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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (532616)1/30/2004 10:30:53 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Public Needs to Speak Up for Freedom, Justice Says
From Associated Press

NEW YORK — Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said Thursday
that people concerned about losing freedom to government antiterrorism
efforts should speak out.

The Supreme Court is taking up several terror-related cases this spring,
including challenges to the government detention of terror suspects without
legal rights.

Ginsburg, speaking to a
group of women's rights
lawyers, was asked if
people's rights were in
danger.

"On important issues,
like the balance between
liberty and security, if the
public doesn't care, then
the security side is going
to overweigh the other,"
she said.

That would change, Ginsburg said, "if people
come forward and say we are proud to live in the
USA, a land that has been more free, and we want to keep it that way."

Ginsburg, who argued women's rights cases at the Supreme Court several decades before former
President Clinton named her to the court in 1993, said "an active public" made the difference in the
victories of feminism.

Ginsburg, now 70 and one of the more liberal justices, won five of the six Supreme Court cases she
argued. She was reunited Thursday with some of the clients she represented during an event held in her
honor at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York.

"She was calling to our attention that work in women's rights, civil rights is under threat," said Lisalyn
Jacobs, who handles government relations for the National Organization for Women's Legal Defense
and Education Fund, which co-sponsored the event.

The Bush administration has been criticized by civil libertarians for some of its actions in fighting
terrorism, including the detentions of hundreds of foreigners at a military prison in Cuba and some U.S.
citizens in America.

They are being held without charges or access to lawyers, something the government maintains is
necessary for national security.

In April, the Supreme Court will consider cases involving detainees in Cuba and America.

This in opposition to SCALIA KILLING ANIMALS WITH BUNKERBOYDICK

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