Saturday, September 19, 2020

 

The Loss of An American Hero

 

Larry E. Coben

 

I never met Ruth Bader Ginsburg, but I feel like I’ve lost a great Aunt. But, more tragically, all Americans who cherish Democracy have lost a dear champion. Almost all lawyers “learn the law” and practice their trade in quiet anonymity, working for one client at a time. Only a very few Americans have had opportunity, the “will”, and the skill to reshape the lives of so many. When we recount those few Americans who—in modern times—stand out as champions for justice and equal protection for all Americans, we observe the coalescence of their remarkable resolution, their individual genius and the times and circumstances that propelled them to succeed.

 

In modern U.S. history, RBG now joins the ranks of a very select group of heroes who devoted their lives encouraging and battling society to recognize and acknowledge the value of every American regardless of gender, race, religion, appearance, or political persuasion. Some of these heroes succeeded by example, while others succeeded by deeds and words. Judging the accomplishments of these heroes, cast in the setting of their respective times, Justice Ginsburg proudly stands tall with these American heroes (some of which—sadly—you may not recall): Thurgood Marshall, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama, Chief Justice Earl Warren, Betty Friedan, Bella Abzug, Gloria Steinem, Jonas Salk, Benjamin Spock, Muhammed Ali, Jackie Robinson, Vice President Joseph Biden, Ted Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, John Lewis and Morris Dees. Each of these heroes (and there are many more not named), lived with these common purposes: devotion to proving and establishing that “we are all born free & equal”, “discrimination is wrong”, safeguarding the “right to life”, “equality before the law”, “freedom of thought”, “freedom of expression”, “the right to live without fear of poverty”, “the right to affordable housing, medicine and education”, “the right to a fair wage”, and “the protection of these human rights against the intolerance of those who seek to oppress”. These Human Rights (and others), acknowledged by the United Nations as Universal Declarations, were in large part established and practiced in very public ways by these heroes. And, we must all—regardless of our “political leanings”—acknowledge that but for their efforts, we would all be less free today. “The Legacy of Heroes is the Memory of a Great Name and the Inheritance of a Great Example”. [Benjamin Disraeli]   

 

Justice Ginsburg, we salute you and thank you for your good work. You are a true American Hero.

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