This is Literally. Not. Possible.
Just a brief recap. The allegations surrounding the letter are that Brett Kavanaugh, as a high schooler, attempted to rape another teenager at a party.
So Wednesday night, after Grassley hears about this letter—but only its existence and not its contents—his staff manages to find 65 women who just happened to know Kavanaugh at the time in question, when he was in high school. And all 65 of these women just happen to be perfectly willing to attest to the character of this guy they knew 35 years ago when they have absolutely no information as to why they are being asked to sign this letter.
And Grassley expects anyone to believe that? Okay, maybe Susan Collins would be willing to play dumb enough to go along with this, but seriously?
________________________________________________________________________
Friday, Sep 14, 2018 · 7:21:55 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter
Here’s the supposed real story as told to Buzzfeed:
A group of women who have known Brett Kavanaugh since his high school days decided on Thursday to put together the letter of support for him — a day after rumors of allegations against him first became public — one of the organizers of the letter told BuzzFeed News.
So overnight, Meghan McCaleb who is the wife of one of Kavanaugh’s best friends (Scott McCaleb) and who also attended Kavanaugh’s hearings got 64 other women who she knew and who she knew would remember Kavanaugh from high school and be willing to attest to his character to sign this letter, even though they didn’t know exactly what allegations they were refuting because those hadn’t been published yet to sign the letter.
Yeah, that’s totally believable.