revsdd
Well-Known Member
On Fox News, Brett Kavanaugh portrayed himself as virginal and teetotalling in high school. Now that's very possible. I don't accept the "boys will be boys" line of thinking. High school boys can be virginal and teetotalling. (I was.) But he told the Committee yesterday that he partied and liked beer in high school. Now, I do believe that there's something in the Bible about how if a person can't be trusted to be honest on small things (like drinking some beer in high school - why lie about that on Fox?) then they can't be trusted on big things (like, maybe, on judging US Supreme Court cases?) And having done some research I find it weird that Kavanaugh apparently uses terms like "boofing" and "Devil's Triangle" (which I'd never heard of) in ways that no one else ever seems to have used them - he says they mean farting and a drinking game, as opposed to a certain type of drug use and threesome sex involving two men and a woman which is apparently how those in the rest of the world use them. And setting aside the details of what he said - if Christine Blasey Ford had cried and shouted and been angry and interrupted senators and made sarcastic comments to them while they tried to question her she'd have been crucified. And if - say - the Republicans (who now find that filling a Supreme Court seat is so vital that it has to be rushed through) had actually allowed a hearing on Obama's pick of Merrick Garland and Garland had behaved like Kavanaugh did yesterday they'd have crucified him. But Kavanaugh? All I hear is Republicans talking about how "credible" he was.
The truth is that even before he was nominated most Republicans had already decided they would support whoever Trump nominated and most Democrats had already decided they would oppose whoever Trump nominated. The fact that it's Kavanaugh and the accusations against him and suspicions about him won't change anything. Why? Because whatever the impact on the mid-terms, Republicans have obviously decided (and Democrats understand) that they're willing to sacrifice control of Congress for 2 or 4 or 6 or 8 years (whatever) in exchange for a clear conservative majority on the Supreme Court that will probably last for more than a generation. To those who are increasingly the vocal and powerful core of the Republican Party (conservative, far-right evangelical Christians especially) the Supreme Court is far more important than Congress. Why? Abortion. Nothing else matters to them. The ends justify the means. That's why Trump was elected; that's why evangelicals remain so solidly in support of him no matter the obvious moral and ethical clouds surrounding him; that's why the Republicans are so driven to push through Kavanaugh's nomination. Questions about character and ethics and morality are totally meaningless in the face of abortion.
Abortion (on both sides of the issue) has become in some ways the idol of the times and blurs reasonable discussion of other issues, trapping everything in a hyper-partisan, winner take all battle. The far right evangelical Christian base of the GOP wants Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court. Out of control testimony, and definite hints of group sex, drugs and drunkenness aside - he'll vote to overturn Roe vs Wade. That's all that counts. Most American evangelicals have completely betrayed Jesus for a couple of seats on the Supreme Court.
And so ...
A modern paraphrase of Matthew 26:15: Then the evangelicals said to Trump, "what will you give us if we throw our votes to you?" And he said to them in reply, "A couple of seats on the Supreme Court." And they betrayed Jesus and voted Republican.
The truth is that even before he was nominated most Republicans had already decided they would support whoever Trump nominated and most Democrats had already decided they would oppose whoever Trump nominated. The fact that it's Kavanaugh and the accusations against him and suspicions about him won't change anything. Why? Because whatever the impact on the mid-terms, Republicans have obviously decided (and Democrats understand) that they're willing to sacrifice control of Congress for 2 or 4 or 6 or 8 years (whatever) in exchange for a clear conservative majority on the Supreme Court that will probably last for more than a generation. To those who are increasingly the vocal and powerful core of the Republican Party (conservative, far-right evangelical Christians especially) the Supreme Court is far more important than Congress. Why? Abortion. Nothing else matters to them. The ends justify the means. That's why Trump was elected; that's why evangelicals remain so solidly in support of him no matter the obvious moral and ethical clouds surrounding him; that's why the Republicans are so driven to push through Kavanaugh's nomination. Questions about character and ethics and morality are totally meaningless in the face of abortion.
Abortion (on both sides of the issue) has become in some ways the idol of the times and blurs reasonable discussion of other issues, trapping everything in a hyper-partisan, winner take all battle. The far right evangelical Christian base of the GOP wants Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court. Out of control testimony, and definite hints of group sex, drugs and drunkenness aside - he'll vote to overturn Roe vs Wade. That's all that counts. Most American evangelicals have completely betrayed Jesus for a couple of seats on the Supreme Court.
And so ...
A modern paraphrase of Matthew 26:15: Then the evangelicals said to Trump, "what will you give us if we throw our votes to you?" And he said to them in reply, "A couple of seats on the Supreme Court." And they betrayed Jesus and voted Republican.