Minoosh
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2011
- Messages
- 12,772
All indicating IMO that Kavanaugh is not a towering figure and knows it. For someone with his credentials he's had a fairly mediocre career. No big paychecks from the private sector, a habit of carrying excessive credit card debt, a big mortgage and little home equity and debts that disappeared without an adequate explanation. Thursday, he won Trump's respect by coming out emotional and swinging during a proceeding that did nothing to create an impression of candor, maturity or any hint of judicial temperament.Kavanaugh in his 20s.
I don't fault him for being a political hack, particularly, but his CV doesn't suggest anything except a career bureaucrat. We're missing 100,000 pages of his work product, 4 times as much as Bush wanted withheld. The FBI investigation is turning out to be severely constrained. This seems to be the best the GOP can do to salvage a dodgy Supreme Court nominee and I wouldn't be surprised to see a few defectors on the vote. Then again maybe some Democrats will cross over. I'd be shocked, but actually pleased to see some who may actually vote their conscious (or more likely, bow to political realities at home).
Kavanaugh is a profoundly unimpressive pick with just enough credentials to make him a plausible nominee. And, you know what? Fair enough. He may squeak by just as Trump himself did. He may be beholden to some of the same interests. We don't know how his debts went away, or why he seemed to need to impress his buddies, or what he did for the Bush administration that was so potentially damaging that Senate committee members can't even look at his memos. Or why his story changed on the Federalist Society, or why he gets so shirty when underage and in some cases adult drinking issues are brought up. There's another couple of issues, but frankly I wasn't paying too much attention earlier in the process.
The Senate can content themselves that they scraped together a skin-of-their-teeth confirmation vote. Kavanaugh will be the new Clarence Thomas, joining that distinguished jurist in moldering away, cranking out paint-by-the-numbers "conservative" positions. This is the process, folks. It was surprising to even get that one-week delay. Other presidents will come to power, other justices will retire, other senators will be sworn in. At this point I want senators to do whatever has the greatest chance of shaking up the Senate.
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