Anonymous ID: bdff34 July 9, 2018, 6:52 p.m. No.2099202   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2099187

theres a difference between being a concernfag and a blind follower

im a paranoid fag

who is like 80% trusting the plan 20% this is all a trick

good pick tbh

Anonymous ID: bdff34 July 9, 2018, 7:05 p.m. No.2099384   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9409 >>9461 >>9543

anyone else laughing their ass off at how every trump pick is either former swamp who wants to come clean or people who wanted justice but were stopped by the swamp

poetic as fuck

Anonymous ID: bdff34 July 9, 2018, 7:08 p.m. No.2099454   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9509

>>2099409

im guesing most people here dont live near dc/md

or have family in govt

most people in government are not baby eating satanists

they seem to be obstructed/kept in line by them tho

how much you wanna bet there were some solid good people in every admin

?

less so in obama clinton and nixon tho

Anonymous ID: bdff34 July 9, 2018, 7:20 p.m. No.2099641   🗄️.is 🔗kun

whoever is saying that kavanuagh is a Jesuit is smoking something

A Yale grad

 

Kavanaugh, 53, was born in Washington and was a standout student and athlete. He attended the same Jesuit high school in Maryland as President Donald Trump's first Supreme Court pick, Neil Gorsuch, another former Kennedy clerk.

 

His mother, Martha, a public-school teacher in Washington, and his father, Edward, both graduated from law school in 1978 when Kavanaugh was a teenager. His mother was a Montgomery County (Maryland) Circuit Court judge, and his father led a trade association.

 

After graduating from Yale Law School, Kavanaugh spent his early career steeped in Republican politics and partisan warfare in the nation's capital. As a young lawyer for independent counsel Kenneth Starr, he investigated the death of President Bill Clinton's deputy counsel, Vincent Foster. (Kavanaugh concluded there was no doubt Foster had killed himself.) He laid out the grounds for impeaching Clinton after the president's affair with a White House intern.

>jesuit high school

holy fk the concernfagging

 

On the bench, Kavanaugh is a proponent of "originalism," the practice of interpreting the Constitution and statues by looking at the original meaning and text.

 

Shannen Coffin, a former deputy assistant attorney general in the Bush administration, called Kavanaugh an "extraordinary choice" and noted his deep understanding of the "proper role of the courts" and separation of powers.

 

Kavanaugh objected to a 2011 ruling that upheld Washington's ban on semiautomatic rifles. In his lengthy dissent from two other judges nominated by Republican presidents, Kavanaugh pointed to the Supreme Court's landmark decision declaring an individual right to gun ownership apart from military service.

 

"Gun bans and gun regulations that are not longstanding or sufficiently rooted in text, history, and tradition are not consistent with the Second Amendment individual right," Kavanaugh wrote.

 

In a recent high-profile case involving abortion, Kavanaugh was again in the minority among his D.C. Circuit colleagues. He sided with the Trump administration in its refusal to "facilitate" abortion services for a pregnant teen in immigration custody. Kavanaugh said the majority "badly erred" and had created a new right for undocumented immigrant minors in custody to "immediate abortion on demand."

3 min of google