What the Ffffff? NY Times gets to the bottom of Kavanaugh high school yearbook entry

*Strong language warning

Leave it to the New York Times to get to the bottom of what the “Ffffff’s” represent in Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s yearbook.

In addition to leading the Resistance to try to destroy President Donald Trump, the paper engaged in a spirited effort to take out Kavanaugh and in the process revealed a Beach Week letter from 1983 that inadvertently confirms the nominee was telling the truth about one yearbook entry.

As you may recall, a scurrilous claim was floated that the “F’s” stood for something vulgar — after all, a man’s character was assassinated.

Creepy porn lawyer Michael Avenatti, a useful stooge for the left, tweeted that the “FFFFFFFourth of July” entry stood for: “Find them, French them, Feel them, Finger them, F*ck them, Forget them.”

And while the letter uncovered by The Times revealed little else, it did explain the significance of the repeated use of the letter “F.”

From The Times piece:

Judge Kavanaugh and his friends had their own language and traditions. There was Mr. Garrett, nicknamed early on as “Squee” because of his resemblance to an upperclassman with a similar last name.

When he drank, Mr. Garrett would stutter words that began with the letter F. It became such a joke that many football teammates, including Judge Kavanaugh and Mr. Garrett himself, had “FFFFF” references in their personal yearbook pages. Mr. Garrett, now a middle-school teacher in Georgia, sometimes hosted gatherings, including one when the Washington Redskins won the 1983 Super Bowl. Classmates said some seniors were too hung over to attend school the next day.

 

A paragraph leading up to the caption above showed Kavanaugh was a “restraining influence” on his classmates at times, when they were a little too rambunctious.

Judge Kavanaugh — nicknamed “Bart” after a Georgetown Prep teacher garbled “Brett” — sometimes acted as a restraining influence. One night, a friend named Sean Feeley was out of control. Judge Kavanaugh pulled him aside and whispered three words: “Come on, Sean.” Mr. Feeley today credits Judge Kavanaugh with knowing how to calm classmates without them losing face.

 

But what The Times reveals even more clearly is what an egregious hatchet job the Democrats and their media allies unleashed on one of the brightest legal minds in the America.

An episode that features a sitting U.S. senator — Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I. — pouring over 36-year-old high school yearbook entries made by teenagers, looking for secret code words that will expose Kavanaugh as a sexual predator.

 

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