GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Joan Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Joan Ruth Bader Ginsburg

U.S. Supreme Court justice, jurist, and gender-equality lawyer

United StatesBorn 1929 · Died 2020otherSupreme Court of the United StatesAmerican Civil Liberties Union Women's Rights ProjectU.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia CircuitRutgers Law SchoolColumbia Law School
55
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

55/100

Raw Score

46/85

Confidence

78%

Evidence

High

About

Ruth Bader Ginsburg spent decades using careful legal strategy to widen equal citizenship for women and other excluded groups, then carried that project into a long Supreme Court career marked by discipline, dissent, and public trust.

The strongest public evidence supports high marks for freeing people from legal constraint, persevering through illness and conflict, and maintaining a generally serious, reliable judicial ethic. The main limits are thin evidence about private devotional life and charity, plus the 2016 Trump-comments episode, which was a real integrity lapse that she later corrected.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview40%(10/25)
Contribution to Others60%(18/30)
Personal Discipline20%(2/10)
Reliability80%(4/5)
Stability Under Pressure80%(12/15)

Ginsburg's public record is strongest where structural care, legal courage, and disciplined endurance meet: she repeatedly used law to reduce exclusion and kept working through serious hardship. The score remains well below the highest bands because the public record is thin on worship and private charity, and because the 2016 Trump-comments episode was a genuine integrity failure even though she corrected it quickly.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god2/5

Jewish heritage is publicly meaningful, but strong public evidence of active theistic practice is limited.

Belief in accountability last day2/5

Her moral language stressed justice and responsibility, but public evidence for afterlife-oriented accountability is thin.

Belief in unseen order1/5

Public evidence does not strongly show a sustained metaphysical framework beyond ethical tradition.

Belief in revealed guidance3/5

She publicly linked her justice ethic to Jewish tradition and Deuteronomy, but not to a strongly observant life.

Belief in prophets as examples2/5

Publicly visible scriptural modeling is modest rather than central.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives2/5

Public evidence for relative-care is present but limited.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people3/5

Her work materially helped younger women and girls through equal-access precedent, though not via direct child-service work.

Helps the poor or stuck3/5

Her legal work aided excluded workers and litigants, though not mainly through poverty-relief institutions.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people3/5

Her equality jurisprudence helped outsiders navigate exclusionary systems.

Helps people who ask directly2/5

Public evidence is stronger for structural advocacy than for direct-response aid.

Helps free people from constraint5/5

This is the clearest strength of her public record.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently1/5

Strong public evidence of regular devotional practice is missing.

Gives obligatory charity1/5

Public evidence of disciplined religious giving is thin.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication4/5

Long judicial discipline and a prompt apology after the Trump-comments lapse support a strong but not perfect score.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty3/5

She navigated early professional inequality and family strain, though the public record is not centered on financial hardship.

Patient during personal hardship5/5

Recurring illness and personal loss did not visibly break her public steadiness.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

She stayed forceful and composed under legal and political pressure.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1971

Co-founded the ACLU Women's Rights Project

Public records from the Supreme Court and ACLU place Ginsburg at the center of building the Women's Rights Project, which turned sex-discrimination litigation into a sustained equality campaign rather than isolated cases.

The project became a durable institutional engine for legal challenges that reshaped how U.S. courts treated sex-based inequality.

high
1993

Joined the Supreme Court after a broadly accepted nomination

The Court's biography records her 1993 appointment after service on the D.C. Circuit, placing her in a role that required long-horizon judgment rather than movement-lawyering alone.

Her influence moved from advocacy into precedent-setting judicial service with national consequences.

high
1996

Authored the Court's opinion against VMI's male-only admissions policy

The official U.S. Reports record identifies Ginsburg as the authoring justice in United States v. Virginia, the landmark ruling that struck down the Virginia Military Institute's exclusion of qualified women.

The opinion became one of the clearest public examples of her method: incremental but firm legal dismantling of institutional sex barriers.

high
2007

Used a high-profile dissent to challenge a narrow reading of pay-discrimination law

In Ledbetter v. Goodyear, Ginsburg's dissent argued that hidden and cumulative pay discrimination should remain legally redressable, grounding the objection in workplace realities rather than abstraction.

Her dissent became a prominent public and legislative reference point in the later Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act debate.

high
2013

Dissented when the Court weakened a key Voting Rights Act coverage formula

The Oyez case record highlights Ginsburg's dissent in Shelby County v. Holder, where she argued Congress still had constitutional authority to maintain targeted federal voting-rights protections.

The dissent sharpened her public role as a principled minority voice under an increasingly conservative Court.

high
2016

Public criticism of Donald Trump crossed expected judicial restraint

Coverage in PBS and Time records that Ginsburg publicly criticized then-candidate Donald Trump and then acknowledged that the remarks were ill-advised.

The episode remains one of the clearest public integrity blemishes in an otherwise disciplined career.

medium
2016

Quickly acknowledged the lapse and publicly expressed regret

On the same day the backlash peaked, Ginsburg issued a statement saying her remarks were ill-advised and that judges should avoid commenting on candidates for office.

The apology did not erase the mistake, but it showed unusual clarity about the norm she had breached.

medium
2019

Continued court service through serious cancer treatment

A Supreme Court press release said Ginsburg completed radiation treatment for a pancreatic tumor in August 2019 and would continue ongoing monitoring, part of a larger pattern of sustained work through recurring illness.

The record reinforced her reputation for persistence under physical hardship, even among critics of some of her strategic choices.

medium
2020

Death closed a long judicial career and fixed her public legacy

The Court's official death announcement marked the end of 27 years on the Supreme Court and framed her legacy around service, family, and institutional stature.

Her public record became historical rather than developing, with later debate focusing on legacy, succession, and the costs of her choice to remain on the bench.

high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Shelby County dissent

2013

A conservative majority struck down the Voting Rights Act's preclearance coverage formula, leaving Ginsburg in a losing minority on a major civil-rights case.

Response: She answered with a detailed dissent grounded in constitutional structure and legislative record rather than rhetorical collapse.

strong resilience under conflict pressure

Trump-comments backlash

2016

Her public criticism of a presidential candidate prompted bipartisan criticism and concern about judicial neutrality.

Response: She quickly admitted the comments were ill-advised and reaffirmed the norm that judges should avoid such interventions.

mixed: real lapse followed by clean acknowledgment

Cancer treatment during Court service

2019

She underwent repeated cancer treatment while public attention fixated on whether illness would end her work on the Court.

Response: Official court updates showed continued participation and a refusal to detach from duty because of personal hardship alone.

strong personal resilience

Progression

crisis years

Later years brought harder tests: ideological minority status, public hero-making, recurring cancer, and one notable failure of restraint.

mixed

current stage

As a deceased historical figure, her signal is now stable and legacy-based: strong public service and equality work, tempered by thin spiritual evidence and enduring debate over succession timing.

stable

early years

Her early public pattern combined academic excellence, family strain, and firsthand experience of legal sexism, forming a patient but unsentimental equality ethic.

up

growth years

From the early 1970s through the 1990s, she turned carefully chosen litigation into broad structural change and then carried that method onto the Supreme Court.

up

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Incremental but durable legal change instead of slogan-only activism.
  • Persistent work under sexism, illness, and ideological minority status.
  • Repeated attention to people constrained by formal rules rather than only symbolic causes.

Concerns

  • Private religious and charitable life is lightly evidenced in public sources.
  • The 2016 political-comments episode showed that admiration from allies could blur professional boundaries.
  • Legacy debate about retirement timing complicates otherwise strong public trust signals.

Evidence Quality

8

Strong

3

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: high

This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.