Los Angeles Times

A sad replay

Re “Lessons to heed from the Anita Hill saga,” Opinion, Sept. 19

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It’s deja vu all over again. Twenty-seven years ago, Anita Hill was butchered by Republican­s on the Senate Judiciary Committee, the Democrats did nothing, and then-Supreme Court nominee Judge Clarence Thomas refused to answer any questions.

Instead, Thomas called the Senate hearings a “high-tech lynching.” He has maintained this attitude all these years as he seldom speaks but hatefully continues to wreak his revenge against Democrats by voting against them in the cases that come before the Supreme Court.

Now we’re in 2018. After all the hullabaloo dies down, Judge Brett Kavanaugh will likely be confirmed to the Supreme Court by the Senate. Given what is happening right now, I will not be surprised if Kavanaugh takes this same attitude toward the Democrats. Therefore, even if the Democrats are successful in taking over either the House or Senate in the 2018 midterm election, Justice Kavanaugh’s and Thomas’ votes will probably define what this country will be like for years to come.

Not a pretty picture, I’m afraid. Bob Murtha, Santa Maria

Op-ed article writer Timothy Phelps may have omitted the most important lesson.

Angela Wright, like Hill a former employee of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, also allegedly had been sexually harassed and propositio­ned by Thomas while she was at the EEOC.

Though Wright’s testimony undoubtedl­y would have corroborat­ed Hill’s own account, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1991, Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), conspicuou­sly never called her to testify at Thomas’ confirmati­on hearing.

Biden’s inexcusabl­e withholdin­g of Wright’s critical testimony may be explained by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum’s (D-Ohio) famous remark in reference to Thomas’ alleged conduct: “If that’s sexual harassment, half the senators on Capitol Hill could be accused.” Mark E. Kalmansohn Santa Monica

We should be clear about what part of Christine Blasey Ford’s possible testimony might justify rejecting Kavanaugh.

Are we offended that a teenage boy may have groped a teenage girl without her consent? Perhaps so, but teenage boys are stupid. That doesn’t make the alleged conduct right, but it does make it unsurprisi­ng. In contrast, Thomas was an adult when he is alleged to have harassed Hill.

Vote against Kavanaugh because he might have lied about his teenage years to the Senate. Vote against him because he is a political operative. Don’t vote against him based on his alleged misdeeds as a teenager unless that standard can be applied to all men seeking positions of authority. Judi Bloom Manhattan Beach

It’s interestin­g to see the GOP showing some spine on Kavanaugh. I doubt most people really care what he may have been doing as a drunken teenager.

And who are the Democrats to be lecturing anybody on sexual morality? After the Kennedys and Bill Clinton, they have absolutely nothing relevant to say on that subject, unless to further enlighten us with their in-your-face hypocrisy.

As for the “courage” of Kavanaugh’s accuser, what about the courage of Paula Jones and Juanita Broaddrick? Patrick M. Dempsey Granada Hills

 ?? Laura Patterson CQ Roll Call ?? IN 1991, Anita Hill’s allegation­s of sexual harassment by Clarence Thomas did not derail his confirmati­on.
Laura Patterson CQ Roll Call IN 1991, Anita Hill’s allegation­s of sexual harassment by Clarence Thomas did not derail his confirmati­on.

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