The last time we checked in on WorldNetDaily editor Joseph Farah, he was complaining about the possibility of Brett Kavanaugh being nominated as a Supreme Court justice — until he actually was; Farah then went silent on him through the controversial nomination process.
Now that Kavanaugh is safely ensconced on the Supreme Court, Farah is suddenly able to criticize him again.
In a Dec. 10 column hyperbolically headlined “The Kavanaugh betrayal!”, Farah rants that Kavanaugh siding with the majority — “the high court’s leftists” in Farah’s description — in refusing to hear a case focusing on “Republican efforts to defund Planned Parenthood,” it means that “Brett Kavanaugh is a fraud. He should never have been President Trump’s first choice. He’s a weakling. He buckled to the extreme left to salvage his own reputation.”
Farah then rehashed his conspiracy theory about Kenneth Starr, for whom Kavanaugh worked investigating President Clinton in the ’90s, as “either the most incompetent prosecutor in the history of the country or complicit in the cover-up of those crimes. I lean toward the latter judgment.”
Farah also wrote of Kavanaugh: “I had a bad feeling about this guy – ever since his role in the Vincent Foster cover-up and his tutelage by former independent counsel Kenneth Starr.” Farah didn’t explain why he didn’t vocalize any of this “bad feeling” during Kavanaugh’s nomination process.
Two days later, Farah was back to rant some more about Kavanaugh and Starr:
Are you puzzled about what went wrong with the Brett Kavanaugh appointment?
You should be.
We just got a Supreme Court nominee confirmed who will be with us for decades who is likely to uphold abortion on demand for his lifetime term.
We should have known better. A little more research could have prevented this human-rights disaster.
It was ever-so-predictable. I know, because I did.
Again, Farah didn’t explain why he didn’t speak up during the nomination process.
Farah went on to complain that “Starr appointed Brett Kavanaugh to oversee the [Vincent] Foster investigation. Kavanaugh, with Starr’s approval, covered it up by firing the young prosecutor who raised too many questions.”
What Farah is ultimately complaining about, though, is that Kavanaugh refused to put politics — specifically, Farah’s politics — before facts or reason. In Farah’s mind, Bill and/or Hillary Clinton was ipso facto guilty of causing the death of Vincent Foster, if for no other reason than because Farah hates the Clintons with the burning passion of a thousand suns. Similarly, Farah believes that abortion should be made illegal and doesn’t care how that’s achieved. He thinks that the ideal Supreme Court justice should put right-wing politics first and then build a legal rationale for them.
By complaining that Kavanaugh not only wouldn’t adhere to right-wing orthodoxy on abortion but also that he apparently accepted the judgment of pretty much every legitimate investigator that Foster committed suicide, Farah is inadvertently bolstering the case that, contrary to many liberals’ expectations, Kavanaugh might actually be a decent and thoughtful (albeit still conservative-leaning) justice.
Probably not what Farah was intending to do.