CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Ohio Supreme Court Justice Bill O'Neill's tone deaf, sexist Facebook post, and Cleveland.com interview defending Roy Moore, were an insult to all women, including the proverbial Lady Justice.

O'Neill had posted on Facebook that with "the dogs of war...calling for the head of Senator Al Franken" he believed it was "time to speak up on behalf of all heterosexual males." He then proceeded to brag about being "sexually intimate" with "approximately 50 very attractive females" and to belittle the rash of sexual harassment and assault stories involving powerful, high profile men.

"I am sooooo disappointed by this national feeding frenzy about sexual indiscretions decades ago," O'Neill wrote, arguing it was distracting from discussing legalizing marijuana, which it seemed like O'Neill was on when he wrote his Facebook post.

If he had been under oath when posting to Facebook, O'Neill would have been committing perjury when he claimed to be speaking up "for all heterosexual males."

O'Neill was only speaking for judges who don't know the difference between a "sexual indiscretion" and a sex crime. Judges who don't know the difference between consensual sexual relations and sexual harassment and assault. Judges who don't know the difference between being a gentlemen and a sexual braggart. Judges who don't know the difference between an underage of consent 14-year-old and a consenting grown woman. O'Neill was only speaking for himself, and the likes of Roy Moore.

As if his Facebook post wasn't self-incriminating enough, in an interview with Cleveland.com, O'Neill defended the former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice who is accused of sexually assaulting a 14 year-old and pursuing relationships with teenage females while in his thirties and serving as a District Attorney.

"He's been convicted of nothing and he's never had the opportunity to defend himself and that violates due process in America. The media is about to determine the election of a United States Senate campaign," O'Neill said of Roy Moore, now running for Senate with the endorsement of President -Grab 'em by the *****-Trump.

O'Neill views himself as a serious candidate for governor as much has he does a legal lothario. He was never a serious contender for the governorship even before his Facebook post proved how unfit he was. O'Neill's not fit to be governor or a judge in any court, let alone on the Ohio Supreme Court. But his defense of Roy Moore just might put O'Neill on Trump's list of future U.S. Supreme Court nominees.