by danso on 5/9/25, 3:17 PM with 46 comments
by delichon on 5/9/25, 6:47 PM
"You're on the Supreme Court, right?" Souter nodded. "You're Stephen Breyer, right?"
Souter didn't want to embarrass the fellow in front of his wife, so he said yes, he was Breyer. They chatted for a little while, and the fellow asked, "Justice Breyer, what's the best thing about being on the Supreme Court?"
After a pause, the justice answered, "I'd have to say it was the privilege of serving with David Souter."
by pyrophane on 5/9/25, 4:55 PM
I was a teenager at the time, it was the 90s, and I don't think I took much of anything too seriously, but I remember being kind of in awe of him. He talked about the importance of civic education which to this day that remains one of my core beliefs as an American.
A lot has changed for the worse since then, and it feels like we've only gotten further from the idea that the purpose of education is, more than anything else, to teach us to be better citizens and participants in our democracy.
by treetalker on 5/9/25, 5:15 PM
He came across as the most even-keeled person in the world.
I asked him how he thought he had changed, if at all, throughout his years on the Court. He said, "We never see ourselves as others see us." I'll never forget it.
He'll be missed; sorry to hear that his papers won't be released for 50 years.
by delichon on 5/9/25, 6:08 PM
by detourdog on 5/9/25, 4:22 PM
Here he is discussing the dangers of the erosion of civic knowledge.
by senderista on 5/9/25, 5:15 PM
by danso on 5/9/25, 3:18 PM
by rhd1729 on 5/9/25, 5:24 PM
Episode link: https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolabmoreperfect/epi...
by shrubble on 5/9/25, 4:44 PM
by d00mB0t on 5/9/25, 4:26 PM