No. He's extreme because if you arranged major figures from the legal field along a spectrum, from right to left, based on their decisions and published comments regarding major legal issues, he'd sit near the extreme right of that spectrum.
No. What would make you imagine that's what I was saying? My argument is very simple. I'm arguing that part of what has made Kavanaugh so controversial is the expectation that his taking that seat will result in the disruption of key long-standing precedents. That is not, in itself, an argument as to whether those precedents are good or bad, nor whether upsetting them is a good or bad thing. It's just pointing out why he's so controversial. Specifically, people who don't like the idea of women being treated as criminals for ending unwanted pregnancies are keenly aware that if he gets on the court, that's just what's likely to happen.
You seem to have lost the thread here. I'll help. As a reminder, I was pointing out the role that Kavanaugh's refusal to provide customary documentation has added to the controversy. You responded by asking "You mean like a birth certificate that took 3 years to provide?" I responded that I didn't mean that (I'm not even aware of any issue involving a judicial nominee being asked to provide a birth certificate and not doing so for three years). So, I asked what made you think I meant that. So, what's your answer?
First, Biden's comments were made in June and referred to a seat that might become vacant at some point in future weeks, before the election. So, clearly what he was picturing was much deeper in the throes of an election than something happening way back in mid-February, when the primaries haven't even gotten going. Would 1992 Biden have wanted to keep the seat vacant for many more months? That's impossible to know, at this point. However, even if we were to imagine he thought that way, and for some reason only got around to saying something many months later, that still doesn't change the fact he never called for postponing hearings until the next president was in power. That's just the lie that the right-wing blogs told their gullible readers. He merely called for delaying until after the election. There were still 78 days to confirm after that, which is well under the average wait time between nomination and confirmation.
Anyway, you seem to have missed a question I asked, so I'll put it to you again:
Which "black boy" do you imagine you're quoting there, specifically? Please, link to the quotation.
I thought there was a decent chance she'd lose. So did most people who looked at the data, which is why the Republican gambit of delaying was worth it to them. Trump was ahead in the polling average as late as late July, and was in a dead heat with Clinton a couple other times before that. In the end, the Fivethirtyeight analysis gave Clinton a 71.4% chance of winning, which is hardly a slam dunk. In fact, sticking to the basketball analogy, it's about the average percentage of a college free throw shot... you expect it will go in, but you're not terribly surprised when it misses, either. So, it was roughly analogous to a team committing an intentional foul in the closing seconds of a game, knowing that if the opponent hits the foul shots, they'll lose, but still thinking it's their best shot at winning.