Shocking moment crowd at Stand With ICE rally laughs and cheers as Trump-supporting radio host rants about 86-year-old Ruth Bader Ginsburg's cancer diagnosis, saying 'she knows her days are numbered'

  • Randy Corporon said Ginsburg, 86, is 'one tough lady' who 'knows her days are numbered' but deserves 'credit for hanging in there'
  • The radio host was speaking at the Aurora ICE Processing Center in Colorado
  • 'She knows her days are numbered...if you were that one super liberal Supreme Court justice, wouldn't you be trying to live forever?' he told the small crowd 
  • His comments were live streamed by Michelle Malkin at the 'Stand with ICE' rally 
  • Ginsburg's health has been watched closely since it's believed the court would shift to the right if Trump could nominate someone to replace her

A Stand With ICE rally organizer and radio host has told a small crowd of Trump supporters Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg 'knows her days are numbered'. 

Randy Corporon said the 86-year-old, who recently underwent three weeks of radiation therapy for pancreatic cancer, is 'one tough lady' and deserves a 'great deal of credit for hanging in there'.  

The radio host's comments were met with laughter and cheers from those at the event in outside the Aurora Immigration and Customs Enforcement Processing Center in Colorado. 

Corporon added: 'I mean, really, if you were one of the most liberal justices in the history of the United States and you were at this pinnacle, you know, a Supreme Court Justice, and you knew that your days are numbered, I mean, who knows how long she could make it, but she's not well, she's, what, Stage 4 pancreatic cancer, I think, was the last round. 

'She knows her days are numbered and if you saw what Donald Trump is doing on the border, is trying to do to get government out of our health care just thing after thing after thing. 

'If you were that one super liberal Supreme Court justice, wouldn't you be trying to live forever?'

Randy Corporon told a crowd of supporters Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg 'knows her days are numbered'
The radio host's comments were met with laughter and cheers from those at the event in outside the Aurora Immigration and Customs Enforcement Processing Center in Colorado

Randy Corporon, pictured left and right at the rally, told a crowd of supporters Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg 'knows her days are numbered'

The comments were live streamed by Michelle Malkin, who also helped organize the second 'Stand with ICE' rally at that location since Labor Day.

Corporon went on to say Ginsburg 'really gotta try and hang on' as the 'court is really going to move the right direction if she has to step down'.  

He earlier told the crowd: 'We are standing up for the men and women of law enforcement, the men and women of ICE.' 

Ginsburg said in September that she was 'feeling very good tonight,' following her disclosure that she had completed three weeks of outpatient radiation therapy for a cancerous tumor on her pancreas and is now disease-free.

It was the fourth time over the past two decades that Ginsburg, the leader of the court's liberal wing, has been treated for cancer. 

She had colorectal cancer in 1999, pancreatic cancer in 2009 and lung cancer surgery in December.

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, pictured in Septembe, recently underwent three weeks of radiation therapy for pancreatic cancer. Her health has been watched closely by both conservatives and liberals since it's believed the court would shift to the right if President Donald Trump could nominate someone to replace her

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, pictured in Septembe, recently underwent three weeks of radiation therapy for pancreatic cancer. Her health has been watched closely by both conservatives and liberals since it's believed the court would shift to the right if President Donald Trump could nominate someone to replace her

Ginsburg's health has been watched closely by both conservatives and liberals since it's believed the court would shift to the right if President Donald Trump could nominate someone to replace her.

Former President Bill Clinton has alluded to that concern.

'All of us hope that she will stay on the court forever,' Clinton said.