There are people who find themselves appointed to unpleasant tasks and are called upon to serve, even in difficult circumstances, with zealous attention and exacting rectitude, to achieve a necessary goal with persistence and above all, honor. Ken Starr was not that guy. And while one shouldn't speak ill specifically of the dead, I am not sure why I should stop a necessary conversation started while he was yet living.
He was, charitably, a nasty piece of work.
He's most famous for dogging President Clinton and family and associates up until he came across an affair and dragged both the president and the 25-year-old intern through the most salacious interpretations of human interaction imaginable for partisan reasons. But he also defended Prop 8 and Jeffrey Epstein and ignored rape allegations at Baylor when he was president of the University. He unironically defended Trump against impeachment in a way about as hypocritical as former impeachment manager Lindsey Graham.
It's hard to imagine a person who took up for more horrendous things and yet (obviously) retained the respect of the larval creeps who managed to do stuff like get on the SCOTUS bench with his tutelage. You know, like Brett Kavanaugh.
If any of that sounds disrespectful to the dead, you should have heard what I would have said about him, alive. Probably even to his face with the appropriate lubrication. He had the opportunity to do an awful lot, and what he did was, well, awful. And a lot.
2 comments:
He was a neighbor of mine in the nineties. A self-satisfied, holier-than-thou, privileged, piece of shit. Part of a well-to-do East coast catholic culture. Wall to wall hypocrites. I didn’t like him.
I can believe it. It's hard to imagine a better private persona, based on his public face.
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