In many of her dissents from cases where the Supreme Court narrowed the scope of Title VII and other anti-discrimination laws, Justice Ginsburg had a common refrain: That even when the Court narrowed people's civil rights, Congress retained the power to expand them.
In LedBetter v. Goodyear, a pay discrimination case, Justice Ginsburg wrote "Once again, the ball is in Congress’ court ... the Legislature may act to correct this Court’s parsimonious reading of Title VII.”
The first bill Pres. Obama signed was the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act.
In Vance v. Ball State, which dealt with workplace harassment, Justice Ginsburg stated "The ball is once again in Congress’ court to correct the error into which this Court has fallen, and to restore the robust protections against workplace harassment the Court weakens today.”
The message was clear: Congress as a co-equal branch of government has not only the power, but the responsibility, to do what is right and legislate to expand the rights of women, African Americans, and all those who have historically been denied the equal protection of the laws.
In her dissent in Shelby County v. Holder, Justice Ginsburg described the passage of the Voting Rights Act as part of a Congressional mission to end racial discrimination in voting that was "long delayed" and "of extraordinary importance."
So as we reflect on Justice Ginsburg’s extraordinary life and legacy we should remember that we still have the power to hold our lawmakers accountable and demand that they fulfill the promise of the 14th and 15th Amendments; the promise inherent in “We the People.”
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Tonight, we’ll be live tweeting from our second #HerDreamDeferred event! #SayHerName: Black Women’s Stories of Police Violence and Public Silence - An Advocacy-based Book Club.
If you're watching with us, follow along and use #HDD2024. And if you haven't registered, go to: bit.ly/HDD2024
In June of last year, #SayHerName: Black Women’s Stories of Police Violence and Public Silence co-authored by Professor KimberléCrenshaw and the African American Policy Forum was published.
#Juneteenth is an important holiday that commemorates the freedom of enslaved people in the US country. #FreedomToLearn
This year, Juneteenth arrives at a time when the knowledge of our ancestors and Black studies is under attack across the nation. #FreedomToLearn
As we celebrate our ancestors quest to liberation, we must also continue the fight by defending our #FreedomToLearn. Visit freedomtolearn.net for more info.
We start by wishing @KhalilGMuhammad a very happy happy birthday! 🥳🥳🥳
.@KhalilGMuhammad on the ugliness of the recent College Board revelations: "We have caught the @CollegeBoard in all the lies that they created from from day one in terms of when this controversy emerged." wsj.com/articles/colle…
How did we go from a racial reckoning to bans on Black studies? How did @CollegeBoard go from introducing an AP African American Studies (APAAS) course to appeasing authoritarians who seek to prevent the transmission of knowledge?
A thread. 🧵⬇️ 1/
August 2022: 60 high schools across the US offer a pilot course in APAAS, which @CollegeBoard began developing during the “racial reckoning” of 2020 as anti-racist protests swept the nation following the murder of George Floyd. 2/
September 2022: Flagship conservative magazine National Review publishes a screed denouncing APAAS as “leftist indoctrination,” arguing that Republicans in power should reject APAAS because the course “run[s] afoul of the new state laws barring CRT.” 3/
Under the repressive laws attacking teaching about race, "this kind of documentary can't be shown," says @sandylocks. "And I think it's important to recognize this and understand this." #TruthBeTold#TheNeutralGround
.@gocjhunt discussing the title of his film, The Neutral Ground. No, it's not about some mythical political neutrality. (Reviewers— that's a clear indicator you didn't watch the film!)