In recent years Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was surprised to find herself so popular that âeveryone wants to take a picture with me.â The justice, who died Friday at 87, had become a feminist icon, with books, movies, clothing and even coloring books devoted to her.
People wanted to give her awards. They wanted to hear her talk. Ginsburg was invited to speak so often that inevitably she was asked the same questions and delivered the same punch lines, always, it seemed, to a delighted new audience.
Some of the things Ginsburg liked to tell groups:
What she had in common with a rapper
Ginsburg came to be known as âThe Notorious RBG,â a play on the name of the rapper âThe Notorious B.I.G.â Ginsburg liked to note they had one important thing in common. Both were born and bred in Brooklyn, New York.
When asked for her advice
Ginsburg often dispensed a piece of wisdom her mother-in-law gave her on her wedding day. The secret to a happy marriage is this: âSometimes it helps to be a little deaf.â Ginsburg said it was excellent advice in dealing with her colleagues on the court, too.
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On equal parenting
Ginsburgâs son James was what she called a âlively child,â and she would often get calls from his New York City school about his latest caper. Ginsburg finally told the school: âThis child has two parents. Please alternate calls.â It was Ginsburgâs husbandâs turn, she said.
So Ginsburgâs husband went to the school and was told James had âstolen the elevator,â taking a group of kindergartners for a ride.
But âafter the elevator incident, the calls came barely once a semester,â Ginsburg noted, and not because James was any better behaved. âThey were much more reluctant to take a man away from his work than a woman,â Ginsburg liked to explain.
On facing discrimination
Ginsburg often noted that she had âthree strikesâ against her in trying to get a job when she graduated from Columbiaâs law school in 1959, despite graduating at the top of her class. She was Jewish. She was a wife. And she was a mother.
âGetting the first job was hard for women of my vintage,â sheâd say. âBut once you got the first job you did it at least as well as the men and so the next step was not as hard.â
Ginsburg also liked to note something Justice Sandra Day OâConnor would say: âSandra said, `Where would the two of us be if there had been no discrimination?â Well, today weâd be retired partners from a large law firm.â
On her friendship with Antonin Scalia
The genuine friendship between the liberal Ginsburg and conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016, puzzled many audiences. Ginsburg explained: âThe number one reason why I loved Justice Scalia so is he made me laugh.â
The two shared a love of opera. And they were close enough that their families spent New Yearâs together. Scalia would sometimes call to point out grammar errors in Ginsburgâs opinion drafts. Ginsburg, for her part, would sometimes tell him: âThis opinion is so overheated, youâd be more persuasive if you tone it down.â She liked to say: âHe never listened to that.â
Ginsburg often described a famous picture of the two of them riding an elephant together in India, the heavyset Scalia in front and diminutive Ginsburg in the rear. Ginsburgâs feminist friends were horrified. Why was she in the back? Weight distribution, she explained.
On her achievements
Ginsburgâs mother, Celia Bader, who died the day before Ginsburg gradated high school, never attended college but worked as a bookkeeper. Ginsburg would sometimes ask audiences: âWhatâs the difference between a bookkeeper in New Yorkâs Garment District and a U.S. Supreme Court justice?â Her answer: âOne generation.â
Read more: U.S. Supreme Court successor to Ruth Bader Ginsburg to be named âwithout delayâ: Trump
On changing the constitution
When asked how she might change the Constitution if given the opportunity, Ginsburg liked to point to the effort in the 1970s to pass the Equal Rights Amendment, which fell three states short of ratification. Ginsburg said passing it was still a good idea.
âI have three granddaughters,â Ginsburg liked to say. âAnd Iâd like to be able to take out my pocket Constitution and say that the equal citizenship stature of men and women is a fundamental tenet of our society.â
On the Supreme Courtâs women
Ginsburg, the second female justice, was sometimes asked when there would be enough women on the Supreme Court. Her response: âWhen there are nine.â Sheâd explain: âSome people are taken aback until they remember that for most of our countryâs history there were only men on the high court bench.â
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