Democrats and their media allies are convinced that Brett Kavanaugh has committed perjury. He lied about getting drunk, they exclaimed. He did not. He specifically testified that he did sometimes drink too much. He lied about when he heard about the specific Ramirez allegation, they insisted. He did not. He lied about what the slang term "boofing" meant in is high school year book, they cried. He did not:
10 years later at Georgetown Prep, students talked about boofing. One meaning was definitely farting.
— Del Quentin Wilber (@DelWilber) September 27, 2018
That's Los Angeles Times reporter and Washington Post alumnus Del Quentin Wilber, who graduated from Georgetown Prep a decade after Kavanaugh. Add his voice to the chorus of people arguing on social media, on both sides, about whether "boofing" referred to flatulence or a sexual act back in the day. What a time to be alive. But Lefties' favorite claim in this vein has been that the "Devil's Triangle," referenced in Kavanaugh's high school yearbook entry, was a sex act involving three people -- not a drinking game, as he testified. If he lied about the Devil's Triangle, he can't be trusted on anything. He did not lie. According to another Georgetown Prep graduate from Kavanaugh's era at the school, he was the teenager who invented that term. He doesn't offer that assertion now; he made it back then. In his own yearbook post. He's now signed a letter to the Judiciary Committee confirming that, indeed, the "Devil's Triangle" was a drinking game:
Shot: Bernard McCarthy’s early 80’s Georgetown Prep yearbook post claiming credit for inventing the “Devil’s Triangle.”
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) October 4, 2018
Chaser: Bernard McCarthy’s new letter to the Judiciary Committee explaining that the “Devil’s Triangle” was...a drinking game. pic.twitter.com/GIwewEXczI
Jake Tapper of CNN also tweets out a second letter written by non-classmates of Kavanaugh, who recall a college friend of theirs (a Georgetown Prep alumnus) teaching them the game at Boston College. It involved three cups, exactly as Kavanaugh said:
Letters sent to and released by Senate Judiciary Committee insist “Devil’s Triangle” is a drinking game pic.twitter.com/FApKrLvojo
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) October 4, 2018
With all of this evidence in place, please go back and enjoy this exchange between Sen. Whitehouse and Judge Kavanaugh. It was pathetically amusing then. It's pathetically hilarious now:
Whitehouse also advanced a half-baked theory about Kavanaugh's calendar that turned out to be total rubbish, as well.