BRILLIANT: Kamala Harris: Transportation Makes Sure “People Have The Ability To Get Where They Need To Go!”

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Vice President Kamala Harris and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg hosted a roundtable on Tuesday — the topic, transportation accessibility for Americans with disabilities. The Veep got the discussion started by making a cringe-y comment.

 

Watch the clip above.

Harris was roasted online for the comment, with many questioning her speaking abilities.

“Are the Biden people forcing her to come off dumber than he is?” Townhall columnist Derek Hunter wrote in a tweet.

 

“Kamala Harris gives voice to thought and then this nonsense comes out. She can’t be serious,” Republican communicator Steve Guest wrote.

 

“She’s a genius,” OutKick’s Tomi Lahren wrote.

 


9 COMMENTS

  1. Rebbitzen Emhoff is mamesh a tzadiekes. She bakes the challas for Doug. Then she lights the Shabbos candles.

    • You have to be a first-class idiot to believe that these “dumb as a doorknob” guys are President and VP of the US. “If it does NOT look like a duck, does NOT swims like a duck, and does NOT quacks like a duck, then it probably is NOT a duck.”

  2. You have to be a first-class idiot to believe that these “dumb as a doorknob” guys are President and VP of the US – EVEN if the media and Trump and other politician and trolls say so. “If it does NOT look like a duck, does NOT swims like a duck, and does NOT quacks like a duck, then it probably is NOT a duck.”

    There is a story told of Rabbi Yonason Eibeshutz, the Chief Rabbi of Prague 250 years ago and an extremely intelligent man who was famous for his debates with priests. The story goes that a priest once asked him, “Doesn’t it say in your Torah, ‘Acharei rabim l’hatos’ (Follow the majority)? And since we are the majority, why don’t you exchange your faith for ours?”

    But while the Rabbi and the priest were still walking in the street, the Rabbi stopped and stared at the sky in wonder. The priest asked him, “What are you looking for up there?” The Rabbi answered, “I see a partial solar eclipse right now!” The priest was embarrassed to admit that he didn’t see anything of the sort, so he made it seem like he, too, saw something in the sky.

    So now, passersby who saw the Rabbi and the priest standing in the street and looking up at the sky stopped to ask, “What are they looking at?” So the priest told them, “There’s a solar eclipse happening right now!” And so, all the people, one by one, started looking and convincing themselves that they, too, saw something different about the sun today.

    After a huge crowd had built up, all looking up and pointing at the sky, with each person saying to the next, “Look over there! You’ll see it!”, at that point, the Rabbi turned to the priest and said, “The truth is that I didn’t see anything.” The priest replied, “I also didn’t see anything, but I was embarrassed to admit the truth.”

    So the Rabbi said to him, “You see this huge crowd standing here acting as if it sees something that we both know is false? This is not the majority the Torah intended when it said, ‘Achrei rabim l’hatos (follow the majority).’”

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