Booray said:Because I think it is a really hard decision. As I have pointed out several times, we don't have the whole record. He very well could have been more forthcoming abut his drinking habits in closed door communications with the committee; being a sloppy, belligerent drunk is not the same as being a blackout drunk but they are in the same universe and it was decades ago. I assume that if he still drank like that, we would know about it.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:See your bullet point #3 above. Not sure why you feel the need to dance around your reason you don't think Kavanaugh should be on the Supreme Court. You think he should not because you think he lied about his degree of drinking in college or what he wrote in high school yearbooks. Is that not correct?Booray said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Booray said:Doc Holliday said:You might as well install AI computer software to make SCOTUS decision with your standards lolBooray said:
Oso,
Sort of an old news post. No one I know questions his credentials.
Those who would vote against him on idealogical grounds would agree that he is not as far right as others.
Did he sexually assault someone? Not enough evidence to say yes; I don't think that is a close call.
Did he lie about sexual assault? Logically, has to be the same answer, but I would go further and say that even if there was some sort of incident, he doesn't remember it so he can't lie about it.
Did he lie about collateral matters? Lie is a strong word. He certainly did not tell the whole truth.
Do you ever find yourself questioning why you're super critical of a guy that is pretty damn centered and not extremely conservative?
I know you're very left leaning, but you lost an election...this is good as you're going to get. I suggest you focus on why your Democrats can't seem to resonate with voters anymore.
1) I have never said he shouldn't be confirmed. I said his honesty issue is troubling.
2) Do you ever ask yourself why any criticism of any right-wing position or politician is automatically incorrect?
3) Specifically in this instance, does Judge Kavanaugh's obvious minimizing of his drinking habits and distorted remembrance of some of the collateral matters from his yearbook bother you in the least? Or do you fall in the camp of "lying is ok if he was unfairly attacked?"
4) More people vote for Democrats than for Republicans. Print your post and 20 years from now tell me how much the current GOP continued to "resonate."
Yep. High School and College drinking and what we wrote in our high school yearbooks should be the litmus test for all of us regarding our employment.
Said no one.
And for the record, there is nothing wrong with that if your answer is YES. People just have different opinions about what is and is not important.
All of which is why you could never prove a perjury case. But he did present as someone whose drinking was usually within reasonable limits and there is plenty of evidence that it went beyond that.
On the yearbook side I had never heard the terms "boofing" or "devil's triangle" before his testimony. The explained urban slang is apparently sexual; he said they refer to farting and drinking. Would like to know what Mark Judge, P.J. and Squi had to say about that. Is it possible they used the terms differently-sure. Unlikely, but possible.
My guess is that if I had the full record my vote would be no based on less than complete candor. But I really don't know for sure. BTW, I think the Dems-in a rush to solidify the women's vote--did an awful job of focusing on this point. There was no way we were ever going to know if there had been a sexual assault, yet that became the sole focus. The GOP was happy to let that happen-because there was no way we were ever going to know if there was sexual assault.
Boofing was an anal sex reference I first heard at Baylor my freshman year, along with bufu and boofed.
Imagine my surprise a few years later to meet a kid named Boofie.
“Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place.” (The Law, p.6) Frederic Bastiat