+1 Right? Of course she did. So much hypocrisy here. |
Yep. And she provided them with everything needed to verify her allegations. They chose not to publish those. |
DP. You're completely proving the PPs point. You don't want to believe any support of Kavanaugh because you don't like him. And yet, he has/had tons of female friends, both in high school, and as an adult. RBG praised him for being the justice who hired the most female clerks. But I'm sure you've totally dismissed those facts. |
You seem to be deliberately ignoring the point - which is why were so many Democrats, including you, so utterly outraged over an allegation of teenaged groping, yet now so completely willing to chalk up Platner's bad behavior and comments as "he was young and stupid, all is forgiven"? Not to mention, why did you believe CBF without reservation (even with zero substantiation) but now call Fifield a liar - when she actually does have evidence in the form of old text messages? Don't you find this just a wee bit hypocritical? |
Probably because they followed up on them and found them to be not credible. That's one of those funny things about journalism. |
Not at all. It's not credible in the first place. That "letter" was released within FOUR HOURS of Ford's allegations becoming public. You couldn't possibly reach out to 65 different women who you hadn't been in contact with for decades and get them to sign on to a letter that quickly. Clearly there is something very fishy about that "letter" - if anything the letter would have had to have been organized months in advance of allegations, if it was even real at all. That's not my opinion, either - numerous reporters and commentators believed the letter was fishy. First of all, they weren't high school classmates, as Georgetown Prep where Kavanaugh attended was an all-boys school. The women whose names appeared attended totally different schools or were friends of friends who didn't even know Kavanaugh well. Additionally, numerous women who allegedly signed the letter were either unable to be reached for followup by reporters, or when contacted said thy felt misled, they signed before knowing any of the details, or that they never would have signed, knowing what they later found out about the allegations. |
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Meanwhile we STILL don't know who paid off Kavanaugh's mortgage and extensive debts.....
Shady AF. |
I could go on the class year insta page for my high school and get probably 150 signatures for something important within an hour. Have you ever used social media. |
Sure, kid. Except, Kavanaugh isn't from the Instagram generation, genius. He wouldn't even have 150 high school classmates on that platform to begin with. |
And he didn’t have any high school classmates who were women. |
Idk I’m Gen X and we have a high school IG account and a Facebook group with 200 or so people. Doesn’t seem that weird or unusual. |
That's definitely what Lyndsey and her advocates would have you believe. |
DP. You are making a broad assumption (ass out of you and you) that everyone doubting Lyndsey supported Ford's recitation of history. Just stop. It shows a lack of an inability to reason. For me, Kavanaugh was unwanted for other reasons, such as his support of Bush v. Gore, his judicial decisions, and his obvious push to dismantle Roe v Wade. Susan Collins knew this man would help to dismantle Roe, she just didn't expect it so soon and with such a strong rip-the-bandaid-off approach. And I would present to you that a lifetime position on the SCOTUS is far more powerful than a six-year seat in a 100-member Senate body. |