What you guys think about this letter published by the New York times, allegedly confirmed by Kavanaugh's lawyers to be his own writing?
During the hearing he "dodged" a question about being Bart in Mark Judge's book "Wasted" by saying "you'd have to ask him" (Mark, the author of the book).
(does anyone have a PDF? Stupidly expensive and it would be nice to actually verify the part where it allegedly says that Kavanaugh "blacked out" and see it in context. I couldn't find a real quote or screenshot)
Press of course is all over it, what else to expect.
Personally, I think this - at best - proves that he was evasive about the question. If not for the whole rape accusation, I doubt anyone would even care tho.
If Bart in the book had the same name but is heavily exaggerated can it even be considered as him?
Matthew King
Teenage fantasies
People sometimes exhibit human tendencies
Camden Jackson
Is he a rapist? >No. Well shit, what else can we get him for? >Uhhhhh he drank a lot in high school and college? Genius, roll with that. We got him!
Asher James
(((moving the goalposts))). This will be America and the rest of the West if these faggots have their way.
Julian Brown
>allegedly confirmed by Kavanaugh's lawyers to be his own writing?
If so, can't they get finger prints?
Not that it matters. These accusations have much bigger issues.
Blake Garcia
>pizzagate has zero real evidence
>"WTF ALL PEDOS SAVE THE KIDS!"
>kavanaugh has tons of evidence of him being a piece of shit sexual predator unfit to the job
>"WTF F-FAKE NEWS!!"
the absolute state of drumpfkins WEW
James Sanchez
>FFFFF Bart Kek, it seems the hacker four chan
Adrian Gray
thanks user!
Dominic Nguyen
>During the hearing he "dodged" a question about being Bart in Mark Judge's book "Wasted" by saying "you'd have to ask him"
the point is, even if the character is based off Kav, it can also be true that Judge made a lot of stuff up for the sake of the book. It's obvious that a character named "bart kavanaugh" was inspired by him.
Easton Martin
Good question, didn't even occur to me. After all the book isn't necessarily written as a biography, maybe more for entertainment value. In which case he might have just "filled in the blanks" with something that seemed amusing.
Maybe reading it will reveal more about the nature of the writing. Currently trying to figure out how to download and read it.
I mean, he did say he liked beer, very clearly lol. So there's that. Did he black out? Depends on how accurate the book in question is, I suppose.
The New York times article I linked in OP also mentions that Kavanaugh often served as a kind of restraining force and was able to calm down his friends when they got too drunk or sth like that, you can check it. Kinda surprised they didn't choose to omit this bit, but glad they didn't.
Kayden Young
Maybe you need to get that the press has a long history of creating false information or using info out of context in order to manipulate the thinking of dunces like you
Henry Anderson
Ok, here's the page with the Kavanaugh incident. It only gets brought up as a quote.
If we assume this is 100% accurate (that's a big if) account of what was said and they didn't lie, here's what I take away from it: - He puked. Ok, doesn't really contradict what he said, which is that he sometimes drank too much. - He passed out. Now, this is the interesting part though. He puked in someone's car. The passing out gets brought up in relation to that. Which implies that the two are related. Here's my guess what probably happened: A friend or acquaintance offered to drive him home. He puked in that person's car. And fell asleep.
In the very least, there's a big difference between falling asleep and "having a blackout". Sure, you won't remember being asleep either, but the difference is that someone who is asleep doesn't go around raping people either. (correct me if I'm wrong duh, and sorry for the baby logic lol)
In the hearing, his only claim was he never blacked out, which for me means either losing consciousness or memory purely from being drunk.
Falling asleep in a car driving you home hardly counts as a "blackout".