Aug 30, 2024
Harris Shows BRILLIANT Restraint In Interview Question About Trump
Vice President Kamala Harris asked for the next question when Dana Bash brought up former president Donald Trump's questioning of her race.
- 12 minutes
I want to ask you about your opponent,
Donald Trump.
I was a little bit surprised.
People might be surprised to hear
that you have never interacted with him.
Met him face to face.
That's going to change soon.
But what I want to ask you about is
what he said last month.
[00:00:15]
He suggested that you happened to turn
black recently for political purposes,
questioning a core part of your identity.
Yeah.
- And he.
- Same old tired playbook.
Next question please. Yeah.
[00:00:31]
That's it. That's it.
That was from Democratic nominee
for president Kamala Harris's first
formal interview since Biden dropped out.
And she became the nominee, not dignifying
it in any way by stooping to his level,
which I do not think I could have done.
[00:00:48]
I'm curious your guys thoughts
in a moment,
but Trump, right after the interview,
simply posted on Truthsocial
the following bit of very high level
insight and and just a dissection
of what was going on in the in
[00:01:03]
the interview by posting this boring.
So, you know, really bringing it there.
More in a minute
about the the clip that caused this, but I
would love to get your guys thoughts.
That Trump tweet reminds me of what he did
during Kamala Harris's
[00:01:22]
acceptance speech at the DNC.
He wrote.
Yeah, but Tim Walz turns out to be
not a coach, but an assistant coach.
And I'm like, that's what you wanted
to post as a response to her speech
at the convention?
[00:01:37]
Fascinating. Okay.
But what I want to hear
what you think of that response first.
Hey, don't scroll away.
Come back, come back.
Because before the video continues,
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[00:01:52]
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I think it's brilliant in terms
of strategy and how to play this.
I recently read, Nate Silver's Substack,
his newsletter, where he talked about
[00:02:07]
Kamala is rejecting the failed strategy
of Hillary Clinton in 2016.
If you guys remember,
like every other word and utterance was,
we're shattering the glass ceiling
and I'm the first woman and blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah, and all of that
identity politics kind of stuff, which I
[00:02:25]
think is part of the calculation there.
But really, I think what she's doing
is the Obama playbook.
If people will remember, yes,
he is the first black president
of the United States of America.
But when he ran in oh eight,
he never explicitly talked about this.
[00:02:43]
He would do these feints right
where he's like singing amazing Grace
and he's, you know, sort of cadence
or he would borrow from, you know,
historical black church and that preacher
type of cadence, depending on his
audience, he would like play
certain music at his rallies but he never
[00:02:59]
really sort of cloaked himself in this.
I'm the first black president
because he didn't have to.
Like, you don't have to remind people
that you're a black woman
when you look like Kamala Harris.
And your name is Kamala.
Like, it's obvious what she's doing.
[00:03:16]
She's just she's just not playing
into this identity politics thing.
The truth of her identity is manifest.
She doesn't need to conk
people over the head with it.
And so when Donald Trump
does the race baiting, she doesn't take it
[00:03:31]
because she doesn't have to.
That's the thing about being black, right?
Like, as opposed to being, like,
Italian or Greek, like,
people might be like, yeah, he's white,
but like, which one is he?
Like when you're black?
People tend to know that you're black.
People tend to notice. Yeah.
[00:03:49]
Look, Ben, to answer your question,
I'm with was I.
You know, I've been saying all along
since Kamala Harris entered the race,
first side to play identity
politics loses and so and the Republicans
and Trump and Vance
have done nothing but identity politics.
Oh, she slept her way to the top.
Oh, she's not even black.
[00:04:07]
And it's just constant attacks
on her gender, her race, etc.
I think by not addressing it and not
playing identity politics, Kamala Harris
is definitely making the right decision.
So that way she's not asking people
to go out of their comfort zone.
[00:04:22]
Well, you could agree or disagree on
whether they should be in a comfort zone,
whether that's a morally correct or not.
But as a matter of political strategy,
she's saying, hey, I'm good.
I'm just like one of you guys, right?
Whereas Trump is screaming, no, I don't
like women, I don't like minorities.
And that's a definitely a losing strategy.
[00:04:39]
I hear that for sure.
And I do think it was very smart
to make herself more presidential
and above the fray in a moment like that.
I, I would have gone so much deeper
into a response being like,
and how dare he say that?
And I've been identifying this my whole
life and I would have gone much more.
[00:04:56]
So it's noble that she didn't.
But I wonder your your guys thoughts.
Should she have just like,
added another word in there
to frame it more aggressively
instead of saying same old tired playbook?
What if she said same old tired,
racist playbook?
Next question.
Or same old tired, race baiting question?
[00:05:14]
Next question.
Yeah, I wouldn't have done it because
the minute you say racist, it triggers.
- What about race.
- Baiting?
What about saying race baiting?
It's clearly what it is.
Even then, you know, look, here's
a super sad fact in my opinion, which is
that it's a funny sentence already.
[00:05:29]
Okay?
Which is that when you say, hey,
we should end racism or there is racism,
it triggers a certain number of people.
Now, it doesn't trigger me
because I don't think like, oh,
that's a statement about me because it's
not I'm not racist, I'm against racism.
[00:05:48]
So I never take it personally.
But a lot of Americans do.
And and that's an uncomfortable fact.
But they do.
So I don't want to trigger those people.
I want Trump to trigger our side
into voting against him.
[00:06:05]
Right.
And I want Trump
to trigger independents into going.
I don't like that guy. He's not one of us.
Right.
Whereas when you start getting into
saying like he's unfair to me,
I'm offended he's doing racism or it's
race baiting, it, it it makes some portion
[00:06:23]
of people feel like you're not them.
I wish that wasn't the case,
but I think it is.
- Was what do you think?
- Yeah.
I think if you're playing politics,
there's a way
that you can handle this question.
If you're Kamala in her position,
that kind of indicts the audience
[00:06:39]
and there's just no reason to do that.
Like trying to score some level
of racial morality points in an interview
doesn't work if like, again,
if this were like 1920 something before
color TV and all we had was the radio
[00:06:58]
or whatever it was, and she's giving
this interview on the radio.
I might maybe be saying something
different, but it's on TV. People can
look at Kamala Harris and the person
questioning her race just seems silly.
[00:07:14]
Like there's no reason for her
to engage it in some serious manner
and some scolding sort of manner
when you don't have to.
Like, I think the mistake
that Democrats have made in the past
is a contempt for the audience
and contempt for a certain amount
[00:07:33]
of the American electorate who isn't,
you know, didn't go to college, didn't
take these racial sensitivity ideas.
They haven't ingested them fully.
And so therefore they're not as,
let's face it, good as college people are
[00:07:50]
at toeing the race line, right?
But I think most Americans say, understand
that Kamala Harris is black and anybody
who questions that is being ridiculous.
And I give Kamala the credit
for not having to spoon feed
[00:08:08]
the American public the truth here.
- Like it's not that deep.
- Yeah.
Fair enough. Fair enough.
I think maybe then another thing
that she could consider going forward
is like setting more traps for him,
because it would be interesting
[00:08:23]
if she instead said, like,
I don't know what he's talking about,
but I do know that only recently did
Donald Trump start identifying as white
and just make him then go on TV and say,
I've always been proud of how white I am.
I'm very white and smart.
[00:08:39]
- That might be a better way to do it.
- Yeah.
Or like I heard, he's pretending
he's German or something like that,
or pretending he's not German.
So because that actually did happen.
His family pretended not to be German.
And so then Trump would
come out and go, I am German.
[00:08:56]
I'm proud to be German. Right?
I'm like, okay, brother, take it easy.
And and of course,
in case you don't remember
the initial clip that sparked this.
Harris was responding to Trump's race
baiting and just plain insane comments
that Harris only recently became black,
[00:09:13]
which, of course, he said
while speaking with the National
Association of Black Journalists.
Take a look at this pearl of wisdom
straight from the pigs mouth,
surrounded by lots of extra vitriol
towards his black interviewer.
ABC's Rachel Scott and more casual racism
thrown in all around it.
[00:09:29]
Do you believe that Vice President
Kamala Harris is only on the ticket
because she is a black woman?
Well, I can say no.
I think it's maybe a little bit different.
So I've known her a long time.
Indirectly, not directly, very much.
And she was always of Indian heritage and
she was only promoting Indian heritage.
[00:09:48]
I didn't know she was black
until a number of years ago
when she happened to turn black.
And now she wants to be known as black.
So I don't know.
Is she Indian or is she black?
She is always identified as a black woman.
- I respect.
- Either one.
I respect either one.
But she obviously doesn't
because she was Indian all the way.
[00:10:05]
And then all of a sudden
she made a turn and she went.
- She became a black person.
- Just to be clear.
- Sir, do you believe.
- That somebody should look into that too?
When you ask a continuant
a very hostile, nasty tone.
- It's a direct.
- Question.
Sir, do you believe that Vice
President Kamala Harris is a Di hire,
[00:10:22]
as some Republicans don't know?
I mean, I really don't know. Could be.
I mean, just in every way.
The guy can't be nice, can't play by any
sort of actual policy based politics,
can't ever brush aside an opportunity
for identity politics.
[00:10:37]
It's his bread and butter
and his famous someone should look into.
That is just the great way
to get people questioning things that are
obvious facts before your very eyes.
Yeah. Kamala Harris is definitely right.
Let him punch himself
into oblivion, right?
[00:10:53]
I mean, you can't do better than that
as a Kamala Harris ad, because if you
can't tell that Kamala Harris is black,
you probably shouldn't be president.
It's it's really that simple.
And I think Trump is showing
some slippage in his game in that clip.
[00:11:11]
Because if you're if you really paying
attention, what he's trying to do there
is attach Kamala to this idea
that I think has some credence
that she's a flip flopper.
She's Medicare for all and she's not.
She she wants to ban fracking,
not fracking.
[00:11:27]
Excuse me. Now she's all for it.
You know, she's
she's vacillating between her positions
on these issues all the time.
And if he were a more savvy candidate,
he could try
to effectively paint that picture
of Kamala being this and being that.
[00:11:45]
And it's true.
Like there's been times in her past
where she emphasized her Indian heritage
and other times
where she emphasized her black,
her her black American heritage, right.
Or Jamaican American heritage. Right?
Like a savvier person in Trump's position
could effectively communicate that,
[00:12:06]
but he just doesn't have it.
And so what we get instead
is just his sloppy way of saying,
you never know who Kamala is
or where she stands or what she believes,
and instead he's saying
that she's going black all the way now,
[00:12:22]
like he's he's slipping, y'all.
Yeah, but.
To be fair, once you go black,
you can't go back.
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Thank you.
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