Supreme Court confirmation hearings have mostly been theater for a long time. The dismaying thing about the latest episode - the Brett Kavanaugh show - is that it became the theater of the absurd.
In the classic absurdist dramas of the 1950s and 1960s, Brittanica.com explains, European playwrights "did away with most of the logical structures of traditional theatre. There is little dramatic action as conventionally understood; however frantically the characters perform, their busyness serves to underscore the fact that nothing happens to change their existence."
That's a pretty good description of the sound and fury signifying nothing on display this week from Democrats and protestors alike.
The central complaint of the Democrats is that they haven't been given access to records from Kavanaugh's time working in the Bush administration. They demand their release by the current White House, or the Senate Judiciary Committee, or Kavanaugh, or, perhaps by this writing, Aslan the Lion deity of Narnia.
Explaining the ginned-up controversy would be a waste of time, because the point of these demands merely is to put on an absurdist drama in which the finale is never in doubt.
Judge Brett Kavanaugh, an indisputably qualified nominee, even according to the typically liberal American Bar Association, will be confirmed no matter what the Democrats do and no matter how many indecipherable yawps get shouted by the hysterics in the hearing room.
The most obvious proof that this is all theater, isn't "The Handmaid's Tale" cosplayers outside the hearing rooms, it's the senators most passionately shouting that they require more information despite already declaring they won't vote for Kavanaugh, no matter what that information reveals.
One of the lead protagonists of this drama, New Jersey Sen. Corey Booker, exclaimed Thursday morning that "This is the closest I'll ever get in my life to an 'I am Spartacus' moment," and threatened to divulge confidential documents to the public, even if it meant risking losing his job.