Daily Mail

The U.S. sex scandal dividing the world and how we really can forget things we’re ashamed of

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Someone once said — and it might even have been me — ‘I can remember very little, especially about the past.’ A joke, obviously: but it also makes a serious point. our autobiogra­phical memories are much less reliable than is commonly realised.

Unless we appreciate this point, we won’t fully understand the purely personal conflict about what did or did not take place between two students in a bedroom 36 years ago, and which, extraordin­arily, has transfixed and divided not only the entire American political establishm­ent, but television viewers across the globe.

Judge Brett Kavanaugh, enthusiast­ically nominated by his fellow Republican Donald Trump, was on the verge of being approved for the vacant position on the U. S. Supreme Court — a lifetime appointmen­t of colossal influence.

But then a woman called Christine Blasey Ford emerged to claim that in the early eighties, when they were at neighbouri­ng and equally exclusive feepaying single-sex colleges, the 17-year-old Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her: she was just 15.

Tearful

Last week, in scenes almost too excruciati­ng to watch, Ford and Kavanaugh gave their diametrica­lly opposed accounts to the Judiciary Committee of the U.S. Senate, broadcast live coast-to- coast. each was, in effect, accusing the other of scandalous­ly misleading the Committee — and the nation.

Kavanaugh ranted and raged that he was not the man described by Ford. While his behaviour had anything but the dignified manner one might wish from an aspirant justice of the Supreme Court, outraged innocence can manifest itself in such a fashion. His accuser, too, was tearful — especially when she recalled how the young Kavanaugh had laughed at her plight.

But she is now a distinguis­hed professor of psychology — it’s Dr Christine Blasey Ford — and so when asked by one of the Senators how she could be ‘so sure’ that it was Kavanaugh who had assaulted her, given that she couldn’t say exactly where the assault had taken place, or how she had got to the party where it allegedly happened, Dr Ford replied: ‘It’s just basic memory functions and also just the level of norepineph­rine and epinephrin­e in the brain . . . The neurotrans­mitter encodes memories in the hippocampu­s so that trauma-related experience is locked there, so other memories just drift.’

That was much more articulate than anything Kavanaugh provided when on the stand. The (disputed) science invoked by Dr Ford asserts that although the brain does not always store memories completely, some may be especially vivid if the brain prioritise­s them, or if they have a strong emotional component — the hippocampu­s is part of the system connected with human emotion.

on the other hand, we know people can be fantastica­lly compelling in accounts of assaults they say they underwent, and yet which did not happen (or not at all in the way described). most notoriousl­y in recent British criminal history, there is the man known as ‘nick’ who convinced the police he had been regularly raped as a child in the eighties by a series of MPS and military figures. It was all fantasy, but ‘nick’ had so convinced himself, that his detailed and shocking account also suckered people whose line of work normally lends itself to scepticism.

nor can psychiatri­sts distinguis­h between true and false memories of assault. I have this from no less than Sir Simon Wessely, past president of the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts, and professor of psychologi­cal medicine at King’s College London. As he put it to me: ‘That’s why we have judges and juries, and they are rightly suspicious of expert psychologi­cal evidence. We can add to the picture, but it’s really a forensic issue.’

This, in turn, is one reason rape and sexual assault cases produce a lower conviction rate than any other offence. To bring a guilty verdict, juries are required to be sure beyond reasonable doubt — and that is most difficult in cases where there is no forensic evidence and no corroborat­ive eyewitness­es. Which can be very tough on the women who bring such complaints — as the 15-year-old Christine Blasey Ford might have discovered had she taken the matter further at the time.

Denials

It is equally obvious — perhaps more so — that people who have committed a crime can be compelling in their denials. And the reason why they can be so convincing in their claims of innocence is that they have convinced themselves. no one more succinctly described how this happens than the German philosophe­r nietzsche. He wrote: ‘memory says: “I did that”. Pride replies: “I could not have done that.” eventually memory yields.’

I have been prey to exactly this form of self- exculpator­y delusion. Some years ago, I bumped into a friend at a party, who used to write a column for the Spectator magazine under my editorship. I said to him how sorry I was that my successor as editor had terminated his column.

He stared at me with astonishme­nt and then replied: ‘But you sacked me.’ Well, he would know. But I then checked with the Spectator archive, and, sure enough, it was indeed under my command that his column had been discontinu­ed. I can guess how this happened. I liked this columnist, as a person, very much. It must have troubled me that I found it necessary to tell him that his column wasn’t working and would have to end. So I found it easier, first to forget this had ever happened, and, later, to convince myself that someone else had been responsibl­e for his disappoint­ment.

none of this would have been consciousl­y planned. It’s just the way we erase knowledge — memories, indeed — that we find difficult to live with. This obliterati­on of unpleasant events can take remarkable forms. As Sir Simon Wessely told me: ‘People can forget things you might not think possible. For example, studies linked to medical records show that some people forget they had cancer.’

Snapped

That is an extreme version. But in none of us does memory function like a video camera. As one leading researcher in neuroscien­ce has observed: ‘What’s stored in memory is never a one-to-one copy of what really happened in the world. The way our brains are built influences what we perceive, and what is perceived biases what is memorised.

‘one can recall events from memory, but the episodes reconstruc­ted in this way never precisely mirror what happened when the content of the memory was stored. That’s because these contents are not being saved into a safe deposit box or a hard drive, but into a network of nerve cells that are constantly at change.’

Which brings us back to Judge Kavanaugh. In his college days he was, by the accounts of contempora­ries, a prodigious drinker — a member of a club whose motto was ‘100 kegs or bust’. A memoir by a former friend of his, a member of the same club, describes a person named ‘Bart o’Kavanaugh’ as having ‘puked in someone’s car the other night’ and ‘passed out on his way back from a party’. A former classmate of Kavanaugh confirmed he had the nick-name ‘Bart’.

These are not the sorts of memories that a judge — and especially one aspiring to the highest legal authority — will readily assimilate with his sense of self-esteem or standing in society.

In his Senate hearing, Kavanaugh was asked if he had ever experience­d alcohol-derived memory blackouts when at college. Unwisely, given that his questioner was a demure woman, he snapped back: ‘Did you, Senator?’ He then denied that he had. Instead, he tearfully portrayed his teenage self as a ferociousl­y hard-working sexual innocent. Which is doubtless what he now believes, genuinely outraged at any suggestion to the contrary.

It would have been better for him if he had said: ‘Yes, I drank to excess when I was at college. I might have done stupid things as a result. I cannot remember Dr Blasey Ford, let alone assaulting her. But if I did, that is appalling. I apologise to her and seek her forgivenes­s.’

Instead, I suspect, he has so convinced himself of his own perpetual rectitude that this was impossible. Like all of us, he has made his memory the slave of his will. But in his case the whole world can see the consequenc­es.

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