There is no middle ground on this. It will be interesting to see how Senators vote, this close to the election. My Mom is an election judge, she states that the election officials think that this year, more people will be voting, than ever.
I can definitely feel the emotional pain some of the young women display during their protests.
Working backwards:
1. What you saw was anger, rage, & determination, for many, yes, underlaid by the pain of being sexual assault survivors
who rightfully feeling they are being mocked, including by the president of the United States & senate republicans who dare to screech that men are the real victims.
2. There definitely is an unusual & large surge in voter registration & voter enthusiasm for these midterms. Regardless of party affliation (or none) that imo is a really great thing. More voters= more hope for democracy. Still, this is still the US, these are still midterm elections, which means fewer than 50% (and maybe far fewer) of us will bother to actually vote.
3. No middle ground? I really don't believe that is true in reality, and it surely isn't true by necessity.
The obvious middle ground, imo, is a consensus that the legitimacy of the SC matters more than any individual nominee. I honestly cannot imagine how anyone who cares about the necessity of keeping the SC above raw partisan politics could disagree.
I'm convinced that it would be far more helpful to the dems' electoral chances, for example, if Kavanaugh is confirmed. K being confirmed will rile up dem voters even further.
But, K being confirmed will absolutely damage the SC. The degree to which that is true depends on how much comes out during the inevitable Dem investigations of K and this nomination process (including the 90% of K's papers repubs refused to make available).
Troubling or worse stuff will be found, Dems will politize what they find, repubs will go low, the Court will be further tainted. And that's above & beyond the fully 50 percent plus of Americans who already think one SC seat was stolen by repubs, and who will believe that a liar & partisan & man who can't control his temper also sits on the court.
For me, it isn't even close: the legitimacy of the Court is vastly more important than dems' political fortunes. The many thousands of lawyers, judges, and law professors who have come forward to protect the Court are good company to keep
