"You've really fallen in with a bad crowd." I have no sympathy for these broads, none at all. If you're going to bring charges such as these, then you better damn well have evidence that would hold up in court. Yeah, yeah, we ain't in court. I don't give a shit. Mob rule and the court of public opinion are not sufficient to destroy a persons life. The kindest I can be to Ford is she is mentally disturbed. These other two bitches are radical left operatives playing the game. Fuck'em! And let me say, I'll be the very first the publicly apologize, just as soon as they bring forth something that would actually hold up in court.
Revenge of The Clintons. Backfired spectacularly! https://www.businessinsider.com/brett-kavanaugh-monica-lewinsky-bill-clinton-memo-2018-8
Oh look... the 60 year old internet lurking fag hag from Canada whose pathetic, lonely life revolves around our politics thinks Judge Kavanaugh is mentally disturbed
That's how you think of me and yet you follow me around. You might want to give that some thought, toy soldier.
Kavanaugh's prep school friends say 'Devil's Triangle' was a drinking game Fox News Facebook Twitter Flipboard Comments Print Email Kavanaugh: I've never 'blacked out' when drinking Brett Kavanaugh expands on his comments about drinking that he made during a Fox News interview. Four high school classmates of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh have claimed that the phrase "Devil's Triangle" in Kavanaugh's yearbook is a drinking game and not a reference to sexual activity, as has been claimed by some opponents of Kavanaugh. The phrase took center stage when Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., asked Kavanaugh its meaning during a hearing last week. "It's a drinking game," responded Kavanaugh, who asked Whitehouse if he had "ever played quarters?", a reference to another drinking game. In a letter released by Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Delancey Davis, Bernard McCarthy Jr., Paul Murray and Matthew Quinn said the game was a variation on quarters. "When we played 'Devil’s Triangle,' four people sat at a table. On the table, three small glasses of beer were arranged next to one another to form a triangle. Each of the four participants took turns being the “shooter," they wrote. "The shooter attempted to bounce a quarter into one of the glasses. If the quarter landed in one of the glasses, the person at the table sitting nearest that glass had to drink the beer." The quartet added that while they do not remember how the game came to be called "Devil's Triangle," they were adamant that "none of us used the phrase ... in our yearbook to refer to any kind of sexual activity." "If the phrase 'Devil's Triangle' had any sexual meaning in the 1980s, we did not know it," they concluded. The committee also released a letter from two men who roomed with one of Kavanaugh's high school classmates while they were undergraduates at Boston College. The men, Greg Aceto and Bill Van Pelt IV, said that Kavanaugh's classmate Matthew Quinn had taught them how to play "Devil's Triangle" and added that they did not understand it to have any sexual meaning. Some opponents of Kavanaugh's nomination have interpreted the phrase to refer to a three-way sexual encounter. On Wednesday, Jamie Roche, Kavanaugh's freshman year roommate at Yale told CNN that he heard Kavanaugh use the term to refer to sexual activity. Fox News' Mike Emanuel contributed to this report.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...9270f9cce17_story.html?utm_term=.a20b3173ab58 We were college classmates and drinking buddies with Supreme Court nominee Brett M. Kavanaugh. In the past week, all three of us decided separately to respond to questions from the media regarding Brett’s honesty, or lack thereof. In each of our cases, it was his public statements during a Fox News TV interview and his sworn testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee that prompted us to speak out. We each asserted that Brett lied to the Senate by stating, under oath, that he never drank to the point of forgetting what he was doing. We said, unequivocally, that each of us, on numerous occasions, had seen Brett stumbling drunk to the point that it would be impossible for him to state with any degree of certainty that he remembered everything that he did when drunk. Since coming forward, we each have received numerous angry messages accusing us of attempting to ruin a man’s life because of his drunken antics as a college student. In fact, none of us condemned Brett for his frequent drunkenness. We drank too much in college as well. It is true that Brett acknowledged he sometimes drank “too many beers.” But he also stated that he never drank to the point of blacking out. By coming forward, each of us has disrupted our own lives and those of our families. As well as navigating the intense media interest, including having news vans and reporters set up in front of the home of one of us, we have received large amounts of hate mail, including threats of violence. We have lost friendships. The work servers of one of us were hacked.