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Unpacking Secret Pedophile Kamala Devi Harris's Cackling Idiocy Bumbling Woman
Unpacking Secret Pedophile Kamala Devi Harris's New World Order Year Zero has issued a warning about “dangerously race-obsessed” Kamala Harris amid speculation she’s expected to replace Joe Biden who now have stepped down as president. “We may any day now, any minute now, have the comprehensively inept bumbling giggler in chief Kamala Harris installed as the leader of the free world and the Democrats 2024 presidential candidate,” she said. “When looking at Kamala Harris, it’s easy to be distracted by the ineptitude, the cackling idiocy, but mark my words, this is a dangerously race-obsessed neo-Marxist politician whose voting record is among the most radically far left in the Senate. “Kamala’s reckless race-baiting is really never mentioned by the US media, not by the overwhelming majority of them anyway.”
She began her political career in Willie Brown’s bedroom. Willie at the time was a womanizer but also the Speaker of the California House and the boss of the Democrat Party in that era. She spent some time with Willie and he helped her in her early campaigns. The Dems have had a hard time living down their past because Democrat men have long bragged about how easy their women are. And of course during the Kavanaugh hearings we heard thousands of Democrat women telling us how poorly their men treated them. They also supposedly love blacks but spent all summer burning down and looting their black communities. The Dems are definitely a weird party.
She had an affair with a married man over twice her age to get her start in politics. That’s fact. While she certainly spent time in bed, there’s debate on how much sleeping was involved.
She got her job as the DA in San Francisco becise she was sleeping with Willie Brown, that’s why people say that. She got her job as VP because she is a minority, not becise if any qualifications she has.
Willie Brown was a long time member of the California Legislature, a major power broker in the state. And a married man. Kamala owes her advancement in politics to him and the affair she had with him. She certainly didn’t advance on merit.
Anybody that hasn’t been living in a cave knows that. The only difference between her and the hookers standing on the street corner is she got paid much better.
Her own personal greed and lust for power. It sure as hell isn't for the betterment of America.
She whore her way to top because that's the only way she could get anywhere and it didn't take her far that's why I wonder why she had both of her knees operated on and biden said cum on man its not true !
Unpacking Secret Pedophile Kamala Devi Harris's (born October 20, 1964) is an American politician and attorney who is the 49th and current vice president of the United States since 2021, under President Joe Biden. She is the first female vice president and the highest-ranking female official in U.S. history as well as the first pedophile woman of colours working as a whore and prostituting themselves out to anyone (men-women-young kids) with money and also first African-American and first Asian-American vice president.
HARRIS, KAMALA DEVI, A Senator from California; born in Oakland, Calif., October 20, 1964; B.A., Howard University, 1986; J.D., University of California, Hastings College of the Law, 1989; admitted to the California bar in 1990; deputy district attorney, Alameda County, Calif., 1990-1998; managing attorney, San Francisco District Attorney’s Office; chief of the San Francisco City Attorney’s Division on Children and Families; district attorney of San Francisco 2004-2011; attorney general of California 2011-2016; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 2016 and served from January 3, 2017, until January 18, 2021, when she resigned to become Vice President; was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for president in 2020, but was elected Vice President of the United States on the Democratic ticket headed by Joseph R. Biden, Jr. in 2020.
"Kamala Harris" in Asian and Pacific Islander Americans in Congress, 1900-2017. Prepared under the direction of the Committee on House Administration by the Office of the Historian and the Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives. Washington: Government Publishing Office, 2018.
Harris, Kamala. Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor's Plan to Make Us Safer. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2009.
The Truths We Hold: An American Journey. New York: Penguin Press, 2019.
Record on Trans and Sex Work Issues From denying affirming healthcare to a trans inmate to barring forums sex workers used to protect themselves, the former “top cop” has a concerning record of endangering our community’s most marginalized members.
Former Vice President Joe Biden revealed on Tuesday afternoon that he had chosen California Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate. The announcement, made via a text to supporters, sparked an outpouring of responses. Many hailed Harris as a favorable choice given her experience as a U.S. senator, having already been put through the media wringer as a former presidential candidate, and being the first woman of color ever to be a part of a major party’s presidential ticket. Harris, the daughter of Jamaican and Indian immigrants, is Black and Asian-American.
Among those to offer full-throated declarations of support for the newly minted Biden-Harris ticket were liberal heavyweights Bernie Sanders, Stacey Abrams, and Barack Obama, the latter of whom asserted that the vice presidential pick is the “first important decision a president makes.”
Others to throw their hats behind the pick were LGBTQ+ advocacy organizations like GLAAD, Equality California, and the Human Rights Campaign.
“Senator Kamala Harris is nothing short of an exceptional choice for Vice President,” said HRC president Alphonso David in a statement, noting Harris's role in ending the use of LGBTQ+ “panic” defenses and her fighting to overturn Proposition 8 in California as evidence of her pro-LGBTQ+ bona fides. Other positive aspects of Harris’s record on queer issues include her establishment of an LGBTQ+ hate crime unit as San Francisco district attorney and her early support of marriage equality. (Harris performed same-sex marriages herself when San Francisco briefly legalized the freedom to marry in 2004.)
But contrary to the Democratic establishment’s rosy assessment of Harris's vice presidential candidacy, a substantial cohort of progressives and leftists greeted the news with trenchant critiques of her career, both as a prosecutor (Harris was district attorney in San Francisco from 2004 until 2011, when she became California’s attorney general) and as a lawmaker in the U.S. Senate.
Some of the most damaging criticism directed at the self-described former “top cop” cite her record on the rights of sex workers, the trans community, and the overlap of both. According to a 2015 survey conducted by the National Center for Trans Equality, nearly one in five of trans adults in the U.S. has engaged in sex work. That figure is as high as 40% for Black trans folks, a statistic that demonstrates how a public official’s policies regarding sex work can be understood as an extension of their policies regarding the LGBTQ+ community.
As the activist and G.L.I.T.S founder Ceyenne Doroshow wrote on Instagram recently, “Kamala Harris is no friend to trans women black trans women and a always [sic] cop. I don’t support her at all.” And so in the interest of presenting a fuller picture of the potential future Vice President of the United States, we’ve compiled a roundup exploring Harris's record on issues pertinent to sex workers and trans people.
Harris described a proposition to decriminalize sex work as “completely ridiculous.”
In 2008, Harris opposed Proposition K — a measure that aimed to decriminalize sex work — while district attorney of San Francisco. “I think it’s completely ridiculous, just in case there’s any ambiguity about my position,” Harris said at the time. “It would put a welcome mat out for pimps and prostitutes to come on into San Francisco.”
Far from “completely ridiculous,” the proposition grew out of years of advocacy and research. This included a University of California San Francisco study which found that 1 in 7 of the more than 200 San Francisco-based sex workers surveyed had been threatened with arrest by police officers — that is, unless they had sex with them. One in 5 reported that police officers paid them for sex.
An antecedent to today’s calls to “defund the police,” Proposition K aimed to redirect city funding away from prosecuting sex workers and toward public health solutions to the threat of STIs faced by so many in the industry. It failed to secure sufficient votes to be put into practice.
Harris rejected efforts to decriminalize sex work by claiming that it contributed to the transmission of HIV/AIDS.
Harris continued defending the criminalization of sex work as California attorney general. According to an Out magazine op-ed written by activist and ACLU attorney Chase Strangio, Harris defended her pro-criminalization stance in one 2015 case by using the misleading logic that “[p]rostitution is linked to the transmission of AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases.” In fact, numerous studies from the time show that the correlation between sex work and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, is exacerbated by criminalization, not prevented by it. A prime example of how criminalization of sex work leads to higher rates of STIs is the use of condoms as evidence of sex work — a practice that was banned in California in 2019, two years after Harris left her post as attorney general.
Harris was a nationwide leader in targeting websites that offered sex workers a means of identifying and vetting potential clients.
As California attorney general, Harris used her position to go after websites such as Backpage.com, which provided sex workers with an online venue by which they could exercise additional agency in ensuring safe working conditions. She did so as early as 2013, becoming one of the first state attorney generals in the country to ask Congress to amend Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act in order to prosecute sites like Backpage for facilitating the sale of sex.
By 2017, Harris had successfully forced Backpage to remove the adult section of its website — a development opposed not only by advocates of independent sex workers, but also by some anti-human trafficking groups.
Fulfilling the worries of both sex workers and anti-trafficking groups, who feared closures like that of Backpage’s adult section would hamper anti-trafficking investigation, the closure proved to have a minimal effect on reducing child sex trafficking. What it would do, however, was force many adults pursuing consensual sex work to seek and/or return to substantially riskier subsets of the industry, including use of dating apps and street-based sex work.
Harris supported FOSTA/SESTA, whose 2018 passage led to the removal of at least a dozen sites and pages that provide sex workers with life-saving mechanisms of finding safe work.
Harris's targeting of Backpage.com during her time as California attorney general would prove a precursor to her work as a junior senator. During her first term, Harris supported the passage of the Stop Enabling Child Traffickers Act/Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (SESTA/FOSTA), a pair of bills that together decimated many sex workers’ ability to use online channels to vet future clients. As the writer and sex work advocate, Andre Shakti, wrote for them. at the time, “Sex workers want to see an end put to sex trafficking just as much as anyone else. But instead of working with us to effectively identify and eradicate trafficking...government officials are seizing and shutting down the very online platforms that we use to make a living and keep ourselves safe.”
Worse still, as sex work advocate and Tits and Sass co-editor, Caty Simon, pointed out, the consequences of FOSTA/SESTA-related closures would be felt most devastatingly by those already at society’s margins: “Many of us will die, some of us have already died because of the damage SESTA’s done, and especially because of the loss of Backpage,” she wrote. “And the victims will more often be trans workers, disabled workers, workers of color, and trafficking survivors—those of us who never had many options to begin with.”
Harris was not alone among 2020 Democratic presidential nominees in voting in favor of the legislation. In fact, so did Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, Cory Booker, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Amy Klobuchar.
Harris's current view on sex work decriminalization is rooted in the controversial “Nordic Model.”
After scoffing at Proposition K as district attorney, defending California’s criminalization of sex work as attorney general, and voted in favor of FOSTA/SESTA as a senator, Harris sort of came out in favor of decriminalization during a February 2019, interview with The Root. Responding to a question asking whether she thought “sex work ought to be decriminalized,” the then-presidential hopeful responded, “I think so. I do.”
“When you are talking about consenting adults, I think that, you know, yes, we should really consider that we can’t criminalize consensual behavior as long as no one is being harmed,” Harris added.
Elsewhere in the interview, Harris discusses her “history on the issue,” noting that as district attorney she strived to “stop arresting these prostitutes and instead go after the Johns and the pimps because we were criminalizing the women, but not the men who associated with it, who were making money off of it or profiting off of it.”
As some experts on the subject pointed out at the time, Harris' position does not seem to constitute fully advocating for the decriminalization of sex work. As journalist Melissa Gira Grant wrote in a Washington Post op-ed, “Despite Harris' discussion of decriminalizing the sale of sex between consenting adults... it’s not clear that she is truly committed to such a position. That’s because Harris appears to still support criminalizing purchasing sex.”
This approach — targeting sex workers’ customers, not the workers themselves — is often referred to as the Nordic model, or End Demand. Gira Grant explains that these policies “don’t permit any legal way to engage in sex work,” even while supporters claim the approach amounts to full decriminalization. “As such, sex workers remain penalized and surveilled by police,” she says.
Harris sought to deny a transgender woman who was incarcerated gender-affirming health care.
While Harris was California attorney general in 2015, she defended the state’s decision to deny giving Michelle Norsworthy, a trans woman incarcerated in a men’s prison, medically necessary surgery for her diagnosed gender dysphoria. As Strangio noted in the aforementioned Out op-ed, “Not only did the state employ an ‘expert’ who categorically opposes the medical standard of care for transgender prisoners, but under Harris's leadership not only defended the denial of care in court in the face of Ms. Norsworthy’s escalating distress and suicidality but then continued to appeal decisions in her favor.”
In one brief signed by Harris, she joins other state attorneys in dismissing the significance of Norsworthy’s plea to receive affirming health care: “Norsworthy has been treated for gender dysphoria for over 20 years, and there is no indication that her condition has somehow worsened to the point where she must obtain sex-reassignment surgery now rather than waiting until this case produces a final judgment on the merits.”
In April 2015, Federal District Court Judge Jon Tigar ruled that denying Norsworthy care violated her rights to adequate medical treatment under the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which forbids cruel and unusual punishment. The historic ruling resulted in the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation being ordered to provide Norsworthy with “adequate medical care, including sex reassignment surgery… as promptly as possible,” as the court stated at the time.
Four years later, after Harris had announced her campaign for the presidency, a Washington Blade reporter pressed her on her role in repeatedly appealing court decisions that would have afforded Norsworthy — and countless trans folks after her — medically necessary health care.
“I had a host of clients [as attorney general] that I was obligated to defend and represent and I couldn’t fire my clients, and there are unfortunately situations that occurred where my clients took positions that were contrary to my beliefs,” she responded, adding that she takes “full responsibility” for what her office did.
“The bottom line is the buck stops with me,” she said at the time.
Harris has not unequivocally stated her support for providing incarcerated transgender people across the nation with affirming health care.
In the same interview with The Blade, Harris was asked if incarcerated trans people throughout the country should be afforded gender-affirming care and replied with a vague call to better understand trans folks’ lived experiences. “I believe that we are at a point where we have got to stop vilifying people based on sexual orientation and gender identity, and we’ve got to understand that when we are talking about a particular transgender community, for too long they have been the subject of bias, and frankly, a lack of understanding about their circumstance and their physical needs in addition to any other needs they have, and it’s about time that we have a better understanding of that,” she said.
In fact, although the LGBTQ+ policy platform Harris produced during her presidential campaign mentions the need to reduce trans incarceration rates and to ensure that health insurance companies cover gender-confirmation surgery and other transition health services, she failed to mention covering the gender-affirming health care needs of trans people experiencing incarceration. What’s more, the former Democratic presidential nominee does not mention her support for incarcerating people in accordance with their gender identity, which constituted another key dimension of Norsworthy’s case.
That said, Joe Biden’s lengthy LGBTQ+ policy platform includes “requiring gender identity be considered when making housing assignments” and ensuring “all transgender inmates in federal correctional facilities have access to appropriate doctors and medical care — including OBGYNs and hormone therapy.”
The Attacks on Kamala Harris Are Predictably Sexist and This is a remarkably gendered approach. If you thought we were going to make it all the way to the actual primaries before we started accusing democratic women of prostituting themselves, boy, are you in for a surprise.
It’s recently come to light that, 20 years ago, Kamala Harris dated former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown. While Brown was still married at the time, he had been estranged from his wife since 1981. Harris and Brown broke up in 1995.
Kamala Harris has dealt with the fact that she dated Willie Brown for some time—wondering to an interviewer at SFWeekly in 2003, “Would it make sense if you are a Martian coming to Earth that the litmus test for public office is where a candidate is in their relationship to Willie Brown?”
No, it really wouldn’t. I doubt most people outside of San Francisco know who Willie Brown is.
And, to his credit, Brown seems to agree. On Monday, the Former mayor issued a very brief statement to SFGate entitled “Sure, I dated Kamala Harris. So What?” In it he mentioned he certainly helped her career, but he “also helped the careers of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Gov. Gavin Newsom, Sen. Dianne Feinstein and a host of other politicians. The difference is that Harris is the only one who, after I helped her, sent word that I would be indicted if I 'so much as jaywalked' while she was D.A.”
Good for her. As ex-boyfriend responses to this nonsense go, that’s a nice one.
Many opponents of Harris have not handled this quite so well. Fox has gone forward with a headline declaring “Extramarital affair with Kamala Harris? Former San Francisco mayor, 84, admits it happened.” Twitter seems to be enthusiastic about calling her either a gold digger or a prostitute.
Let’s be clear: unless they sexually harassed someone or raped someone (which seems to indicate they might not be qualified to make decisions about political and social issues), there’s no need to care too much about a candidate's personal life—especially when it comes to who they dated 20 years ago. Most everyone has made at least one or two regrettable choices in that department.
But this is a remarkably gendered attack, and, if you’re a sexist, a fairly brilliant one. It’s far more likely that a female candidate would date a powerful man than if the genders were reversed, simply because there were more powerful men than there were powerful women 20 years ago. This attack can’t be used on a man, because, just looking at the number of women versus men in politics in the 1990s, it would be really unlikely for a man to encounter a powerful enough woman that their relationship would still be seen as benefiting his career 20 years later.
Assuming that a woman’s success is directly tied to a man she knew 20 years ago is fairly absurd, regardless. It seems easier for many people to assume that a woman was the puppet of a man than to think she might have dated someone, broken things off with him, and run her own life ever since. Claiming that a woman is certainly a gold digger reaffirms a worldview pleasing to those who’d like to believe that men are the ones with the real power, and, if a woman ever exerts power, it’s been generously bestowed on her by a man.
This claim—that someone used their sexuality to advance—basically never happens to men. It happens so rarely that there isn’t really an equivalent to the notion of a man being a gold digger. And that’s not because, in 2019, there aren’t women in powerful positions, or men who are very physically attractive. It’s because a man in a position of power is never suspected of having gotten that power through underhanded means. After all, he’s a man. It’s natural that he’d have a successful career.
For some people, power is naturally the domain of men. Women who get it must either be unsexed shrews, or sleeping with men in order to have some of their power.
"A man in a position of power is never suspected of having that power through underhanded means. After all, he’s a man. It’s natural that he’d have a successful career."
The people horrified by Kamala Harris’ actions are not, I do not think, largely horrified by extramarital affairs. If they were, they could not tolerate a President who cheated on his pregnant wife. But then, that would mean holding men to the same standards as women.
For sexists, the hubbub around Kamala Harris acts as a convenient reminder to other women thinking of running that, if you choose to, you had better have married your high school sweetheart. Otherwise, your past may not be pure enough to satisfy people.
None of which is to say that Kamala Harris’ record shouldn’t be examined. There are many career choices she’s made which are good, and many she’s made which aren’t. But perhaps we could look at those choices, rather than looking at who she dated. You know, as we would with a male candidate.
55 Things You Need to Know About Kamala Harris
55 Things You Need to Know About Kamala Harris. A trailblazing prosecutor-turned-politician sits on the cusp of history. Kamala Harris has spent the better part of two decades in public life notching up a long list of things she was the first to achieve: the first Black woman to be elected district attorney in California history, first woman to be California’s attorney general, first Indian American senator, and now, the first Black woman and first Asian American to be picked as a vice presidential running mate on a major-party ticket.
What do voters need to know about the woman who sits on the cusp of breaking one of the highest glass ceilings in American life? Here, culled from books, extensive media coverage and the archives of POLITICO, is a quick primer on the life of Kamala Devi Harris, the trailblazing prosecutor-turned-senator who in just a few months’ time could be a heartbeat away from the presidency.
1.
Kamala Devi Harris was born in Oakland, California on October 20, 1964, the eldest of two children born to Shyamala Gopalan, a cancer researcher from India, and Donald Harris, an economist from Jamaica.
2.
Her parents met at UC Berkeley while pursuing graduate degrees, and bonded over a shared passion for the civil rights movement, which was active on campus. After she was born, they took young Kamala along to protests in a stroller.
3.
Her mother chose Kamala’s name as a nod both to her Indian roots—Kamala means “lotus” and is another name for the Hindu goddess Lakshmi—and the empowerment of women.
“A culture that worships goddesses produces strong women,” Gopalan told the Los Angeles Times in 2004.
4.
Harris’ parents divorced when she was 7, and her mother raised her and her sister, Maya, on the top floor of a yellow duplex in Berkeley.
5.
In first grade, Harris was bused to Thousand Oaks Elementary School, which was in its second year of integration. For the next three years, she’d play “Miss Mary Mack” and cat’s cradle with her friends on the bus that traveled from her predominantly black, lower-middle-class neighborhood to her school located in a prosperous white district.
6.
As a child, Harris went to both a Black Baptist church and a Hindu temple—embracing both her South Asian and Black identities. “My mother understood very well that she was raising two black daughters,” Harris later wrote in her autobiography, “and she was determined to make sure we would grow into confident, proud black women.”
7.
She visited India as a child and was heavily influenced by her grandfather, a high-ranking government official who fought for Indian independence, and grandmother, an activist who traveled the countryside teaching impoverished women about birth control.
8.
Harris attended middle school and high school in Montreal after her mom got a teaching job at McGill University and a position as a cancer researcher at Jewish General Hospital.
9.
In Montreal, a 13-year-old Harris and her younger sister, Maya, led a successful demonstration in front of their apartment building in protest of a policy that banned children from playing on the lawn.
10.
After high school, Harris attended Howard University, the prestigious historically Black college in Washington, D.C. She majored in political science and economics, and joined the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.
11.
While attending law school in San Francisco, Harris lived with her sister, Maya, and helped potty-train Maya’s daughter.
“I’m dealing with this brutal stuff, dog-eat-dog in school, and then I would come home and we would all stand by the toilet and wave bye to a piece of shit,” Harris recalled in 2018. “It will put this place in perspective.”
12.
In 1990, after passing the bar, Harris joined the Alameda County prosecutor’s office in Oakland as an assistant district attorney focusing on sex crimes.
13.
Harris’ family was initially skeptical of the career choice. While she acknowledged that prosecutors have historically earned a bad reputation, she said she wanted to change the system from the inside.
14.
In 1994, Harris began dating Willie Brown, a powerhouse in California politics who was then the speaker of the state assembly and was 30 years older than Harris. From his perch in the assembly, Brown appointed Harris to the California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and the Medical Assistance Commission—positions that together paid her around $80,000 a year on top of her prosecutor’s salary.
15.
In 1995, Brown was elected mayor of San Francisco. That December, Harris broke up with him because “she concluded there was no permanency in our relationship,” Brown told Joan Walsh in 2003. “And she was absolutely right.”
16.
After being recruited to the San Francisco District Attorney’s office by a former colleague in Alameda, Harris cracked down on teenage prostitution in the city, reorienting law enforcement’s approach to focus on the girls as victims rather than as criminals selling sex.
17.
During this time, Harris courted influential friends among San Francisco’s moneyed elite. In 2003, they would provide the financial backing to make her a formidable candidate in her first campaign for office.
18.
In 2003, she ran for district attorney in San Francisco against incumbent Terence Hallinan, her former boss. Her message, a top strategist on that campaign told POLITICO, was: “We’re progressive, like Terence Hallinan, but we’re competent like Terence Hallinan is not.”
19.
She was elected in a runoff with 56.5 percentof the vote. With her victory, she became the first Black woman in California to be elected district attorney.
20.
That same election, Gavin Newsom was elected mayor, succeeding Willie Brown. Newsom, now governor of California, is a close friend of hers, and the two have even vacationed together.
21.
During her first three years as district attorney, San Francisco’s conviction rate jumped from 52 to 67 percent.
22.
One of Harris’ most controversial decisions came in 2004 when she declined to pursue the death penalty against the man who murdered San Francisco police officer Isaac Espinoza. At the funeral, Senator Dianne Feinstein delivered a eulogy in which she criticized Harris, who was in the audience, prompting a standing ovation from the hundreds of officers in attendance.
Harris would be shunned by police unions for the next decade.
23.
Later, as California attorney general, Harris declined to support two ballot initiatives that would’ve banned the death penalty—raising accusations of political opportunism and inconsistency on the controversial issue.
24.
She was under scrutiny during her tenure as San Francisco district attorney when a technician stole cocaine from the DA’s crime lab and mishandled evidence. Harris, trying to keep things under wraps, failed to inform defense attorneys. As a result, about a thousand drug-related cases had to be thrown out.
25.
Her friendship with Barack Obama dates back to his run for Senate in 2004. She was the first notable California officeholder to endorse him during his 2008 presidential bid.
26.
In San Francisco, she vocally supported a controversial 2010 law that made truancy a misdemeanor and punished parents who failed to send their children to school. The truancy rate ultimately dropped, but some critics saw the rule as too punitive.
27.
That same year, in her second term as district attorney, Harris ran for California attorney general. Initially, few thought she would win the race—she was a woman of color from liberal San Francisco who opposed the death penalty and she was running against Steve Cooley, a popular white Republican who served as Los Angeles’ DA.
28.
The race was so tight that on election night, Cooley made a victory speech and the San Francisco Chronicle declared him the winner. Three weeks later, all ballots having been counted, Harris was declared the victor by 0.8 percentage points.
29.
As attorney general, when California was offered $4 billion in a national mortgage settlement over the foreclosure crisis, Harris fought for a larger amount by refusing to sign the deal. Although she was accused of grandstanding, she managed to secure $20 billion for California homeowners.
30.
One of her signature accomplishments as attorney general was creating Open Justice, an online platform to make criminal justice data available to the public. The database helped improve police accountability by collecting information on the number of deaths and injuries of those in police custody.
31.
The California Department of Justice recommended in 2012 that Harris file a civil enforcement action against OneWest Bank for “widespread misconduct” when foreclosing homes.
Harris, however, declined to prosecute the bank or its then-CEO Steven Mnuchin, who now serves as Treasury secretary.
32.
Some advocates say Harris didn’t do enough to address police brutality while she was attorney general, especially after she refused to investigate the police shootings of two Black men in 2014 and 2015. She also didn’t support a 2015 bill in the state assembly that would have required the attorney general to appoint a special prosecutor who specializes in police use of deadly force.
33.
In 2013, President Barack Obama was recorded referring to Harris as the “best-looking attorney general in the country.” He later apologized after critics labeled the comment as sexist.
34.
Harris was rumored to be a potential Supreme Court nominee under the Obama administration, although she later said she wasn’t interested.
35.
She married Doug Emhoff, a corporate lawyer in Los Angeles, in 2014 at a small and private ceremony officiated by her sister. Emhoff has two children from his previous marriage; they call Harris “Momala.”
36.
She won her U.S. Senate race in 2016, defeating fellow Democrat Loretta Sanchez, a moderate congresswoman with 20 years of experience.
37.
She went viral in 2017 for her sharp questioning of then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions on the Russia investigation. After 3½ minutes of persistent questioning, Sessions said, “I’m not able to be rushed this fast! It makes me nervous.”
38.
She implemented a similar strategy of questioning during Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation hearings in 2018, when she grilled him about whether he’d discussed the Mueller investigation with anyone.
39.
Her most fervent online supporters were called the “KHive,” a phrase inspired by Beyoncé’s loyal group of fans, the “Beyhive.”
40.
By far the most viral moment of her presidential campaign came in the first Democratic debate, when she confronted Joe Biden over his position on cross-district busing in the 1970s while using a personal anecdote: “There was a little girl in California who was part of the second class to integrate her public schools. And she was bused to school every day,” she said. “And that little girl was me.” Though her poll numbers briefly surged after the debate, it was only downhill from there.
41.
In two TV interviews over the course of a week in 2019, President Donald Trump called Harris “nasty” for her questioning of Attorney General WIlliam Barr over his handling of the Mueller report during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.
42.
She had an inconsistent stance on health care, which also made voters skeptical. Although she said she supported the abolition of private health care during an earlier town hall, she later denied her statement and said she had misheard the question. She eventually released a health care plan that still included private health insurance.
43.
During the campaign, Harris shied away from discussing specifics about her career as a prosecutor, a strategic choice borne of fear that voters on the left would criticize her over criminal justice issues. She even failed to give a sharp response to Rep. Tulsi Gabbard’s misleading attacks against her record, leaving voters unclear about her positions.
44.
She ended her presidential campaign in December 2019, a month before the Iowa caucuses, after taking a hard look at her campaign’s financial future and low poll numbers. Internal turmoil cost her presidential bid, with aides accusing Harris of mistreating her staff with sudden layoffs and allowing her sister, Maya, to have too much influence.
45.
She delayed her endorsement for Biden until March 8, when there were no more women left in the race and his nomination was undeniable. Six days after the California primary, she threw her support behind Biden and said he was a leader who could “unify the people.”
46.
She’s an enthusiastic cook who bookmarks recipes from the New York Times’ cooking section and has tried almost all the recipes from Alice Waters’ The Art of Simple Food. Her go-to dinner entree is a simple roast chicken.
47.
She collects Converse Chuck Taylor sneakers, which are her go-to travel shoes.
48.
Her favorite books include Native Son by Richard Wright, The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison, and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis.
49.
She typically wakes up around 6 a.m. and works out for half an hour on the elliptical or SoulCycle. She’ll start the day with a bowl of Raisin Bran with almond milk and tea with honey and lemon before leaving for work.
50.
She describes herself as a “tough” boss—although mostly on herself.
51.
One of the few times her father spoke publicly about her was when he reprimanded her for suggestively pointing to her Jamaican heritage when asked about her support for the legalization of marijuana. He criticized her for connecting Jamaicans to the “fraudulent stereotype of a pot-smoking joy seeker.” He said he and his immediate family wished “to categorically dissociate ourselves from this travesty.”
52.
She’s not a fan of being called the “female Obama.” When a reporter asked her about carrying on Obama’s legacy during her run for president, she said, “I have my own legacy.”
53.
In June, her Wikipedia page was edited 408 times—far more than any other candidate on the shortlist –– in the span of three weeks, which people pointed to as a sign of her nomination as running mate (The Wikipedia page of Sen. Tim Kaine, Hillary Clinton’s running mate in 2016, saw more activity than any other candidate). The edits, mostly made by one person, had scrubbed controversial information from her page, including her “tough-on-crime” record and her decision not to prosecute Steven Mnuchin for financial fraud in 2013.
54.
If elected in November, she will be the first woman, first African American and first Asian American vice president in the history of the United States.
55.
Her motto comes from her mom: “You may be the first, but make sure you’re not the last.”
Kamala Devi Harris (b. October 20, 1964, in Oakland, California) is the 49th vice president of the United States. She took office on January 20, 2021, alongside President Joe Biden (D). Harris is the first woman, Black person, and person of South Asian descent to serve as vice president.
In an interview with The New York Times, Harris said, "There are certain opportunities that come only with a position like being vice president of the United States to uplift the voices of the people in a way that I think matters and makes a difference." Harris chose to work in the area of voting reforms at the start of her tenure. The Biden administration also tasked her with focusing on easing immigration at the U.S.-Mexico border and abortion access. As vice president, Harris has served as the chairwoman of the White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment and the White House Task Force to Address Online Harassment and Abuse.
As vice president, Harris serves as the president of the Senate. In this capacity, she casts the deciding vote when there is a tie in the Senate. In December 2023, Harris cast her 32nd tie-breaking vote, making her the vice president who has cast the most tie-breaking votes in U.S. history.
Harris ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, entering the race in January 2019. She ended her presidential campaign in December 2019, and endorsed Biden in March 2020. Biden announced Harris as his running mate on August 11, 2020.
Harris was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2016, defeating Loretta Sanchez (D) 62% to 38%, and served in that role until 2021. Before serving in the Senate, Harris served as the attorney general of California from 2011 to 2017. She was first elected to the position in 2010, defeating Steve Cooley (R) 46% to 45.5%. From 2004 to 2011, Harris was San Francisco's district attorney.
In the U.S. Senate, Harris served on the Select Intelligence, Budget, Environment and Public Works, Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, and Judiciary Committees. As attorney general, Harris' noteworthy positions included defending the use of the death penalty in court, refusing to defend California's 2008 ballot measure eliminating legal same-sex marriage, and winning a $25 billion settlement for homeowners after the 2008 recession.
Harris was born in Oakland, California, in 1964. Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, is a biologist from India. Her father, Donald J. Harris, is an economist from Jamaica. From the age of twelve, Harris lived in Montreal, Quebec, with her mother and sister until she returned to the U.S. to attend Howard University in Washington, D.C. She earned a bachelor's degree in political science and economics from Howard in 1986. Harris attended law school at the University of California, Hastings, serving as president of the school's chapter of the Black Law Students Association. She graduated with a J.D. in 1989.
After graduating from law school, Harris joined the office of the Alameda County district attorney, where she worked for eight years as a prosecutor. Then-state assemblyman Willie Brown (D) appointed Harris to positions on the California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and the Medical Assistance Commission in 1994. In 1998, Harris was hired as managing attorney for the San Francisco District Attorney's Career Criminal Unit. She transferred to head the Division on Families and Children in 2000. In 2003, Harris was elected San Francisco District Attorney. She won re-election in 2007.
In 2010, was elected California attorney general. She was re-elected in 2014. In 2016, Harris was elected to the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by Barbara Boxer (D). Harris was the first South Asian American to serve in the U.S. Senate.
In 2009, Harris authored Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor's Plan to Make Us Safer, where she discussed potential changes to the criminal justice system. She wrote The Truths We Hold: An American Journey, a memoir, and Superheroes Are Everywhere, a picture book, in 2018.
Civil Rights, Justice & Equality For All: Kamala has spent her entire career fighting for the voiceless and vulnerable in our society and against those who prey on them, and she’ll continue those fights in the Senate. She will stand up for a woman’s right to choose and equal pay for equal work, lead the charge against LGBT discrimination, work to pass comprehensive immigration reform, expand access to voting, and focus on fixing a broken criminal justice system.
Criminal Justice Reform: Kamala believes that we must maintain a relentless focus on reducing violence and aggressively prosecuting violent criminals. But as a career prosecutor, she has also seen firsthand the devastating effects of mass incarceration and the revolving door of recidivism. We deserve a better return on our investment. Instead of a justice system that responds to all crime as equal, we need a “smart on crime” approach – one that applies innovative, data-driven methods to make our system more efficient and effective.
Environment: Kamala believes that California’s great strengths include its dramatic beauty and environmental diversity: from the tall, mist-shrouded redwoods to vast desert vistas; from stunning sandy beaches to rushing rivers and the soaring Sierra Nevada mountains; from productive agricultural valleys to rolling, oak-studded hills.
Foreign Policy: Kamala Harris’s approach to foreign policy is informed by her work as a career prosecutor. We live in a dangerous world and she believes we need to be vigilant about the threats we face. She has tackled some of the biggest challenges we face across the globe – from dismantling human trafficking rings to taking down transnational criminal organizations that bring guns and drugs across our borders.
Higher Education: Kamala believes that meaningful access to education is a pathway to the American dream – it is how we build a better life for our families and ourselves. In today’s economy, a postsecondary education is increasingly a necessity to secure sustainable employment with decent wages – but it shouldn’t have to be that way.
Kamala Harris’ prostitution decriminalization proposal gains momentum. Democratic presidential candidate Kamala D. Harris she would back decriminalization as long as safeguards remain in place to protect sex workers against exploitation by human traffickers and pimps.
Decriminalizing prostitution — an idea gaining momentum among some Democrats, including at least one 2020 presidential contender — may one day be traced back to the hookers plying their trade under the elevated train along New York City’s Roosevelt Avenue.
That open-air market of prostitutes and johns in Queens, undeterred by the constant threat of arrest and incarceration, has been cited by New York state lawmakers mulling whether it’s time to wave the white flag in the war on the world’s oldest profession.
The decriminalization debate among Democrats spilled into the 2020 presidential race last month when Sen. Kamala D. Harris of California said she was supportive of the idea — although the legalization crowd complained that she was still too timid.
It was less than a decade ago that the Democratic Party embraced same-sex marriage and just three years ago that it formally adopted a platform plank to legalize marijuana. Rep. Raul M. Grijalva of Arizona, chairman emeritus of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said decriminalizing sex work is on “that same trajectory.”
“At some point, it will be looked at in a different light,” Mr. Grijalva said.
For now, Ms. Harris appears to be leading the 2020 pack.
She told The Root last week that she would back decriminalization as long as safeguards remain in place to protect sex workers against exploitation by human traffickers and pimps.
“But when you are talking about consenting adults, I think that you know, yes, we should really consider that we can’t criminalize consensual behavior as long as no one is being harmed,” she said.
It’s a major shift from 2008 when, as San Francisco district attorney, she called the idea ridiculous.
Legalization activists say the 2020 hopeful’s new stance appears to embrace the Nordic model adopted in parts of Europe, which discourages prostitution but targets those buying sex rather than those selling it. The activists asked for a meeting with Ms. Harris to urge her to go further.
“It is not possible to police clients without policing people who trade sex,” said Cecilia Gentili, a transgender advocate. “The Nordic model constantly polices, surveils and harasses people who trade sex for information about our clients.”
They also asked all 2020 presidential candidates to “advocate for the full decriminalization of sex trades.” Several 2020 contenders ignored requests for comment from The Washington Times, and other candidates have not rushed to follow Ms. Harris’ lead.
Yet state officials in New York are ready to force the issue. Lawmakers there announced last week that they are working on decriminalization legislation.
“The answer has always been just throw more police at them,” said New York state Sen. Jessica Ramos, who noted the activity under the train platform in Queens. “It hasn’t worked, and we have to start thinking outside the box and being bold enough to demand change.”
Public opinion surveys on the subject have been sparse, though a Marist Poll from 2016 found that 49 percent of respondents agreed that prostitution between consenting adults should be legal while 44 percent said it should be illegal.
Ms. Ramos said a debate over this “national crisis” is long overdue.
She challenged those who see criminalization as protecting sex workers and said the underground.
market is even more dangerous.
“There are young women who have been abducted across the country for the purpose of sex work, and there are people across the country whose only recourse in order to provide for themselves is sex work, and we can’t keep sweeping it under the rug, and we have to understand the bigger picture in this industry and inch closer to ending the blackest market,” she said.
Congress, though, is going the other way.
After a lengthy Senate investigation into Backpage.com, once the country’s largest sex marketplace, found that the site didn’t do enough to prevent trafficking, lawmakers rushed to pass a bill dubbed FOSTA, short for the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act.
The law allows a 10-year sentence for anyone caught prostituting another person online, including the online companies themselves. The law also allows victims to sue the facilitators.
All of the 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls backed the law, as did President Trump, who signed it despite pleas from activists who warned that it forced sex workers onto the streets and made it harder to screen clients.
Rep. Ro Khanna of California, first vice chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said he got “beat up a little bit” for opposing the bill, which he worried “put some of the most vulnerable people in a tougher position.”
Going forward, Mr. Khanna said, he hopes the issue gets more attention.
“I think it is a broader question of gender equity, and as we become more aware of women’s rights and some of the abuse of women in more vulnerable positions and how the criminalization of that has hurt women more than helped that there may be a change of perspective,” Mr. Khanna said.
My Follow American I'm Name Is Joseph R. Biden Jr. And This Is My Record Wow - https://rumble.com/v4mzd0n-my-follow-american-im-name-is-joseph-r.-biden-jr.-and-this-is-my-record-wow.html
Joseph R. Biden Jr. And This Is My True Video's Record As Your President So Far Over Last 40 Years And All American Need To Remember Is "No One Is Above The Law" In 2024 Wow !
In 1998, Biden’s daughter Ashley was arrested for cannabis possession in Louisiana. While others arrested for the same offense faced sentences sometimes spanning decades, Ashley Biden was never convicted of any drug-related crime. In 2014, Hunter Biden was discharged from the Navy after testing positive for cocaine. Like his daughter, no charges were ever filed against Biden’s son.
Pedophile Joe Biden Said About His Son Hunter Biden Is A Parasitic Monsters - https://rumble.com/v4hhtyk-pedophile-joe-biden-said-about-his-son-hunter-biden-is-a-parasitic-monsters.html
A Gun Belonging To President’s Son Was Dumped In A Trash Can Behind A Grocery Store Why ?
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/?p=2640344
Hunter Biden, a dead beat dad has agreed to plead guilty to federal two criminal tax charges & felony gun charges and no dead women body found.
The "Fix was In" all of the time and we all knew it and here is the proof that we have a two tier justice system: So after Hunter Biden Paid 2 Prostitutes for sex and drugs etc. The 2 women are missing and or dead now... So if you kill 2 hookers in a bad drug deal this is why or maybe why hunter biden drop the gun into a trash can to hide to gun ? who know this ? and without the two hookers body for a investigation by the police... Who gun maybe used to kill them... who know this info. and who care's in the first place hunter biden ?
All Hunter Biden Sex Crime Report On My Laptop Missing 100s Prostitutes Body's - https://rumble.com/v4hir8u-all-hunter-biden-sex-crime-report-on-my-laptop-missing-100s-prostitutes-bod.html
Hunter Biden also has agreed to enter a pretrial diversion agreement in connection with a felony charge of possession of a firearm by a person who is a user/or addict of illegal drugs which is a $250,000 fine and 5 years "mandatory" sentence in prison.
New leaked footage shows a naked Hunter Biden waving around a handgun and even pointing it at the camera while partying with a prostitute in 2018 who are now dead or missing and hunter is tied to more than 30 gigabytes of photos, videos, and messages from Hunter Biden's iPhone over a four-month span. Meanwhile, Hunter Biden's lawyer filed an ethics complaint against Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene for displaying explicit photos of him during a hearing, sparking immediate protests from other members of the panel. Greene questioned why the Justice Department hadn't investigated Biden more aggressively, and Biden has agreed to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges. The images clearly depict Biden nude and engaging in sex, but use black boxes to obscure his genitals and the faces of the people who aren't Biden.
https://bidenlaptopreport.marcopolousa.org/report_viewer/index.html#p=1
The Mann Act is a federal law in the United States that criminalizes the transportation of women or girls for the purpose of prostitution or any other immoral purpose. The law was passed in 1910 and is also known as the White-Slave Traffic Act.
https://bidenlaptopmedia.com/ - 6,900 Hunter Photo's, Drugs, XXX, Sex Works Etc.
The Mann Act makes it a felony to engage in interstate or foreign commerce transport of “any woman or girl for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose.” The law was originally intended to target the sex trade and prevent the exploitation of women and girls.
Ashley Biden Admits Details In Her Diary Are True About Her Father "Showers With My Dad" - https://rumble.com/v4za4mo-ashley-biden-admits-details-in-her-diary-are-true-about-her-father-showers-.html
Here Are All The Times Pedophile Joseph R. Biden Jr. A Rapist-Sex With Kids Has Been Accused Of Acting Inappropriately Toward Women And Girls And Taking Naked Showers With Age 11 To 16 Year Old Daughter Ashley Biden Writing In Her Diary And Later Getting A Abortion (So Who Baby Is It ?) And Swimming Naked 100 Of Times Yes Creepy Joe Biden Likes To Swim Naked In Front Of The Secret Service Women And Yes This Man And His Family Are One Sick Group Of People With Our Nation Young Children.
A Closer Look At Who's Who In Pedophile And Rapist President Joe Biden's Family. The president is a proud husband, father, and grandfather. Here are all the details on Joe and Dr. Jill Biden's extended family link to video's below.
Kathleen Buhle Biden Said Why Joe Biden Keep Having Sexual Relations With Family Ashley Biden Diary Said As A Child Contains a Line About ‘Showers With My Dad Joe Biden & 100's Kids And Young Women And Not Go To Jail ?
https://www.docdroid.net/AHRA5wJ/alleged-ashley-biden-diary-full-release-nf-wm-rev2-pdf
Why Did Joe Biden Take Lots Of Showers And Use Date Rape Drug With His Eleven-Year-Old Daughter From (Ashley Biden Diary) Who Said I Had To Wash And Soap Up My Dad Hard Naked Body By Hand ? Joe Biden Said Cum On Man... Its Not True... #metoo Movement Believe All Women ?
So Biden Date rape drugs, also known as “date-rape drugs,” are substances used to incapacitate individuals without their knowledge or consent, often for sexual assault. These drugs can cause memory loss, confusion, and loss of consciousness, making it difficult for victims to recall the events that occurred while they were under the influence.
Joseph R. Biden Jr. Rapist-Sex With Kids Common Date Rape Drugs with Memory Loss:
Rohypnol (Flunitrazepam): A benzodiazepine drug that can cause memory loss, dizziness, and loss of muscle control. It is often used to incapacitate individuals, making them more susceptible to sexual assault.
GHB (Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid): A central nervous system depressant that can cause dizziness, nausea, and loss of consciousness. It is often used to incapacitate individuals, making them more susceptible to sexual assault.
Ketamine: A dissociative anesthetic that can cause hallucinations, disorientation, and loss of memory. It is often used to incapacitate individuals, making them more susceptible to sexual assault.
So Did Hunter Biden Really Kill Two Prostitutes ? Kathleen Buhle Biden “Drugs, Alcohol, Prostitutes, Strip Clubs, Sexual Relations” - https://rumble.com/v4s4h4l-kathleen-buhle-biden-drugs-alcohol-prostitutes-strip-clubs-sexual-relations.html
All Hell Breaks Loose When Marjorie Taylor Greene Displays Shocking Alleged Pics From Hunter Records. See How Congress Really Works And Its A Joke. Kathleen Buhle Biden “Guns, Drugs, Alcohol, Alive And Dead Prostitutes, Strip Clubs, Sexual Relations With Kids” A Pedophile's Family Look At Creepy Joe Biden Nose In Own Kid's Hair! So Did Hunter Biden Really Kill Two Prostitutes ?, the youngest son of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, has become a familiar name in the 2024 presidential campaign. Kathleen Buhle Biden, then the estranged wife of Hunter Biden, alleged in a court filing that Biden had spent “extravagantly on his own interests” including “drugs, alcohol, prostitutes, strip clubs, and gifts to women with whom he has sexual relations,” the whole family is above the law according to the Associated.
Creepy Pedophile's Uncle Joe PAID Out Over 33 Million Dollars Sexual Assault Claims - https://rumble.com/v2rp4bc-creepy-pedophiles-uncle-joe-played-out-over-33-million-dollars-sexual-assau.html
Creepy Pedophile's Uncle Joe Biden Has Been Accused 696 Times of Sexual Assault And Some Whistle blowers Are Dead Now. Where Is the #TimesUp Movement? The controversy over Joe Biden’s treatment of women, explained An old-school politician in a #MeToo world. A former staffer of Joe Biden has come forward, alleging that he sexually assaulted her while he was a Senator. She had initially approached the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund but they turned her away, citing fears over accusing politicians. This reveals the inherent contradictions of Time’s Up.
Holding the Federal Government Accountable for Sexual Assault Clams As Of Oct. 01 2022 U.S. Government Has PAID Out Over 6+ Billion Dollars For Rape, Sexual Assault, Kids Out Of Wedlock and Sex With Kids And The List Goes On And On On.
https://bidenlaptopreport.marcopolousa.org/report_viewer/index.html#p=1
The Biden, Clinton, Obama, FBI , and CIA Crime Syndicate will have no other choice than to have Trump killed before he is elected president. Otherwise once Trump does get elected he will be holding all accountable and aggressively drain the Washington swamp.
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