"I could give you a massage here . . . just a block and a half," he wrote. Later in the online conversation, Foley asked, "so you do see us palyin around"?
"sure," the page responded. "weve gone over this before . . . havent we"? "i excuse your memory when you are drinking . . . cause i dont remember much when i drink," the page continues.
Foley then wrote: "I wish i would have jumped you after dinner in san diego, but I was good."
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Often implicit in the chats is an exchange of professional advancement in exchange for sex that plays on the allure of power that Foley used to entice one of the teenagers. Foley at one point promised to help him become the "stylish elite type" person the teenager said he wanted to be.
"We will make you successful," Foley promised, "as long as you don’t mind me grabbing your [deleted] once in a while."
In all of this Foley frenzy, it’s easy to focus on how the Republican leadership avoided dealing with the problem, and not recalling what the problem really was. They weren’t overlooking something small. They were overlooking an iceberg big enough to sink the Titanic – as it should…
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