The elite learn early that they’re special — and that they won’t face consequences.
Brett Kavanaugh is not telling the whole truth. When
President George W. Bush nominated him to the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit in 2006, he told senators that he’d
had nothing to do with the war on terror’s detention policies; that was not true.
Kavanaugh also claimed under oath, that year and again this month, that
he didn’t know that Democratic Party memos a GOP staffer showed him in
2003 were illegally obtained; his emails from that period reveal that
these statements were probably false.
And it cannot be possible that the Supreme Court nominee was both a
well-behaved virgin who never lost control as a young man, as he told Fox News and the Senate Judiciary Committee this past week, and an often-drunk member of the “Keg City Club” and a “Renate Alumnius ,” as he seems to have bragged to many people and written into his high school yearbook.
Then there are the sexual misconduct allegations against him, which he denies.
How
could a man who appears to value honor and the integrity of the legal
system explain this apparent mendacity? How could a man brought up in
some of our nation’s most storied institutions — Georgetown Prep, Yale
College, Yale Law School — dissemble with such ease?
The answer lies in
the privilege such institutions instill in their members, a privilege
that suggests the rules that govern American society are for the common
man, not the exceptional one.
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