Ruth Ginsburg tactfully fights the law to gain women rights, leading towards gender equality. In the state of Idaho, the law favored men over women to oversee property, and the topic was brought up in the case Reed v. Reed. By introducing the 14th amendment, RBG’s assistance helped dismantle the law as it was deemed unconstitutional (Frost-Knappman). The ruling of Reed v. Reed breaks clichés of women traditionally reining in the familial aspects of the household and led them to have proprietary rights. Moreover, the first utilization of the 14th amendment to rule gender-based treatment unconstitutional was a major step for women to gain fairness. Then in 1973 Ginsburg represented Frontiero in Frontiero v. Richardson. Air Force officer Sharron Frontiero was denied to expand her husband’s benefits that male member’s spouses could obtain, so they declared the law stripped them of their rights (Pullman). Society places emphasis on males being the protector and the provider. However, in this case it was a female in that position, so society disregarded her capabilities of being a