When cornered, Harris turns to ‘word salad’ or untruths


After a recent CNN town hall held in Pennsylvania, some analysts, even Democrats, criticized Vice President Kamala Harris’ performance, accusing her of giving “word salad” responses to avoid direct answers. Harris’ responses to voter questions were sometimes lengthy and circular, occasionally lacking context or containing exaggerations.

In the video above, Straight Arrow News contributor Star Parker argues that Harris — a former prosecutor — doesn’t grasp the impact of her words and references a “reckless” 2021 remark involving the Border Patrol to illustrate her point. Parker also asserts that Harris’ previous comments about law enforcement have not only been proven false but also but “pose a risk of inflaming volatile situations.”


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The following is an excerpt from the above video:

In a town hall meeting in Malvern, Pennsylvania, Kamala Harris said most of her career has been spent as a prosecutor and as attorney general of California she was “acutely aware” of how much her words mattered. Really? Was Harris “acutely aware” of the power of her words when she slandered the Border Patrol with the false “whipping Haitian migrants” allegation? Instead of waiting for the Department of Homeland Security to investigate the situation, Vice President Harris compared the agents’ efforts to protect the border to tactics “used against African Americans during times of slavery.” 

Harris has never apologized to the Border Patrol agents for her reckless and inflammatory allegation even though that charge has been proven false. Was she “acutely aware” of the power of her words when she recklessly used the word “murder” to make false allegations against police officers regarding the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky? On Aug. 9, 2019, the fifth anniversary of Michael Brown’s death, Senator and presidential candidate Kamala Harris described Brown’s 2014 death as “murder” years after Obama Attorney General Eric Holder’s Justice Department had cleared the police officer of any wrongdoing.