As anyone pointed out that after 30+ years there is essentially no way either of them remember the event correctly?
Its certainly possible that many of the details will become fuzzy. (Did it happen on a Weekend or weeknight? What music was playing?) It is less likely for someone to remember incorrectly whether the incident happened at all, and if it did the people that were involved (if they knew their identities before hand.)As anyone pointed out that after 30+ years there is essentially no way either of them remember the event correctly?
As anyone pointed out that after 30+ years there is essentially no way either of them remember the event correctly?
No, no...”O’Kavenaugh”. A completely fictional creation, not based on any real person whatsoever.I wasn't inferring anything specific, just saying that if it were my friend, I'd want to testify. And Judge has written a book about his excessive drinking, etc. at high school. Kavanaugh features throwing up in the back of a car.
Can I just say that theprestige ought to be recognized for using "begs the question" correctly? Whether or not we agree with him, the boy knows the meaning of the term, which puts him in the literate minority.After 30+ years, it's reasonable to ask if there even was an event to remember in the first place.
It's one thing to assess people's ability to remember a documented occurrence, thirty years later. The Challenger explosion, for example. Regardless of what you remember, we can always compare your recollection to the documentary evidence that the event actually happened, and happened in a particular way.
In this case, there is no documentary evidence that the event happened, only the claimant's recollection over the years. So I think it begs the question, to say that Kavanaugh probably can't remember the event correctly, when we can't even say with confidence that there was an event for him to remember in the first place.
But maybe, unbeknownst to her, one or both of them did. Seems that might be a pretty reasonable rationale for further investigation.Few things maybe someone can clear up. Why is she being referenced at 15 during the incident, him 17, but the specific year unknown? We do know the year they were born, and would assume the summer of said year would be the time this occurred. Or were those ages guessed or made up whole cloth?
Beyond that not sure what evidence there is to gain by testimony in front of the senate. Per her account, she told no one of the incident at the time. Of the people she remembers there, both have denied. So what exactly will her testimony shed light on that her original statement does not convey? Hell, what investigation can be expanded with so little information.
That is not to say she is lieing or he is innocent, but it remains a tough road to tread finding anything about this specific instance that would sway beyond how believable the story and person are. Guess that's all there is to gain. How convinced of her story she is, and how convinced is he of the denial.
Can I just say that theprestige ought to be recognized for using "begs the question" correctly? Whether or not we agree with him, the boy knows the meaning of the term, which puts him in the literate minority.
Has anyone pointed out that what you're saying is essentially a lie?As anyone pointed out that after 30+ years there is essentially no way either of them remember the event correctly?
But maybe, unbeknownst to her, one or both of them did. Seems that might be a pretty reasonable rationale for further investigation.
There is for him (and his witness): "I remember that it never happened, period."
You’re not alone. All by itself, placing another person besides the aggressor in the room is not the kind of detail you’d offer if you were making up the tale.ETA: I tend to find Blasey more credible than Kavanaugh, FWIW.
She has said it was probably 1982. She's not clear about the date or the place.
Testimony by both parties and any other witnesses would be under oath. That means that a lie by either party -- or any other witnesses they bring in -- would be a criminal offense. They want to assess everybody's credibility. If she says "this happened to me," and he says "Golly, I was drinking a lot, I just don't remember," that alone would be devastating.
Doesn't seem that reasonable to me.
Investigating whether an alleged criminal allegedly talked about their alleged crime to hypothetical alleged accomplices 30 years ago seems like an obvious waste of law enforcement resources.
Repubs coming after Ford.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...1b8b31b326b47ec9596ea/?utm_term=.611759747e87
Which is an odd thing to say, really, given that they don't know what party is being referred to, and there's documentary evidence from Mike Judge that both of them had a habit of getting blackout drunk at that time in their lives.
No, per her account, she didn't provide details until 2012. According to a report I linked to upthread, the White House is worried by rumours that two school friends of Ford's can corroborate that she told them about the incident at the time.
Ford said she has not spoken with Kavanaugh since that night. And she told no one at the time what had happened to her. She was terrified, she said, that she would be in trouble if her parents realized she had been at a party where teenagers were drinking, and she worried they might figure it out even if she did not tell them.
“My biggest fear was, do I look like someone just attacked me?” she said. She said she recalled thinking: “I’m not ever telling anyone this. This is nothing, it didn’t happen, and he didn’t rape me.”