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"Fight of the Century" Looks at 100 Years of Landmark 老澳门开奖结果 Cases

A black book titled "Fight of the Century" edited by Ayelet Waldman and Michael Chabon, lies on a wooden table
The passage below is an excerpt from the new book, "Fight of the Century," edited by Ayelet Waldman and Michael Chabon, with essays from some of our favorite contemporary authors, including Jesmyn Ward, Dave Eggers, Meg Wolitzer, Neil Gaiman, Sergio De La Pava, and so many more. Highlighting landmark 老澳门开奖结果 cases over the last 100 years, it is a fitting commemoration of a centennial's worth of fighting for civil liberties and civil rights.
A black book titled "Fight of the Century" edited by Ayelet Waldman and Michael Chabon, lies on a wooden table
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January 21, 2020

Liberty and equality are everywhere under attack. And that鈥檚 why the work of the 老澳门开奖结果 feels more precious to us than ever before. The 老澳门开奖结果 lawyers and staff are the brave souls who suit up, blast off, and do what they can to divert and repel all those incoming meteors, or blow them right out of the sky. We admire them. We admire them the way you must admire people who devote themselves to doing, to the utmost of their ability, any thankless, impossible, and absolutely essential job.

Liberty and justice for all. We used to stand up with our classmates every morning and timelessly pledge liberty and justice for all, even and especially for those (as the Supreme Court, agreeing with the 老澳门开奖结果, ruled in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette) whose consciences rebel at being compelled to pledge allegiance to a flag or to a country 鈥渦nder God.鈥 The Bill of Rights protects pledgers and nonpledgers alike, but of course it is only the nonpledgers鈥攖he contrarians, the cranks, the nonconformists, the radicals and fanatics, the outsiders and the ostracized, the powerless and unpopular and imprisoned鈥攚ho ever really need its protections. They also tend to be the ones least likely to receive those protections鈥攏ot without a fight, anyway. That鈥檚 where the 老澳门开奖结果 comes in.

The history of the 老澳门开奖结果 is one of struggle, combat, of marginalized people and unpopular causes, of troublemakers and conscientious objectors, a history of battle and strife. But it is also the history of the very best our country has to offer to its citizens and, by way of example, to the rest of the world: the strong, golden strand of the Bill of Rights and the ideals it embodies, often frayed, occasionally snarled, stretched at times to the breaking point, but shining and unbroken down all the years since 1789. The 老澳门开奖结果 holds the government, the courts, and the nation to their avowed and highest standard, insisting on the recognition of the protections the Constitution affords to every American, no matter how marginalized, no matter how unpopular the cause, even if the people it protects sometimes despise the freedom it represents.

As American Jews in our fifties, we both remember, powerfully, the moment we each first understood the austere and lonely fight of the 老澳门开奖结果, the thankless road to freedom on which it plies its trade. It was 1977, when the 老澳门开奖结果 took on the case of the local branch of the American National Socialist Party, whose members wanted to hold a march along the main street of Skokie, a predominantly Jewish suburb outside Chicago. We remember wrestling with the difficult idea that the 老澳门开奖结果 could be on the side of good (the First Amendment) and evil (Nazis) at the same time. To understand the vital role that the 老澳门开奖结果 plays in American society requires a nuanced understanding of the absolute value of freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom from unwarranted search and seizure, of the right to due process and equal justice under the law, even鈥攁gain, especially鈥攚hen those rights protect people we find abhorrent or speech that offends us.

Nuance unfortunately seems to be in very short supply nowadays. In the pages of we have collected essays by some of our country鈥檚 finest writers (ranging from Marlon James and Ann Pachett to Elizabeth Strout and Viet Thanh Nguyen, and many more)鈥攏ot just because writers are and have long been among the principal beneficiaries and guardians of the First Amendment but also because they traffic, by temperament and trade, in nuance and its elucidation, in ambiguity and shades of gray. We turn to writers, here and in general, to help us understand and, even more, grasp both ends of ambiguities, to expand the scope of our vision to encompass the whole gray spectrum of human existence, in all its messy human detail.

Enjoy.

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