Many who don't care about "drinking and loose behavior" object to Kavanaugh lying about it. Lying about anything under oath is a problem. Lying repeatedly about something unimportant shows contempt for the very idea of "under oath," and raises suspicion he'd lie about other stuff https://twitter.com/SohrabAhmari/status/1046562992878440448 …
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Replying to @NGrossman81
Agree with your point. And just as importantly, the drinking and predatory attitudes depicted in the yearbook buttress the credibility of Ford's accusation.
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Replying to @HealthCareHuck
I could easily accept that the attitudes depicted in the yearbook were normal high school stupid. That they're exaggerated or didn't actually happen, but Kavanaugh and friends thought it was cool or funny. But then just admit it. Lying raises a big red flag.
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Replying to @NGrossman81
I've learned recently is that boys prep school culture of that era was very different from my high school culture. We didn't have "Suzy Alumnus" snickering jokes in our yearbook. Also, how many have a best friend who wrote a book about their collective high school debauchery?
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Replying to @HealthCareHuck @NGrossman81
That best friend also turns out to be allegedly present at the attack. Kav under oath denied he was the best friend "Bart O'Kavanaugh" in the guy's book. You could not make this stuff up - too crazy.
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A lot of easy ways to answer the "Bart O'Kavanaugh" questions without sounding shady. "Not very subtle, is it? We were friends and I read the book, and while 'Bart' does some things I did, he also does some things I didn't. Composite? Exaggeration for narrative? I don't know."
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