BEER! BEER! BEER! BEER!
FULL DISCLOSURE:
I can tell another drunk from a mile away. I just wanted to put that out there.
I don't want to be seen here as picking on Bret Kavanaugh. The guy has been through enough ridicule of late, and I'm hesitant to add any more fuel to a fire that is already completely out-of-control (did you happen to catch Saturday Night Live this weekend? Ouch!) I know this sounds strange, but I'm starting to feel a little sorry for the guy - and I really feel bad for his daughters! I have to tell you that I was much heartened to see that, given his emotional reaction when he spoke of them during his conformation hearings, there are at least some daughters in America that this judge is capable of feeling such sincere compassion for - even if it's only his own daughters. Still, that's a good start. We must grab these little morsels of humanity wherever we may find them, ay?
His follow up testimony to Christine Blasey Ford's was revealing. From his ranting about left wing conspiracies to his claim that all opposition to his nomination was "revenge" for the Clintons, it was all I needed to see to understand that this is a man not in possession of a tenth of the temperament to be an objective and dispassionate jurist. We don't need political operators on the Supreme Court; we already have one in Uncle Clarence Thomas. I'm reminded of William O. Douglas. He was appointed to the Supremes by Roosevelt in 1939. He was probably the most liberal member of that body in history - which is precisely why FDR chose him. As a private citizen, Douglas had been very politically active, but once he found himself sitting on "the highest court in the land", all of that political activity went straight into oblivion.
Many of his law clerks remember him staring longingly at the morning papers reading about any given cause that might have been brewing at any given moment in America (like the civil rights movement) and the good judge wistfully sighing, "Oh, if only I could have attended this rally!". But he never did. He knew it would be wrong for a sitting Supreme Court judge to become involved in partisan politics. That's not true for Clarence Thomas. It won't be true for Bret Kavanaugh. Count on it.
The most revealing (and disturbing) part of the Kavanaugh hearing was his interchanges with Amy Klobuchar and Dick Durbin. His back-and-forth with Durbin was particularly unsettling. The guy literally had what could only be described as a pre-teen tantrum. He refused to say that he would approve of an FBI investigation (as Dr. Ford has) and when he was pressed, he folded his arms and remained silent for a few seconds. When Klobuchar asked him if he had ever "blacked out", he turned the question around and asked her if she ever had. Like the Army/McCarthy hearings of 1954, it was one of those moments of political theater that people will still be looking back on in 2072.
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"At long last, sir, have you no sense of decency?"
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Joseph Welsh, 1954
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I could not believe what I was witnessing. It was yet another reminder (as if another reminder was even remotely necessary) how depressingly dumbed down America's national conversation has become in the last half century.
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Perhaps Bret Kavanaugh and Dr. Ford are both speaking the Truth. I've blacked out a number of times in my partying career and was perfectly capable of some reprehensible behavior that I only found out about the morning after when told by a concerned friend of my inebriated exploits - although sexual assault was never part of the equation; that's never really been my shtick. Most of the trouble I've gotten into during any particular blackout involved my mouth - or my pen. I can really be one mean son-of-a-bitch when I'm intoxicated and someone has wronged me. Not violent, mind you - just mean. Maybe Judge Kavanaugh really believes he's innocent. That's why the other Judge (Mark) needs to be subpoenaed. But Mark Judge's problem is that he can't plead the Fifth. Spilling a whole can of nasty tasting beans about Buddy Bret would not be self-incrimination. He's not in a good place anyway you look at it.
Think about this: If Christine Blasey Ford created this story out of thin air, why the hell would she fabricate an eye-witness? Doesn't Mark Judge's presence in the room on that night in the long-ago summer of 1982 make her tale just a bit more difficult to prove? Or maybe it makes her more believable. I believe her.
This is not a "calculated and orchestrated political hit" as Judge Kavanaugh claims. This is something far more substantial than that.
These are indeed golden days for political junkies. I never thought that it would ever get any weirder than the Watergate era. I was wrong. Ron Zeigler was right. Comparatively speaking, Watergate was "a third rate burglary".
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
This is not a "calculated and orchestrated political hit" as Judge Kavanaugh claims. This is something far more substantial than that.
These are indeed golden days for political junkies. I never thought that it would ever get any weirder than the Watergate era. I was wrong. Ron Zeigler was right. Comparatively speaking, Watergate was "a third rate burglary".
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
Closest Companion
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edited and annotated by Geoffrey C. Ward
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I picked this one up at the FDR Library back in January. In the 1920s, in the months after he was stricken with polio, Franklin Roosevelt sought the company of Margaret Suckley, a distant cousin who lived a few miles up Route 9 from Hyde Park in Rhinebeck, NY. FDR was lonely and needed someone to talk to. Theirs’ developed into a beautiful friendship that lasted until the day he died in 1945. Margaret has never been anything but a footnote in his biography. When she died in 1991, just a few months shy of her 100th birthday. a suitcase filled with twenty years of letters between them was discovered under her bed. Geoffrey Ward has unlocked a corner of Roosevelt's soul that none of his previous biographers knew existed. This is a wonderful book - and highly recommended for any fan of the Frankster.