Ruth Bader Ginsburg has said she no longer has cancer, months after a diagnosis made the liberal Supreme Court justice's health a major concern for many Americans. Start your Independent Premium subscription today.Sharing the full story, not just the headlinesIn 2018, Justice Ginsburg underwent surgery to remove two malignant nodules from her left lung, and doctors at the time determined that the cancer had not spread.The 88-year-old justice announced her cancer-free status during a wide-ranging CNN interview on Tuesday in which she celebrated her successful treatment.No hype, just the advice and analysis you needAre you sure you want to mark this comment as inappropriate?Are you sure you want to submit this vote?Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later?

And it marked the second major scare during the Trump presidency, which has seen two new conservative Supreme Court justices who many progressives fear could reverse or undermine past legislative victories on issues ranging from women's rights to gun rights.Justice Ginsburg is the senior member of the court's four liberals, a grouping that makes up a minority on the nine justice court.Create a commenting name to join the debateEnter your email to follow new comments on this article.Independent Premium Comments can be posted by members of our membership scheme, Independent Premium. While we waited, a pot of tea with a single cup on a saucer was placed on the table across from me. Our journalists will try to respond by joining the threads when they can to create a true meeting of independent Premium. When Marty had cancer his third year, our second year, she visited him in the hospital a few times, and I was wondering how that would be for her, because I watched her once in class.

I heard about Flora every now and then.They were just to sit next to us at dinner, and sit next to us when we moved from the dining room to the living room. “…Ginsburg also made her somewhat surprising remarks in a moment when the bulk of her feminist accomplishments are endangered by an increasingly conservative Supreme Court.”But Ginsburg has already disappointed the left in her final act. And then I was just so engaged all the time, with either law school, or with Jane. He said when the class was moving slowly, and you wanted to get a crisp right answer, “You called on a woman. But for me, there wasn’t a single firm in New York … two called me back, I came down to have the interviews, but in the end …Yes. And the only mother, because Rhoda [who was married] took her first year at Penn, and then she was in our second year.Maybe the best teacher I ever had, my first year in law school, was Ben Kaplan. So he asked that question, “Why are you here occupying a seat that could be held by a man?,” because he wanted to be armed with stories from the women themselves, about how they plan to make use of their law degrees, and not just waste this wonderful education they would get. We had as visitors two people we’d been close to in the Army. Ironically, it’s for departing from her usual legal schtick to reinforce that what the law says matters, instead of giving authorities license to do whatever the heck they want.Mencimer’s article catalogs a number of calls from the left then for Ginsburg to step down and secure their power over the Supreme Court for another generation. "I'm cancer-free," she said, noting she has resumed an active schedule.Liberal icon had missed time on court since July diagnosis with pancreatic cancerAre you sure you want to delete this comment? In those days I smoked, and Herb was a chain smoker. I think Carol, I think she got married. The women in my Harvard class … I stayed in touch with Jinnie Nordin for many years. These appeared openly in the pages of the Los Angeles Times, National Journal, The New Republic, and Slate. And she just turned it down, because of her husband.And the same thing with the dormitories. She’s the only one in the class that I stayed in touch with. So, Herb Wechsler was sitting next to me. So Jinnie was living in our apartment then.

Oh, it was really one of those moments, when you wish you could have a trapdoor to fall through. Still, today’s left chooses to ignore the parts of the law they don’t like while using the parts of it they currently find to their liking, or making things up if they don’t like the law at all. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, looks out the window of her chambers following an interview in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, Aug. 23, 2013.

I had come from Cornell, where the girls had to live in the dorms. You answer it.” And then I got up and told him that he was rude to my guest, and I would answer the question. And so in late January, just weeks before the court emptied and went remote, a few colleagues and I headed up the sweeping marble steps of the Supreme Court. It didn’t matter to me because I wasn’t going to be in the dorm anyway. It’s the expectation. Ginsburg was appointed by President Bill Clinton and took the oath of office on August 10, 1993. Live by the courts, die by the courts.Copyright © 2020 The Federalist, a wholly independent division of FDRLST Media, All Rights Reserved.When Congress went through its part of the amendment authorizing process for the ERA, its authorization included a deadline for ratification by the states.

Alice … was getting married, or she had just gotten married.