the principles the institution of slavery existed in the colonies. jones provocative speeches that america that was born in 1776 was not the perfect union that it purported to be. that is kind of what you would expect from any yield law professor who is interviewed about their 6019 project. that has become kind of mainstream and american legal thought today. you use what just happened at e law school, 100 students bursting into obscenities and s forth. this doesn t surprise me one bit , but she certainly shouldn t sit on the supreme court. absolutely. how quickly things have changed when you and i were at law school in uba, i was able to introduce robert work as a speaker in people who disagreed with him politely sat and listened to him in college the same thing, students were able to be respectful. if you are taught to hate from
less credible and don t involve her husband, she s okay with just believing accusers and ditching the account of anyone else. young women and girls are saying you have to hear our stories too. they ve been historically dismissed, condescended to come up picked apart, second-guessed, held to a double standard, and at some point it s time to say enough. tucker: there s a guy who says he s a journalist, you can be certain no meaningful follow-up questions were asked of course. she also went on to say cavanagh became too angry after being accused of gang rate rape and e shouldn t sit on the supreme court. [laughs] i thought it was part of the whole of his very defensive and
vouching for his character. this was an isolated event that might have happened 30 something years ago. i m not sure if it should disqualify him now. ben: drew, if i were to spot something try to do this to my sister, i d probably beat him to death with a baseball bat. my standard is if i beat someone with a baseball bat for activity, they shouldn t sit on the supreme court. how do you feel on this one? i do disagree. they ve got him in a bind now, he s denied it. he said unequivocally it didn t happen. if he s lying, that would disqualify him. i would break the neck of a man who did this to my daughter. if he did it and i found out 36 years later, and in that time he lived the kind of unimpeachable life we believe brett kavanaugh lived, i would have to forgive him. we have no sense what human life is all about. would you want to judge sitting on a bench for you who had no grace, no compassion. ben: what is your take on this?
forward. vouching for his character. this was an isolated event that might have happened 30 something years ago. i m not sure if it should disqualify him now. ben: drew, if i were to spot something try to do this to my sister, i d probably beat him to death with a baseball bat. my standard is if i beat someone with a baseball bat for activity, they shouldn t sit on the supreme court. how do you feel on this one? i do disagree. they ve got him in a bind now, he s denied it. he said unequivocally it didn t happen. if he s lying, that would disqualify him. i would break the neck of a man who did this to my daughter. if he did it and i found out 36 years later, and in that time he lived the kind of unimpeachable life we believe brett kavanaugh lived, i would have to forgive him. we have no sense what human life is all about. would you want to judge sitting on a bench for you who had no grace, no compassion.