Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Kavanaugh Claim Collapses in Flaccid Hearsay


Ann Coulter  . . . "If someone from Bob Jones University said that her dreams of marital purity were “ripped away” because she saw a man’s penis in college, liberals would never stop laughing. 
“ '(Kavanaugh) was ... known to attend an annual teenage bacchanal called ‘Beach Week,’ where the hookups and drinking were more important than the sand and swimming.”
"It wasn’t much of a “beach party” -- if you want to call it that. Instead of wholesome fun, the young people consumed alcoholic beverages and engaged in inappropriate flirting. "Everyone said it was inappropriate -- not just us.
"Most shocking, from a “Little House on the Prairie” perspective, was this:
“People ... would start to say ‘Debbie does …’ playing on the 1978 porn movie ‘Debbie Does Dallas.’ "But Ms. Ramirez didn’t understand the reference.”
"Remind me: Aren't these the same people demanding that we teach kindergartners about “fisting”?
"But the “Debbie Does Defamation” authors weren’t finished." . . . 


Victor Davis Hanson writes in American Greatness, 
 The Stalinist mantra “to accuse is to be believed”   . . . "In the end, Ford was perhaps fortunate that the entire circus ceased when it did. Had investigators probed any more deeply the recent accusations of her once long-term boyfriend, the strange but multifaceted role of her lifelong but apparently conniving friend Monica McClean in the Kavanaugh allegations, the passages of the therapist tapes, the exact circumstances surrounding the lie-detector test, the long odyssey of Ford’s original accusation through Feinstein’s staff to Democratic committee members and the media, and the sources of Ford’s judicial support, there might well have been more incompatibility with the ever growing number of Ford’s narratives.
"In the end, we were left only with the Stalinist mantra “to accuse is to be believed”—but, of course, not even the current accusers in the future would be exempt from the very nightmare they now would create for others."

Tony Branco

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