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Marble Fox Kits For Sale UkSonia Sotomayor’s slap-down of Clarence Thomas this week did more than express a dissenting opinion, it made the 61-year-old jurist a member of an exclusive club: supreme court justices who have transcended the legal and political arena and entered the realm of pop culture.
West Elm Linen Duvet Cover Review Within a day or so of Sotomayor speaking out against her fellow justices’ ruling – that evidence gathered during an illegal search should be considered admissible – she had gone from being an outspoken but sober member of the highest court in the land to being “Sonia from the block”, her portrait popping up all over the internet overlaid with inspirational quotes from her own speech
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, or defiant lyrics by Beyoncé. At work here, as in every memification of an establishment figure, was a combination of admiration, affection and playful condescension. It was also rooted in the novelty of there being women on the supreme court at all. Like her colleague Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sotomayor, before she even gets out of the gate, is elevated to the level of near-icon as one of only four women justices and the sole Hispanic woman to have served in that role. Justice Sotomayor as meme. Photograph: Beyonce Voters on Tumblr With a little tweaking, she becomes at least structurally the torch-bearer for a marginalized group, less dusty old judge than romantic figurehead, from whence it’s a short haul to liberation icon and the descent – or ascent, depending on one’s view – into all-out kitsch. It helps, in these circumstances, to have liberal politics. Since her death, Margaret Thatcher has been to some extent kitschified, but conservative views tend to wear less well on a T-shirt than liberal ones.

These women, at the very heart of the establishment, nonetheless occupy a role as outsiders, their progressive values all the more admirable in light of their age and the reactionary eras through which they have persisted in holding them. And they are tough. Behind the humor of young people teasing old people with references they almost certainly won’t get – notably, the Bader Ginsburg-inspired Tumblr Notorious RBG – lies the absolute certainty that the 83-year-old could take any of us down if it came to a fight. Overlaying images of these women with more traditional representations of street toughness is a good joke, yes, but it also speaks to the scale of their rebellion. When Sotomayor defends the disenfranchised against the police and judicial establishment, the stakes are as high as can possibly be imagined. The #NotoriousRBG is a beast: The first to release an opinion from every sitting, including one sitting w/2. The quotes themselves, meanwhile, range from inspirational to funny to self-deprecating and human, not an abundantly found register in that neck of the woods.

From RBG: “Women belong in all places where decisions are being made.” And “every now and then it helps to be a little deaf”. And, most memorably: “People ask me sometimes, when will there be enough women on the court? And my answer is, when there are nine.” (Compare this to Antonin Scalia’s greatest hits, which include the observation: “I occasionally watch movies or television shows in which the F-word is used constantly, not by the criminal class but by supposedly elegant, well-educated, well-to-do people. The society I move in doesn’t behave that way.” Sotomayor meanwhile occasionally speaks as if dictating text directly for use on inspirational posters: “I do know one thing about me: I don’t measure myself by others’ expectations or let others define my worth.” She has a way to go, not least in years, before she reaches RBG levels of hero-worship, but the process might one day be said to have started this week. “That is the dissenter’s hope, that they are writing not for today but tomorrow,” said Bader Ginsburg once, whose own rebellion may well have peaked not only from her defense of women and minorities, but from a healthy lack of deference towards the machinery of power: at the 2015 State of the Union address she fell asleep, then told the press it was because she’d had wine with her dinner.

The People's Dispensary for Sick Animals (PDSA) is a veterinary charity in the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1917 by Maria Dickin to provide care for sick and injured animals of the poor. It is the UK's leading veterinary charity, carrying out more than one million free veterinary consultations a year, and was up to 2009 the largest private employer of fully qualified veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses in the UK. During World War I, animal welfare pioneer Maria Dickin worked to improve the dreadful state of animal health in the Whitechapel area of London. She wanted to open a clinic where East Enders living in poverty could receive free treatment for their sick and injured animals. Despite widespread scepticism, she opened her free "dispensary" in a Whitechapel basement on Saturday 17 November 1917. It was an immediate success and she was soon forced to find larger premises. Within six years, Maria Dickin had designed and equipped her first horse-drawn clinic, and soon a fleet of mobile dispensaries was established.

PDSA vehicles soon became a comforting and familiar sight throughout the country. Eventually, PDSA's role was defined by two Acts of Parliament, in 1949 and 1956, that continue to govern its activities today. Maria Dickin instituted the Dickin Medal in 1943 to acknowledges outstanding acts of bravery by animals serving with the Armed Forces or Civil Defence units. It has become recognised as the animals' Victoria Cross, and is administered by PDSA. The PDSA created a second animal bravery award, the PDSA Gold Medal, in 2002, which is now recognised as the animal equivalent of the George Cross. Today, treatment is only available to the pets of those in receipt of Housing Benefit or Council Tax Benefit. For those eligible, treatment for sick and injured animals is free of charge. Recently, the PDSA started providing eligible pet owners with preventative services such as neutering, vaccinations and microchipping. These services are the only treatments that are not free; however, they are offered at cost price.

Although there is no cost for all treatments except for those of a preventative nature, PDSA asks clients to make a donation of whatever they can afford towards the treatment of their animal. Currently, PDSA is able to offer its services to 75% of eligible people, and has plans to increase this to 80% over the coming year. In May 2009 the PDSA began requesting a donation on checking the animal in for treatment. PDSA operates throughout Great Britain through animal hospitals and practices; a vast network of charity shops support the organisation. It has one animal hospital in Northern Ireland, the catchment area of which covers much of the area East of the Bann. Although further hospitals are not currently planned for that region, some services through private clinics may be offered, and a charity shop is due to open in March 2007 in Lisburn. The charity's Head Office is based in Telford, Shropshire. In 1937, a branch of the PDSA was founded in District Six, South Africa, which at the time was a poverty-stricken area of Cape Town.

In 1988, the organization became autonomous but maintains a strong link with the mother society in the United Kingdom and a great deal of information is exchanged between them. In October 1938 the PDSA held a Twenty-First Birthday Dinner at the Holborn Restaurant in London, attended by Mrs Dickin. There were words from abroad from France (Mr Horne), Dutch East Indies (Mr Cronin), Roumania (sic) (Mr Smith), and Greece (Mr Hurle). In 2012 Bulldog Licensing, the brand licensing agency for Roobarb & Custard, pledged a long-term link with PDSA to help raise £1m. The characters have already appeared on a range of PDSA T-shirts, modelled and supported by singer and TV presenter Alesha Dixon. In 2005 the PDSA launched its Pet Fit Club competition, in order to help battle the problem of pet obesity. The annual contest sees a group of overweight dogs, cats and rabbits embark on a strict six-month diet and exercise programme, specially tailored by PDSA vets and nurses.[4] At the end of the programme the best-performing pet will be crowned slimmer of the year.