Thought For the Day
- Donald R. McClarey
Donald R. McClarey
Cradle Catholic. Active in the pro-life movement since 1973. Father of three, one in Heaven, and happily married for 43 years. Small town lawyer and amateur historian. Former president of the board of directors of the local crisis pregnancy center for a decade.
File Under ‘Great Moments in US Senate SCOTUS Confirmation Hearings’:
Christine Blaisey Fraud = “Believe All Women.”
Amy Coney Barrett = “White Woman Lies.”
Ketanji Brown Jackson = “What’s A Woman?”
Light sentencing for guilty pediophile pornmakers. Reviewing Ketanji Brown rulings and sentencing shouldn’t come up in confirmation? Huh!?
Tragedy is when I get a papercut. Comedy is when you fall into an open sewer and die.
RH.
Yeah…you’ve pinned it down. We are living in surreal times. So many individuals, Democrats mostly, have chosen a bleak eternity for themselves.
All we can try to do is help as many to the Ark, Blessed Virgin Mary, as possible before the final curtain call.
Peace.
These are either (1) deeply mendacious people or (2) people operating under the assumptions of the contemporary left, wherein we do not live in a commonwealth of adult citizens. Kavanaugh and Brown are deemed to be of different orders in society. In the order Kavanaugh occupies, it’s perfectly fair for the purveyors of JustUs to recruit some dame to accuse you of felonious conduct 36 years after the fact; that the only demonstrable connection between you and her is that as youngsters you lived in the same county (which had a population of about 600,000 in 1982, among them perhaps 50,000 born after 1962 and prior to 1969) and that your father and his mother were both lawyers (as were about 10,000 other people around DC at that time) is immaterial. Believe all women, or whatever. It’s also perfectly fair to put some shmuck with whom you shared a dorm suite 35 years ago (for all of four months) on television to accuse you of being a lying alcoholic. In the order Brown occupies, people in Kavanaugh’s order are getting above their station asking her sharp and skeptical questions about her conduct on the bench.