No evidence, that is, until shortly after Kavanaugh testified as to his personalized definition of the term. ![]() If “devil’s triangle” is a game that, indeed, involves bouncing coins into cups, there was, as of Thursday afternoon, seemingly no evidence of this on the internet, when people watching Kavanaugh’s hearing, inevitably, checked. ![]() “Three glasses in a triangle,” Kavanaugh said. “Devil’s triangle,” he insisted, was merely a drinking game. Kavanaugh, however, told the committee that his definition of the term was different. ![]() On Thursday, the testimony delivered by Brett Kavanaugh to the Senate Judiciary Committee took a turn that was at once unexpected and, the past week being what it has been, deeply predictable: Sheldon Whitehouse, the senator from Rhode Island, used a portion of his allotted questioning time to ask the Supreme Court nominee about the definition of the “ devil’s triangle.” For most Americans who came of age in the same rough decades as Brett Kavanaugh, the term-included, along with his self-identification as a “Renate Alumnius” and references to kegs and ralphing and boofing, on Kavanaugh’s yearbook page-would seem an obvious reference to a sexual act.
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