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| All I can say is that it had something to do with this. |
Now apparently this letter was sent months ago to a Anna Eschoo, who is a House member from California. Eschoo passed it along to Feinstein shortly thereafter. Feinstein has not brought it up until "now", when there is no real chance to ask Kavanaugh about it or allow any chance of rebuttal.
Democrats (en masse) have now claimed to have turned the information over to federal investigative authorities. I am curious if they all took a bus together or how this would actually work. Of course bringing this to authorities at this point is silly considering whatever is alleged to have happened, would have happened over 35 years ago. Outside of murder, I am pretty sure the statute of limitations would have expired. Moreover, it would be difficult to decipher what one high school student may have done to another that would be considered under the jurisdiction of federal law rather than state law.
All that being said, it is now being reported that the FBI was already aware of the letter, had done some cursory background on it, and that it was included in the background check on Brett Kavanaugh. So the Democrat's claims of turning it over to authorities is basically irrelevant. But it sounds good to the easily fooled Democratic base.
According to sources, the situation involved Kavanaugh (and at least one other student) locking a female student in a room against her will. Sounds like the sort of thing high school boys do to high school girls who they have silly crushes on. Apparently the girl said she felt "threatened" even though she was able to actually get out of the room. Doesn't sound very serious, it doesn't sound very sexual, and it doesn't sound very disqualifying. Not hard to understand why neither the FBI or Feinstein found this relevant.

8 comments:
This story is dying down very quickly. Quite problably because the Democrats see danger ahead if they push it.
Doesn't sound very serious, it doesn't sound very sexual, and it doesn't sound very disqualifying.
what it does sound like is desperate and pathetic.
which explains exactly why the alky posted it on the previous thread.
Manafort to plead guilty of something....LOLOL Think trump sees any trouble ahead????? More at 11:30
I stated earlier that this was an accusation of a sexual assault when both of them were 17 years old.
Blogger Roger Amick said...
I stated earlier that this was an accusation of a sexual assault when both of them were 17 years old.
without having any possible way to know if this was an accusation of sexual assault.
di fi the accuser didn't even define the allegation as sexual assault.
smooth move alky.
Yes you did. Why?
Anonymous Myballs said...
Yes you did. Why?
because the first requirement of being a card-carrying member of the #resistance is to jettison the truth in favor of the narrative of the moment.
and speaking of the USSC, check out RBG's interview at GW university the other day. she sat there all knotted up like stephen hawking, and she sounded like an episode of 'tales from the crypt.'
https://youtu.be/AriOjUfbBrw
trump will get to name her replacement as well. heh.
A Fox News poll this week found that Republican congressman Kevin Cramer leads incumbent Democratic senator Heidi Heitkamp by four percentage points in the North Dakota Senate race, 48–44 percent.
The survey of 701 likely voters is the first poll of the race since mid June, just after the North Dakota primary. That poll, conducted by Mason-Dixon, also found Cramer leading Heitkamp 48 to 44 percent.
The Fox News poll, which was conducted from September 8–11, found that 8 percent of voters say they remain undecided, while 15 percent say they might change their mind on their candidate selection before November.
Perhaps most interesting, the poll shows that one-third of voters who said they might change their mind before the election said they’d be less likely to vote for Heitkamp if she opposes the confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court later this month.
Meanwhile, Heitkamp has a 7-point edge among female respondents, and Cramer has a 15-point advantage among men. White evangelical Christians chose Cramer over Heitkamp by a whopping margin of 30 percentage points, and voters prioritizing the economy picked the Republican by an even larger 36-point margin.
Voters’ views of President Trump will likely play a role in the North Dakota race, too. According to Morning Consult, the president has a 51/45 net favorable rating in the state, and the Fox News poll indicates that 26 percent of voters want their Senate vote to express support for Trump, while 24 percent say their vote will be in opposition to him. Forty-six percent of respondents said the president wouldn’t be a factor in their vote at all.
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