
Kamala Harris’s flaws are on full display during her The Masquerade book tour
Kamala Harris She goes on a ridiculous 15-city “international” book tour, during which she tells gullible women who line up for hours to see her that she only narrowly missed the presidency.
It claims that 2024 was “the closest presidential election of the 21st century.”
Everyone knows that’s a “lie,” as Donald Trump said in a hot “Social Truth” post, detailing his “landslide!” victory. He won the Electoral College by 312 to 226, won counties nationwide by 2,600 to 525, won all seven swing states and won the popular vote by the millions.
Harris claim Which she almost won Biden-level delusion. It’s a reasonable assumption that she’s using “107 Days” and her self-justifying book tour with the likes of Hillary Clinton emerging as a springboard for another suicidal run for the White House.
But last week, when he was asked that on stage Washington, DCWhether she would become a presidential candidate in 2028, she was coy: “Maybe, maybe not.”
Probably not, I think.
Harris’s flaws as a candidate were on full display on her book tour — the inappropriate hyena-like laugh, the painfully unclear word authority, the ever-shifting accents and affectations. This is clearly someone with no concrete sense of self, a woman who has been given big jobs and got everything wrong.
Marca women are a mess
However, the method Democratic Party Heading up, these obstacles may mean nothing. Blunders and character flaws that would have derailed any candidate just 10 years ago are overlooked and excused, especially when it comes to liberal women with low self-esteem who can seemingly do no wrong.
When chased katie porter, The Democratic front-runner in California’s 2026 gubernatorial race was exposed last week as a troubled bully with anger management issues in a viral on-air meltdown during a CBS interview in Sacramento, and the sisters were quick to make sense of the unforgivable.
Prominent liberals and unionists praised the 51-year-old three-term congresswoman as “strong,” “tough” and “the courageous leader California needs to stand up to Donald Trump.”
Porter said he was just “going through a menopausal moment.” Joy Behar On “The View” before criticizing Trump. “Maybe she was having a bad day,” said co-host Whoopi Goldberg.
Well, Porter must have a lot of bad days, judging by the leaked videos that show her cursing and abusing employees for minor transgressions.
She had to take anger management lessons after throwing a bowl of hot potatoes at her ex-husband’s head. The father of her three children later claimed in their divorce that she was prone to “extreme anger” and was “unpredictable and unstable (with) a history of yelling and screaming at him and the children.”
Not the kind of person who should be given enormous power as governor of our richest states, but Porter clearly appeals to the AWFL’s group of Democratic voters: wealthy white female liberals.
Another star of the post-Hillary generation of aspiring AWFL leaders is Abigail Spanberger, the former CIA agent and front-runner to be Virginia’s next governor.
Exclusion everywhere
Although more polished than Porter, her refusal to disavow or withdraw her support for her Democratic ally, Jay Jones, suggests a moral callousness that belies her carefully cultivated image as a compassionate woman and mother.
In this age of assassinations, it should have taken every Democrat exactly a millisecond to denounce Jones — who is running for attorney general on the Democratic ticket with Spanberger — and force him out of the race after the revelation of text messages in which he expressed violent threats to kill a Republican rival and his children.
Instead, Democrats believe they can move past the scandal.
In a previous era, older women used to uphold basic moral standards followed by younger generations.
But the liberals dispensed With such feminine implications, they pride themselves on being tougher and ruthless than men in their quest for power.
Harris’s sins are more mundane. She was simply a woefully inadequate candidate, and every trivial utterance reminded us that she had risen far beyond her abilities, for reasons that were not immediately clear.
But that doesn’t stop her from having an ardent fan base of liberal women, dubbed the K-Hive, who flock to her every public engagement and comment on her every empty word, even though she has set back the cause of female candidates for half a century. Even VIP “meet and greet” tickets for her book tour sold for $350, such is the thirst for female leadership on the left.
The women who lined up outside the Warner Theater in Washington, D.C., to hear Harris speak last week were “a combination of naughty nostalgia and the MSNBC #Resistance (popular, wearing) blazer, jeans and Converse combo,” and bought campaign buttons that said “No Kings in America” and “Anti-Trump Grannies Club,” according to the Washington Post.
While her book Why Bill Maher called the film “Everyone Sucks But Me.” Through self-indulgence, she taps into the dominant narrative among liberal women: that they are too important, too uptight, and that the world exists to serve them — especially men, who should always be romantic, supportive, and cater to their every whim.
Left for Doug
One scene sums up the situation.
It’s Harris’ birthday on the campaign trail, She is looking forward to a “special evening” with her husband, Doug Emhoff, at a luxury hotel in Philadelphia.
“I was wondering what he had planned for the evening. The simple answer: nothing. Nothing.” It was her employees who ordered the cake and her friends who sent the flowers.
At least poor Doug gave her a gift: an expensive pearl necklace. But Harris noticed that the necklace was engraved with the date of their wedding anniversary, not her birthday.
She was very upset because he “reused” the gift instead of buying her a new one and went to soak in the bathtub.
But when I asked for a towel, Doug didn’t respond.
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He was watching the baseball game in another room and supposedly didn’t hear it. So I called his phone.
“His response: ‘What’s wrong?’ Really?! It was a bridge too far,” she wrote. “Then we got into it…it was one of those battles every couple has.”
Or not.
Later, Harris had her employee, Storm, hand Doug a stack of note cards and ask him to write apologetic notes “telling me how much he loved me” that would be placed on her hotel bed’s pillow for the remainder of the campaign.
Inflated opinions about self-worth are not a recipe for harmony in life or in politics.
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