This #SundayMorning we're digging into a question that has perplexed several news organizations looking into Brett Kavanaugh's financials.
How do you rack up between $60,000-$200,000 in credit card debt on baseball tickets and then make the debt disappear a year later?
(THREAD)
(2) First off let's explain what the hell is going on here. Brett Kavanaugh's finances are super suspicious. Kavanaugh makes about $250K as a judge and from lecturing at Harvard, but he also owes on a $1.2 million home that has been refinanced twice.
(3) In fact, Kavanaugh's finances tell a story of how he has lived beyond his means for the better part of a decade. Several times, his debt burden has exceeded his liquid assets.
(4) The same year he was at the peak of his credit card debt, Kavanaugh also joined the Chevy Chase Club - an elite country club that counts Chief Justice John Roberts among its members and, as of 2017, required a $92,000 initiation fee and annual dues of more than $9,000.
OUCH.
(5) When the White House released Brett Kavanaugh's financials, they were asked why between $60,000-$200,000 of debt Kavanaugh was holding on three separate credit cards suddenly disappeared in 2017.
The answer? The WH says Brett REALLY likes baseball.
(6) Sounds ridiculous, right. How do you rack up hundreds of thousands on baseball tickets? But the WH claims that's exactly what happened and that Kavanaugh's debt disappeared because his friends paid him back.
(7) Colleagues confirm Kavanaugh is a fan of the Nationals. The most expensive season tickets cost $9,000 a year. In order to reach $100,000, Brett would have had to front the costs for 10 season ticket holders.
(8) ProPublica has been asking if Brett bought season tickets for anyone or if he's been seen at games. There is evidence he attended the All-Star game but he's only been photographed two other times.
(9) Let's give Brett the benefit of a doubt & say he did, in fact, spend all that money on baseball tickets. How the hell did he pay it off all at once? This is very puzzling because Brett doesn't have the liquid assets to pay his debt down so quickly.
This is where we're stuck.
(10) The mystery of the disappearing debt remains. Democrats did not broach the subject in Kavanaugh's hearing, perhaps because the Supreme Court nominee left them such a rich field of accusations in the documents that they felt it wasn't necessary.
(11) Senators considering whether to confirm Kavanaugh know that his debt problems may signal other issues in his character.
It also suggests Brett might be susceptible to bribery in his position. Living beyond your means in DC is easy to do, especially when you like the dice.
(END) Thanks for dropping by for our #SundayMorning thread. I've got a story ready on all the reasons Senators should just say no to Kavanaugh about to drop, so stay tuned.
Enjoy your weekend, friends.
Gah! I almost forgot to thank @contrarymary197 for the thread suggestion.
Appreciate your feedback and thanks for being here.
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(2) Cramer made national news with his hot take on Kavanaugh.
“My point was that there was no type of intercourse or anything like that...that nothing happened in terms of a sexual … event, beyond, obviously, the attack... Even if it’s all true, does it disqualify him?"
Yikes.
(3) Because there was no penetration, Cramer argues, there was no assault. And really, who hasn't been drunk and tried to rape a woman. Am I right? 👀
This is a guy endorsed & supported by GW Bush and Trump because of course, he is.
This #SaturdayMorning we're addressing a complaint from those who say they won't bother voting this November.
What does it matter? they think. Gerrymandering has rigged the election. I'm in a red state or a red district. My vote won't count.
Here's why it matters.
👇
(THREAD)
(2) The GOP has erected many barriers to voting, including voter ID laws & lax security that undermines voter confidence in elections. But perhaps their most powerful tool is voter suppression through gerrymandering.
(3) Gerrymandering is when state legislatures draw up districts in order to heavily weight conservative votes. Republican gerrymandering after the 2010 census helped win a majority of House seats for the GOP in 2012 even though they got fewer votes across congressional districts.
I want to address what some have critiqued about Dr. Ford's accusations.
Why doesn't she recall more specifics?
Some survivors say they don't believe her because she doesn't remember the same details they do about their own assaults.
Let's deal with this bullshit.
(THREAD)
(2) My first assault happened when I was 12 years old. I remember what pajamas I was wearing. I remember what movie we were watching. I remember what beer he was drinking. I can recall specific smells and sounds and almost every nuance of that interaction seared on my brain.
(3) I was assaulted by 2 men in my best friend's house when I was 17. I remember their names of course because I went to high school with them. But I don't remember much else. Not what movie we watched. Not what I was wearing.
I hadn't been drinking, but the details are fuzzy.
(2) I see Brett because when my Mom looks at my stepfather, she sees the man she's loved and been married to for decades. A good partner and father.
But I see the man who abused and assaulted me throughout my teenage years. And the woman who didn't believe me.
(3) I see Brett because when they look at my high school yearbook, my classmates see broad shoulders and a perfect jawline. They see the class president & prom king.
I see the guy who sexually assaulted me. the one I hid in a bathroom to escape while he banged down the door.
This #SundayMorning we're delving into a question that's on everyone's mind these days. With only 51 days left until midterms, the forecast for Dems to take the House is looking pretty sunny.
Is it possible for Dems to take the Senate as well?
(Thread)
(2) First off, anything is possible. Trump wasn't favored to win the Presidency either and here we are. I guess the real question becomes is it likely for Dems to take the Senate in the upcoming midterms.
(3) To take the Senate, Dems would need to hold onto every single seat they currently have, including 10 Dem senators in states Trump won by huge margins like West Virginia and North Dakota.
Senators in the most trouble? Nelson, Heitkamp, and McCaskill.