Trump Sunk to New Lows With Ford Comments: Guest MINDSETTER™ Schoos

Guest MINDSETTER™ Geoff Schoos

Trump Sunk to New Lows With Ford Comments: Guest MINDSETTER™ Schoos

Donald Trump
On March 21, 1973, John W. Dean met with Richard Nixon to discuss issues that were part of the overall Watergate scandal. At this meeting, Dean uttered one of the most famous lines in recorded presidential history, “there is a cancer growing on the presidency.” This cancer was finally addressed, and for a time eradicated, when President Nixon resigned his office in August 1974, thus avoiding impeachment.

On October 2, 2018, President Donald Trump proved beyond any reasonable contestation that he and his administration is a cancer that’s metastasized on the body politic. It was on this date that the president, at a rally in Mississippi, attacked, mocked, and belittled an American citizen who had the temerity to speak her truth. This woman, Christine Blasey Ford, came forward and entered the public arena to discuss the most sensitive and painful topic imaginable, her violation at the hands of two drunk males. At the time of this assault, she was 15 years old. Her assailants were high school upperclassmen, one of them now a nominee to the United States Supreme Court.

That she accused a nominee to the Court is of no small consequence. She tried in vain to avoid having to provide public testimony, having written to her senator and contacting a “tip” line at a Washington newspaper. Ultimately, on September 27, 2018, she had no other recourse and publicly testified as to her allegations of the nominee’s misconduct. As she feared, the firestorm has been fierce.

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Nobody who viewed her testimony, saw her demeanor, heard her voice, and listened to the consistency of her story under examination of a “sex crimes prosecutor” (who was hired because the majority party’s eleven senators feared the appearance of confrontation), can doubt she was victimized sexually. Doctor Ford’s consistency in her story was unimpeachable. Even the president found her story to be “compelling.”

Following Ford’s testimony, nominee and sitting Federal Circuit Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh had his turn. Taking a page out of the Clarence Thomas playbook, he was aggressive, belligerent, abrasive, and insulting. Unlike Ford, he failed to directly answer questions put to him by the minority party members, only to assert his innocence in a louder voice. Those few questions he did answer directly were debunked within days of his testimony.

There has been much discussion about the lack of corroborating direct evidence to support Ford’s assertions. Overlooked is the fact that, save for a calendar, Kavanaugh supplied no evidence to support his innocence. While the burden was on Ford as the proponent of the allegations against Kavanaugh, for his part Kavanaugh seemed disinterested in any effort to investigate this matter. Specifically, while Ford called for and welcomed an investigation by the FBI, Kavanaugh declined to seek an investigation into this matter. Evidently, he thought high volume indignant bluster was enough.

In most sexual assaults, there is little if any direct evidence. Too often these matters become the accuser’s words against those of the accused. In this case, Dr. Ford provided results of a polygraph and affidavits from people familiar with her story. This evidence, as sparse as it was, was consistent with her testimony.

However, one thing ignored is the fact that sworn testimony is evidence. In evaluating this evidence, it’s worth noting that Dr. Ford had her lawyers to prep her for her testimony. Judge Ford had the full resources of the Trump administration and huddled with them for nearly a week prior to his testimony.

As reports of Kavanaugh’s past, and evidence of outright lies to the Judiciary Committee are revealed, Ford has been re-victimized by many members of the Committee by their disregarding her testimony and subtly linking her with some sort of vast left-wing conspiracy against Trump, Kavanaugh, and Republicans in general.

As a lefty, I’m incensed by this line of attack. If there was such a conspiracy, I didn’t get the memo.

But this diminution of a victim’s story and her veracity is exactly why most sexual assault victims don’t come forward. We know that 1 in 6 women have been victims of rape at some time during their lives. We know that victims between the ages of 12 and 34 are at the highest risk for sexual assault. To put this more plainly, we know that there are 321,500 victims of sexual assault every year in the United States.  Or to put it in even starker relief, one victim every 98 seconds of every day. We know that 61% of all rapes/sexual assaults are not reported and that 99% of all rapists will walk free.

Is it any wonder why victims of these most invasive and dehumanizing assaults do not come forward? Why, having been victimized, would anyone act in a manner that would expose her to revictimization? Too often the authorities chalk up allegations of sexual assault as a woman’s recriminations for having had sex, or as revenge against a former partner. However, it’s vital to understand that sexual assault has little to do with sex. Rather it is about power over another person, stripping away her dignity, agency, and humanity. Too often these victims suffer from a form of PTSD, which long impacts other areas of their lives.

Squared against this reality, it is incredible that Dr. Ford came forward at all! She did so because she felt she had a “civic duty” to tell what she experienced at the hands of Brett (Bart?) Kavanaugh. Civic Duty is one of the most cherished virtues handed down to us from the ancient Greeks. Aristotle would be proud.

Five days after he called Christine Ford’s testimony “credible,” Donald Trump, 45th President of the United States, at a political rally, held Dr. Ford up to ridicule and scorn. And the crowd laughed and cheered. This man, intellectually ill-equipped for the office he holds, devoid of any humanity or empathy, consumed with hate toward those who dare to oppose him, who has corrupted the executive and legislative branches and now seeks to complete the job by metastasizing his cancer on the court, has now sunk to new lows and attacked a woman who only sought to do her civic duty as she saw it.

In a democracy, we should welcome and embrace folks like Dr. Ford and eschew the bloviating nonsense of Trump. In a democracy, we should welcome all who would do their duty, not victimize those who have the courage and integrity to stand and speak.

But there is little democracy or civic duty in the United States of Trumpland, only the cancerous cells that threaten to consume the rest of us.

Geoffrey A. Schoos, Esq is the President of the Rhode Island Center for Law and Public Policy

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