But I don't think this kind of microscopic scrutiny should be normalized in all cases. The idea is to prevent people who will abuse their position from entering office, not punish people we disapprove of.
In all cases, no. For a fucking SCOTUS seat, or position of similar power, maybe yeah.
Same sentiment for the convict comparison. This isn't some kind of basic job being considered, nor something necessary for someone's survival, or anything even remotely along those lines. This isn't a "good job" or "good home." This is a consideration for literally the fucking highest judicial position in the country, and to an arguable extent by dint of it being the US's highest position the highest on literally the entire goddamn planet.
The standards. Should. Be. Real. Bloody. High. Yes, we should probably be holding significant drinking problems in their late teens/early twenties against them, because we don't fucking have to excuse shit like that. We can say, hey, you know, maybe you stick to being an appellate judge and we find someone who didn't spend their formative years thinking that was okay. We have that option. We probably should take it.
... beyond all that, it's way past the point we should stop peddling the line that shit like getting blackout drunk is just "college shenanigans", particularly when that bullshit is being used to attempt to excuse attempted or explicit rape. Shit isn't something that "just happens", it's something we as a people have been tolerating and in many ways encouraging, and giving how many people that ends up varyingly literally fucking maybe just maybe we're due to knock that shit off a bit harder.
This. There's a difference between being eligible to work in general, being eligable to work in a position of power, and being eligible to lead a country. The SCOTUS is meant to be one of the heads of state, and should be treated with the utmost care and delicacy. Everyone, at birth, should be
capable of getting into the SCOTUS, but not everyone should be eligible by the time they graduate college. It has powers that require the utmost discretion, and we should have Justices who have demonstrated morally upright behavior consistently for extremely long periods of time - I've never drunk a drop of alcohol in my life, not for moral reasons but simply because I don't care to, and it really wasn't hard to do. I'm all for forgiveness being the highest virtue, but there's really no level of scrutiny I would be uncomfortable with for someone with that much power, as long as it's fair scrutiny and not a witch-hunt. In this case, the scrutiny seems justified, although I don't know if I trust congress to carry out the investigation without bias in one direction or the other. But if Kavanaugh really knew he hadn't done anything, I would have suggested he just let the FBI handle the investigation. Fighting back like this just makes him seem defensive.
I feel like Ford was politically motivated, but I also think she's telling the truth to the extent of her knowledge. And if she's telling the actual truth and not a misrecollection, then we need to cut Kavanaugh from the consideration, regardless of why the allegation was brought up. I want them to let the FBI look into things until they're satisfied that nothing happened, and only then should Congress even consider voting on the new Justice.
(also we should probably have several justices going in parallel, since we have the resources to check these sorts of things in parallel and it would be far faster, but I suppose people are already hard pressed to pay attention to politics, so perhaps that's not a good idea.)