg because
she is 85 years old and looks to be the next justice to replace. Her hearings
before the Senate Judiciary Committee were described as “unusually friendly,”
and she was confirmed with a vote of 96-3. The description of her Senate
hearing is much different than I would describe Kavanaugh’s hearing, which was
not at all friendly.
Even Ginsburg thinks the Democrats
were out of order in Kavanaugh’s hearing. I wonder how crazy it will be when
Donald Trump nominates another constitutionalist to replace her! As Peter Skurkiss points out, Neil Gorsuch was confirmed 54-45 and replaced “conservative giant on the Court”
Antonin Scalia – sort of conservative for conservative. Anthony Kennedy was
known as the swing vote, and there have been hysterics about Trump replacing
him with a conservative constitutionalist, obviously moving the Court to the
right. If Trump, or any other President, nominates a conservative to replace
Ginsburg, the Left will go ballistic! In order to put a conservative justice in
her seat, we need more Republicans in the Senate!
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