Friends, keep in mind that Mitch McConnell and the other Washington "cesspoolers" are sending a message to Bannon - "you want to attack and replace us? Well, this is what we can do to you and your candidates. Politics is truly dirty business and McConnell and his "cesspoolers" will fight to the death.
By
now, most of my readers have heard the allegations put forward by The
Washington Post against Alabama’s former chief justice and
Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore.
The report cited four different women who claimed
to have been approached by a 30-something-year-old Moore when they were
teenagers in the late 1970s.
The media, “swamp” Democrats and even a number of “cesspool”
Republicans are now demanding that Moore step aside from his Senate run, which
would essentially hand the open seat over to his Democrat opponent.
But in an interview a woman in Alabama identified
only as “Beth” has shared her account of working with Roy Moore as a teenager,
and her story differs quite a bit from the narrative put forward by the liberal
media. Beth gave permission for her remarks to be shared and the only changes
made were to grammar and punctuation.
“Yes, I absolutely believe (the) Judge is
innocent!” Beth declared. “I’ve known him and his family for years. I was a
teenager when I first started working in his campaign. And he always honored
and respected me and all the others. I always felt safe around him, I never
once felt uncomfortable.”
“And
even if I didn’t know him personally, I would find it suspicious that these
women are just now coming out with this,” she continued. “He’s been running for
office for the past 17 years and been a judge for even longer. So why, if this
did happen … why didn’t they come out about this before now? They’ve had plenty
of chances.”
“I just find it odd with as many times as he has
run for office over the past several years none of this has come out,” she
added. “I don’t think it is a coincidence that all this is being said one month
before the election. Polls were showing Moore way ahead of Jones, then next
thing you know all this s*** is coming out.”
Beth
explained how she worked closely with Moore during his first campaign to become
chief justice, as it was only her and the campaign manager in the Birmingham,
Alabama office, with a few others working on the campaign from Gadsden.
“So I worked real close with him,” she said. “He
invited all the staff over for cookouts and dinners and stuff at his house. So
if he was like that he had plenty of opportunities.”
Beth stated that she also worked on some of his
other campaigns for office, though to a lesser extent than before, and noted
that she stayed in touch with him and his family for years afterward, even
volunteering her time at Moore’s Foundation of Moral Law.
“He even tried to hook me up with one of his
lawyers that worked for him,” Beth revealed. “It did not work out, but I was
close with them.”
“I went to a play with that guy and the Moore’s and
others around Christmas time,” she added. “All this was years ago, but still …
I know him enough to know he is not like that.”
As to why it
appeared as though Moore had been targeted
by a “hit piece” from the liberal media and establishment
Republicans, Beth replied, “It’s because he stands up for God and biblical
truths and the Constitution. They don’t want him in office because he won’t be
in anybody’s pocket or their lap dog.”
This young woman worked for years with
Judge Roy Moore — at times with few, if any, other people around. If Moore
really was some sort of predatory older man looking to take advantage of
innocent and naive teenage girls, he had all of the opportunity to do so with
Beth … yet he didn’t.
Beth’s recollection of her time with Moore
significantly undercuts the liberal media narrative against the judge, a
narrative that was on shaky ground to begin with.
The
bulk of the allegations against Moore put forth by The Post were from a woman
named Leigh Corfman, who
even The Post had to admit had credibility issues stemming from her turbulent
background.
But on top of that, an exclusive interview from Breitbart with
Corfman’s mother, Nancy
Wells, casts even more doubt on her unverifiable story.
Corfman had
claimed that she gave Moore her phone number and that he had called her to
arrange a date on the phone in her bedroom. But Wells revealed that Corfman
didn’t have a phone in her bedroom during that period of time.
Perhaps more
troubling is Wells’ statement that Corfman never had any intentions of going
public with this story, but was convinced to do so by reporters from the Post,
who in their piece acknowledge interviewing Corfman at least six different
times, potentially
even pressuring her to speak out.
Wells made it abundantly clear that it was only
because she had been contacted by reporters that she decided to publicly share
her tale, and when asked about a possible motivation for doing so, Wells
replied, “It wasn’t done for politics, you know. It was done for personal
reasons. And it wouldn’t have been done if the reporters hadn’t contacted my
daughter.”
As for the claim that “politics” played no role in her
decision to speak out against Moore, some enlightening information uncovered by GotNews about
Corfman’s son, Garner
Polston, may undermine that claim somewhat.
A quick
perusal of Polston’s social media postings revealed that he was proudly
anti-Trump, made disparaging remarks about former Alabama Sen. and current
Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and made a habit of sharing anti-law
enforcement, anti-religion and pro-atheism posts from others.
Obviously, the actions of the son can’t necessarily
be pinned on the mother, but she was also said to have made anti-law
enforcement comments in the past, such as when police shut down a prom party
her son had attended.
As for Judge Roy Moore himself, he has consistently
denied the allegations put forward against him, and said they “are completely
false and are a desperate political attack by the National Democrat Party and
the Washington Post on this campaign.”
Moore added,
“This garbage is the very definition of fake news and intentional defamation.”
As a final note, more than a few skeptical people
have taken note of the timing of this story being dropped, roughly one month
ahead of a critical special election and mere days after ballots had been
finalized and there was no way Moore could be replaced as the Republican
nominee.
Those on the right who are demanding Moore step
aside from his candidacy — even as none of the allegations against him can be
proven or verified — are essentially demanding that he concede defeat and hand
the seat formerly occupied by Sessions to a Democrat that doesn’t represent a
majority of Alabama voters.
We have seen
this sort of hit job from the liberal media before — who can forget the
numerous accusers against then-candidate Donald Trump a month before the
election who strangely fell silent weeks later — but the people have grown wise
to these kinds of shenanigans and smear pieces, and they don’t work as well as
they used to anymore.
On Dec. 12, voters in Alabama will decide whether
they believe Moore or his accuser from nearly 40 years ago.
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