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Ford could be your sister. Kavanaugh could be your brother.

Christine Blasey Ford resonds to questions from Rachel Mitchell at Thursday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Brett Kavanaugh.
Christine Blasey Ford resonds to questions from Rachel Mitchell at Thursday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Brett Kavanaugh. C-SPAN

America watched three searing versions of reality television this week. They all demonstrated that, under the glare of the lights and the stress of questioning, character reveals itself.

Christine Blasey Ford was a startlingly powerful witness before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday. Her answers were clear and concise. She described what she remembered from 36 years ago, and what she didn’t. She never embellished her statements or added extraneous comments. With her simple responses of “yes,” “no” and “correct,” she maintained her dignity while describing the most upsetting experience of her life.

Ford seemed in some ways a modern American “Everywoman,” voicing publicly the often hidden trauma that millions of women have experienced. She may have been “terrified” when the hearing began but she gained confidence as the hearing progressed. It will be harder now for people to question her motives.

Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh followed with an enraged response and rebuttal. He’s usually a practiced performer before the cameras, but Thursday he was deeply shaken. In contrast to Ford’s quiet demeanor, Kavanaugh was almost shouting in his opening statement. He said that Democrats’ attempt to “blow me up and take me down” was a “national disgrace.”

As Kavanaugh struggled to prevent an emotional meltdown, you felt the tremors that have rocked American life as women have spoken out about abuse. Sometimes, when Kavanaugh spoke about the possibility that he might never teach or coach basketball again, he seemed to feel that his life had been undone by the accusations from Ford and two other women.

Kavanaugh was least compelling when he took his defense into a political space, calling the accusations against him “a calculated and orchestrated political hit” and “revenge on behalf of the Clintons.” It was hard to imagine a man so angry and traumatized serving as a dispassionate Supreme Court justice.

Whether the Senate votes to confirm him, Kavanaugh will struggle to recover from the hurt that was so evident in his face. We should want him to heal: Just as Ford could be your sister, Kavanaugh could be your brother.

On the eve of this visceral day of testimony, we entered the fever dream of President Trump. This was a very different self-portrait from the quietly anxious Ford, or the indignant Kavanaugh. In his 81-minute news conference during the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday , Trump was rambling, evasive, boastful, contemptuous.

Trump often seems calculating in his tweets and tempests, but Wednesday he seemed almost out of control. One minute he was denouncing the “con artists” who had attacked Kavanaugh; the next he was insisting that he had an open mind on Ford’s accusations, and then skittering back to discuss his own supposed victimization by the media and other tormentors.

It was obvious that he truly believes what he said at the United Nations, that he had “accomplished more than almost any administration.” The laughter that greeted that boast was quickly transformed in Trump’s mind, to a positive they were “laughing with me.”

Watching Trump in this ultimate reality show, viewers could see for themselves what has been described in recent books by Bob Woodward and Michael Wolff — a president who acts so unpredictably that his closest aides must work around his rants and impulses. What a disturbing show it was.

The United States is living under a volcano. Thursday’s competing testimonies by Ford and Kavanaugh will probably make a polarized nation even more divided. The healing will begin when we have a leader who stops spewing lava and starts building unity, but that seemed a very distant hope this week.

This story was originally published September 28, 2018 at 9:30 AM.

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