cover of episode Harmeet Dhillon: The Shocking Origin Story of Kamala Harris and All the Crimes She’s Committed

Harmeet Dhillon: The Shocking Origin Story of Kamala Harris and All the Crimes She’s Committed

2024/10/11
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Harmeet Dhillon discusses her personal history with Kamala Harris and Harris's background, including her upbringing, education, and early career.
  • Harris's diverse educational background and travels
  • Her first time registering to vote at age 29
  • Her relationship with Willie Brown and its impact on her career

Shownotes Transcript

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Here's the episode. So you are roughly your Younger than come on here in the same generation. You're in a attorney y year from samosas o you first drain into commoner's is in two thousand three twenty one years ago.

You know everyone in her or a bit, you live in the same world. And so with less than a months ago, before the campaign, I thought to be interesting to hear the perspectives is someone who actually knows a lot about common heroes life. I don't see to be many of those. So thank you for doing this. Um who is come on here is exactly.

Well, you see the words come a and and, you know, nicknamed like that applied to her today? yes. And he really has been kind of a shape shifter throughout her entire career and existence. I have a call in some ways of survivor. You know he said number of different environments uh so are growing up in oakland to two university professors as a small kid.

And then after divorce, her mom took her and her sister my to canada where he went joy school and then started college there yeah and then SHE, you came as almost an adult to the united states and went to Howard university and sort immersed herself in that culture of the a predominant black uh college. And then he came to san Francesco where, uh he went to hastings in the tendering area of sanford. Cisco, so education is kind of traveled all over the united states, and we spent her high .

school years in canada.

Yeah, spent high school years in canada and you know, not in conferences. go. And so I think one of the interesting things that I found when looking at her background is the first time SHE registered to vote was at age twenty nine. So really, yeah, so many years after coming to the united states and during the year that SHE dated our former mayor and speaker, willie Brown, is the year that SHE registered. And so connecting the dots, that seems like that might be the time when he decided that politics is in her future because, you know, SHE began to create a voting record and and setting down where he .

had there is no record of her .

having registered to vote until he was almost thirty, which is, you know, I have needs and news ws, and I urge them to get educated and register to vote and and and get active. And so you know it's it's kind of an important thanks. So well after he became attorney, well after he became a process or SHE hadn't registered to vote.

What's seven years? Yeah, he was just, yeah, yeah and that's interesting because everyone has to vote, in my opinion, but because she's described herself repeatedly in public as a child activist. Yeah, he was basically in the march a motion SHE is single hindi desegregated the american south.

He was always freedom, you know, early on. And there was IT.

just for the record, there was no segregation. Yeah, I mean.

her mom was interviewed many years ago before he passed away and tells a story about how where they were growing up in in montreal, in the, in the apartment complex where they lived. Apparently children weren't allowed to play outside. So calm later is single handed. Ly protested this and organized and forced the apartment building to allow children to be able to play outdoors.

So SHE was annoying .

as a child. He was a SHE, was no activist as a child to find a mom. But then you didn't exercise the most basic form of united states citizen activism. M, by exercise the franchise until much later in life. And after he .

was a lawyer, how did he became a lawyer? Well.

SHE became a lawyer, went to you see hastings downtowns reference to go um did not pass the bar the first time he took IT did pass IT the second time around and got her first job after that as a prosecutor in alchemy account. So in alme account, SHE eventually specialized in child sex crimes so important uh job and according to research that was done by some of her opposition when he ran for district to turn y in two thousand and three SHE tried something like eight cases that they can prove there during her or so as um a prosecutor in all my accounting.

I like perspective on this is that a .

lot of it's very little uh for somebody who's claimed today in all of her public appearances a to have been lifelong law enforcement officer in prosecutor and when he ran for district attorney claim ed to have tried hundreds of cases, SHE actually, according to what i've been able to dig up and what her opposition dug up on her in two thousand and three, which SHE never refuted.

Two cases in san Francisco during the two years, if he worked at the da's office before quitting, and then planning her run against her boss. Eight, in the altimeter accounting district, her turn's office. So SHE basically held those two jobs as a prosecutor. Now terrans HEllen, let's setting the stage of my meeting, her and sanctions co. So 3, Frances go had a very progressive prosecutor, I think he was elected in two thousand and six sorry, ninety ninety six so .

name famous person.

famous guy. He was one of some brothers. Um my h departed husband start on the board of the um liberal pacific radio station with the other one of the other hand and brothers so you know they were kind of regulars in the left wing activist circles in san Francisco and HEllen promise to be a progressive prosecutor and you know he came on board and was a progressive prosecutor would you know serve soup with the soup kitchens and things like that kind of old school liberal and that said, he was tough on murder and tough on the serious crimes.

But there was the lower level drug dealers and so for the quality of life crimes that he was a little bit softer on but he recruit commonly Harris um hired her anyway um and SHE hired her out of the alchemy to accounting district attorney's office and um during that campaign in two thousand and three, he actually said that he did IT as a favor to the mayor of san Frances o Willy Brown um but there's a mixed record on that but he gave her chance to move from the job he was in which was sort of all me to accompany. Is not 3Frances go safran。 This goes the the big leagues where all the glamorous stuff happens in the bar, and where we had two united states senators from.

There are a lot of the top brass in california that's now infecting the united states came from kol from san Francisco county. So SHE was a step up to go to be a prosecutor in the big city there in santana go. So he got an opportunity to move over there.

And SHE was the head of the um um a criminal organizations, five person in IT uh after being there for a bit of time and so you know was five people. SHE was in charge but he was passed over for chief of staff, which is the number two position in the district attorneys office on two OK. And you know, soon as he got there, SHE began making her mark and setting her eyes on her political career. okay. So starting around age twenty nine, again, when he moved to 3Francisco, SHE started dating the mayor of san Francisco, Willy Brown.

And he was mayor .

while he was mayor, and he had been the speaker of the assembly, was maybe the most powerful machine politician in democrats politics. Willy Brown and john burton ran san Frances go. They had a political machine. And to win election in that town, their stamp of approval was necessary.

And they really had A, I mean, not a complete control, but they were the most formidable block to get had in 3Frances go。 So they kind of approved who got to be on the board supervisors who know really ran for all these different positions and canada patronage jobs in the city. And so um the fastest way to a send in politics, theirs to be tied to the court tails of a Willy Brown. And so you know he did that and I know .

more more than tied the details and I am .

leading SHE dated him yeah that's how he describes IT. He he is still married at the time and so he's ninety today, but he was married throughout this time that he was a together with her for two years. okay.

And so they were a society couple, and they went to all the Opera, az. Bella's black type anspach iry openly. And you, i've met really Brown several times, you know, this not disputed that he gave her start in politics, and almost certainly encourage to her he maybe SHE registered to vote.

That might be a good start um certainly how to move up in the ranks. And so one of the ways you do that, you get started with some lower level elective office. But even before that, a lot of our politicians in congress and in the senate, and you know, former president, seven lawyers, is a great step stone to a political career.

So, uh, getting a good record in the D. S. Office would have been a way to do that. So we know, hustled away into the destruction of chinese office and mediately began setting her sights on her power base so SHE developed relationships in the african american community um became friendly with amy's Brown, a notorious pastor, an activist in uh the baby hunters point district where is a large african american population there and you know it's one of the refer parts of time where the projects are a lot of the drug and gang violence was centered in that area.

So he tried to make that her patch and her theme was you know supposedly hard on crime but but not in an unfair, disproportionate way on the african american community. So as you know, during that time, the one thousand nine hundred ninety, there was a lot of discussion in our country about harsh drug laws and disproportionate impact on african americans. And so he kind of focused her efforts on that.

And that was her assignment was criminal organizations basically gangs okay, so he was a gangs, uh, and drug prosecutor, not a murder prosecutor, not a violent crime prosecutor. SHE never was that in her jobs before he became the district attorney. So um SHE wanted those jobs, uh, according to reporting at the time, he wanted to be moved up to the more serious responsibility lit ie. S of violent crime and murder prosecutor but he never was given that opportunity by terrans HEllen who I think reading between the lines began to suspect that he was he was gunning for his job pretty early on.

So after SHE was passed over a couple of times for the top uh lu tenant position in the district to turn is office, SHE quit, SHE quit and he went immediately sideways to the city attorneys office and some Francisco, which is also a prominent breeding ground for um some some excEllent judges i've been i've been in front of i've had been city attorney's a denis hera was the city attorney at the time and he held up for a very long time so he moved side ways after IT lesson two years at the director neys office to the city attorneys office where SHE put together a portfolio involving um child welfare and you know sort of juvenile offenders you know that sort of a thing again I will call IT a pretty fluffy portfolio but something that's designed to give her something to talk about if he runs for office. And so so for two or three years SHE spent her time there at the city attorneys office again, by the way, all on the you know public. employment. She's never had a job in the private sector ever, ever.

And so someone here has been living on tax pair money .

her entire entire, her entire career. That's correction, never had a private sector job. Now let me pause for a second. While he was doing some of these jobs, he actually was doing multiple jobs on paper because Willy Brown, one of the one of the um positions that you get access to when you're the speaker and then you pretty much continue to have a lot of access to over the years as the ability to appoint people to patronage jobs.

And so before I um you know I left the speaker's office, he was able to appoint her to a one of two commission. So he was on a taxpayer funded commission called the unemployment appeals board. And so you hear appeals of denials of unemployment benefits.

That's a cushy part time job which pays almost one hundred thousand dollar salary. You show up a couple of days in month. And then he also got her a point to a second of part time job, very part time, couple of days a month again, or something called like the memetic ical assistance commission, which was dealing with medical contracts and and appeals over that.

And so over the years that he was taking a salary as first analyst, ate account prosecutor, then a saran cisco county prosecutor, SHE earned an additional over four hundred thousand dollars over a five year period from these, uh, low show slash no show jobs. Uh, he also got A B M W U. As a gift. And so wilburn gave come on.

haris of bw, he gave A B M W. And he got .

these extra hundreds of thousands of dollars of jobs. And to give you some perspective, the salary of a prosecutor around that time was about a hundred thousand dollars. So he basically got double or triple about her colleagues were getting. So imagine the morale in the office when you are person sitting next to you, is also dating the mayor, and also is making hundreds of thousands of dollars more than you.

because getting a free .

and getting a free bmw. So he was marked out as privileged in her twenties and thirties, very early on. And that allowed her to leap over the career hurdles that those of us who work for a living in the private sector have to actually earn. Yeah right. And I think it's and you know she's she's had to face these criticisms over time and she's become very a glib and and good at deflecting. Yes, the criticism but is it's I don't think it's disputable that the uh, extra income and more importantly, the patronage that SHE enjoyed in her twenties and early thirties made her the person whose, you know the vice present united states today and seeking the top job not merit but influence peddling and using her female lies and just all the sleeze and .

corruption that inevitably arises in a one party state like california.

Um you know multiplied by a hundred when you're dating the most you powerful person there and even after he broke up with him, uh as the story goes because SHE realized that he was never going to make her a wife, um SHE continued that strong relationship into the stage. Willy Brown is endorsed her and you know out there helping her raise money um and so he had broken up with him by the time he ran for district torney but he was instrumental in helping her raise hundreds of thousands of dollars and eventually .

winning in in that Billy Brown has a reputation for last sixty years for a corruption um I not alleging a specific crime. He was a jail house lawyer for years representing radical of various kins um but he he has reputation for corruption .

of absolutely even specifically in this just for attorney race. So i'll i'll break that down for you so terrence, henan was a mixed back. He was the district torney for you know, the one who calmly Harris replaced.

And so but he was tough on corruption. Okay, so there was some corruption of the police department. In 3 ference ces go, the S F, P D. Had a scandal call for heated gate. Where are some cops gotten? Do a beef uh, with some street vendors over some fait does was kind of a silly begetting of the story but the end of that story is that terrence Helen and brought charges against the a police chief, his deputy and some other cops involved in this scandal okay, well, um really Brown and like this, you know he had put all these people basically basically everybody in the top jobs and safeties go out at in some way willie Brown.

And so willie Brown was able to get stuff done in the city as a lobbyist and as a fixture and particularly for the real estate industry by controlling a lot of the elected officials and the law enforcement in some Frances co um there were corruption investigations that terrence Helen and was looking at regarding some of this power structure in safran ceco. And so by replacing terrans HEllen willie Brown through his agent of commonly, Harris was able to put him in to some of these investigations. These investigations were quietly dropped, the fahey gate thing quietly went away, the case collapsed, and the police who were accused of wrong doing, we're never held accountable.

But because of that investigation and indictments that were bright by a terrence Helen, and you know, that began some friction, that continues in friction. The police rules are frustrated at hens failure to take drug dealers off the streets. So Willy Brown, through that, didn't of getting his former mistress the D A job by helping her raise money, getting her key endorsements from the socialists, the getting family and all the top families and saffron cisco who backed her, uh, the founder of north face and getting .

family be the patrons of Gavin newsome, the governor Gavin newsome .

patrons and the patrons. I think there's supporters of common here and others. We've supported every major democrats elite, uh, in california.

And so, you know, their pacific heights establishment. no. bless.

S. R. neither. absolutely. And so find reader .

is glittering events, black tie events, patrons of the arts. And these are the folks, these are the circles that calmo heros moved in through Willy Browns assistance. And so so willie Brown was was able to put an end to pesky investigations into corruption in safe Francesco and misconduct by the police department by getting commonly Harris installed over whether so everything became smooth again when he became uh the destruct attorney and stayed that way under control for many years as well. He was a desert attorney until he ran for attorney general.

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During this period, how does he pronounce her first name? And I asked, because she's on video pronouncing IT, mila and camera two different ways.

So I remember her putting the emphasis on the second silver. So IT was like koala. Koala was how he pronounced IT comma camera is actually how indian indians pronounce IT. Uh, the name derives from the word for lotus and sons groth, which is coal. So, yeah and so you know that is how you supposed .

to me it's .

a conventional name, absolutely. And it's it's a Brown. She's she's from a Brown family, her mother Brown, and so a high cast background.

I thought he was impressed.

She's a shape shifter, like I said. So although, you know, I saw an explanation in one of these liberal publications trying to explain how throughout the most of her career she's passed as african american and not mixed race, because, of course, not until tiger woods became prominent did people pass out their differences in their racing background.

So IT was, IT was suggested that he had to pick one or the other early in her career, and she's largely identified as african american. And so SHE really focused on the african american community. And sa Frances go SHE identified .

as SHE live in a black neighborhood.

SHE live in SHE did not live in her SHE lived in a nice to in the south and in the yes.

SHE was not focused on the office.

He was focused on the african american community. Now i've read just about everything that's very written about and um back in that time period, willie Brown actually got one of his political clients and patrons to rent her her campaign headquarters in baby hunters point not where he lived and not where the course houses but he had her campaign headquarters in that african american neighborhood at well below market rent.

From a connection of the .

SHE is without .

um it's not controversial to say because it's factually it's provable SHE is pronounce her own first name at least two different ways I think three, four different ways, three four different ways. So if we can just like consider for a moment how weird that is. You have a non Angelo first name, you hurry.

That's right.

Indian .

named, I said it's been .

pronounced consistently .

since childhood. It's name E I pretto be different things over the.

but how have you ever met anyone whose pronounced hazor her own first name? Different ways over I.

I really have them. And that was striking to me when SHE was running for the district attorneys when I first met her. And I, I was new to safran ces, go.

I just moved to safety. Ces, going two thousand and three. I had been, I came to california two thousand, and I during the dot com boom, and I went down to silicon valley.

I placed law there, and then I moved to differences in two thousand and three. I was a new to town. So friend from the south asian bar association who'd practiced with her in the D.

S. Office analytic account was no helping her with her da runs. So I went to this fundraiser. I was a new to town and you know, kala Harris walks into the fund raiser. IT was all indian americans at this particular fundraiser.

And so SHE was, uh, you he was all business, no nonsense, strides into the room wearing a designer outfit well beyond her means as a district attorney, assistant district torney at that time, city attorney, an employee um like foreign als um you know strides confidently into the room and begins telling us why she's going to be the Better candidate than terrence HEllen who was running for reelection and I recall from that meeting you know she's really focused on process SHE didn't really have a policy difference with terrence sand SHE is also always paying to yourself as a progressive but tough on crime but progressive prosecutor okay. So um SHE talked a lot about how the computers and the district to turn his office were outdated and you we really needed to professionalize the office. Mean, who can argue with that right? Course, the district, turney, the office in a major american city should have up to date computers.

And then I had them in my law firm, the practice and so that sounded good and you know, SHE also criticize Helen on for being soft on crime, which in retrospect is not fair because he had a much worse record than him in uh, prosecuting violent crime. But i'll get to that but you know, SHE really portray her self as just being the Younger, more compete liberal but tough on crime prosecutor and so he was planning to prosecute marijuana and drug of fences. He was planning to prosecute you know, these quality of live crimes that Helen and allegedly wasn't prosecuting and so that was a selling point um in this in this funded raiser about when I saw her in other settings. You know SHE didn't identify with the indian american community at all and so I saw her in south asian bar association events after he became the district attorney otherwise and so when SHE came into an event where there were indian americans there, like associations, lawyers, SHE was all, you know, numa stay and you know, all of that. But you never saw .

that outside that setting, right?

didn't. In another point, I would have .

been hilarious.

So that fake. And I I immediately saw that when I saw on more than one setting that this woman is just pandering whoever in front of her, which is, of course, i've been around a lot of politicians over the years. That's a common theme in politics, right? But the extent to issue is willing just adopt an abandoned persona .

Prices too. I mean, you know, of course, every politician, penner, I think people pander to each other. All is very common and very human. But when caught, you know, you don't scream .

at the .

other person and call that personal racist for noticing, which is exactly her response. I mean, trump made that point is totally fair point. I thought SHE was india. Now she's black. Well, sounds like he had reason to say that shut up Price.

absolutely. Or let me pick up on that for a second. So it's been really striking in this campaign for president and even when SHE around for president and twenty and twenty and twenty, how she's very self righteous about being in the enforcement and you know a top cop p and a border cop and just like this law enforcement icon.

But SHE actually began her career in politics by breaking the law on multiple occasions, and so this dates back even to before he ran for the district attorney position in two thousand. Willy Brown asked her to take a break from her job at the city atterley office, take a little leave of absence and do some work for ams. Brown, this notorious pastor who was running for the election for the board of supervisors, and aias Brown was representing that african american community.

And he was one of, we live on people, right? And so he had no background in politics or anything. But you know, he thought, well, this is a good way for you'll learn the ropes of how a campaign is wrong.

And IT is a good way. Volunteering for a campaign is a good way to do that. SHE wasn't volunteer though. That's the key point. SHE was paid as a political consultation by amy's Browns campaign but he never registered under city law, which requires all political consultants who are paid by campaign more than a thousand dollars to register and so um SHE was paid think almost ten thousand dollars during this time he worked there. SHE never registered.

SHE was called out on IT and SHE scared, he explained SHE didn't know the rules and you know, SHE SHE hadn't really intended anything. And so I think of fine or some penalty was paid at that point and that was the beginning of simply giving the middle finger to the law. Michaela hairs SHE created SHE SHE got herself and boiled in a much bigger scandal when he ran for district attorney.

So in san france this go, like many of our liberal cities in california, there's there's campaign finance matching funds that are available. But there's also a benefit that you get a few agreed of voluntarily ily cap your raising in spending at the time for mayor, I I think IT was a little bit higher. But for district tourney, a mayor might have been the same.

IT was two hundred and eleven thousand dollars. So if you agreed to cap, you're raising in spending at two hundred and eleven thousand dollars in two thousand and three. You got a statement published in the voter guide that male to all the almost half a million voters and suffrance ces co.

Registered voters saying that you'd voluntarily agreed to confine yourself to that spending cap. So it's like a level playing field and it's a little bit of a gold star that you are agreeing not to engage in corruption, wasteful spending, chronister by raising money from all kinds of unknown sources. So SHE agreed to that.

He felt a piece of paper. SHE signed on a penalty of prod racing. I haris agreed to this voluntary spending limit. The other most of the other candidates in the race and candidates for mayor during that race, they also agreed to that spending limit. Okay, so most of the candidates running for office and california ferens go rather agree to that spending limit.

Well, IT turns out that calm a heros who, by the way, started out in this campaign third behind her boss, terrence henan, who was in the lead, and then, uh, a guy named victoza who was former prosecutor than defense, a channel who was um gonna the hard on crime guy. He was eventually endorsed by the republicans in san Frances o so he was third. SHE was the underdog.

And so SHE quickly was she's getting no traction at first. So SHE realized he was in a half to really supercharge her spending. Will the Brown helped her with this? Will the Brown also helped raise money for independent expenditure to support her as well? So um it's a funny story but you know one of her one of her campaign themes was that he was going to be tough on drugs, tough on marijuana.

Back in two thousand and three, marijuana wasn't the recreational use of marijuana was not legal in california and so he was in be tough on pot. So apparently some pot activists who didn't like this, you know they were pouring over the campaign finance records and its a pod activist to realize that combat haris had raised over three hundred thousand dollars and had spent over hundred thousand dollars. So this person went and let the other campaigns know they filed and if this complaint against her and um at the end of the election SHE had spent over six hundred thousand dollars so triple the amount that he was allowed.

But thanks to hiring a good lawyer uh and making the excuse that oh the form changed, I didn't really understand the meaning of this. So please lift the cap SHE got the san franco ethics commissioned, by the way, many of those. People on the ethics commission owed their positions to Willy Brown SHE got them to look the other way on this growth violation. It's a crime, by the way.

I could he could have been prosecuted for a mister miner, uh, had he been properly held accountable for this significant campaign finance violation and anybody else would have, but the ethics commission simply lifted the cap, which is not in the statute so instead of disqualifying her, which would have been the Normal punishment, uh, and prosecuting her, SHE simply got away with that so in her, his first race for elected office, SHE ignored the campaign finance limits. SHE used corrupt patronage from her former lover to raise the money necessary to do the glassy. As i've got several examples here, SHE did more mailers, and all of the other canada SHE had independent expenditure on her behalf and SHE simply was able to outspend and blow .

through the I got an add from her the two thousand I .

have a lot of this material here from two thousand and two thousand and three and so this is um all the people who endorsed turn. This is all the main political machine there in safran ces go now one of those guys is in jail for is a former state senator, leland e. He was later invited .

for the r Williams .

of Williams and .

kids involved, jim Jones, but maybe rem there's .

a lot of blast from the past over there because SHE raised so much money, he was able to send multiple of this in a big glassy mailers.

Um she's today's 的 voice for justice .

yeah today's voice for justice。 Common haris registry attorney and air and passion Fiona mall you know some of the shade st politicians in california are here on her endorsement. St, of course, really Brown.

Um SHE was, you know, SHE checked all the boxes to get the gay community on board at the asian community on board. You know, SHE really put the coalition together, thanks to the mentorship SHE enjoyed. Here is assembly men.

Mark leo, no one is Better prepared to lead our district attorney's office in this new era than commonly. hair. Well, they're actually almost every prosecutor in that office was Better prepared terrans Helen, and was Better prepared to vicari.

I was Better prepared so by simply outspending and violating the campaign finance cap he was able to um to win this election SHE SHE got IT into the run off and then SHE was able to win in the runoff against her boss. So IT was a pretty incredible upset. This is another one of her glossy glossy mayors, glossy mayor's so um she's a veteran prosecutor.

Thirteen years of courtroom experience in a ninety percent conviction rate. SHE actually only been a prosecutor for ten years and her conviction rate, I mean you can manipulate any statistics you want by simply changing the numerator and the dome intor. Uh and so you know it's pretty incredible that the birth of this meteorite career comes out of multiple campaign finance violations.

Um so SHE won SHE .

won that race. I mean one of the maillard from the other side is a mailer from the um from the tenants union which was supporting cma herr's sorry sorry supporting terrence HEllen and they pointed out that he had committed another violation and that is solicitating money from landlords um who he was supposed to be regulating in her job at the city attorneys office。

So one of her jobs in the city attorneys office involved sort of the wealth fair of people who were on public assistance and that I included people in um the S R O single residents housing and section ate housing. I mean it's it's a lot of our residents are public assistance and live in this kind of housing and so SHE happily took tens of thousands of dollars from slum lords who SHE was supposed be regulating in this campaign and the tenants union. Um there a there's a mailer in here I have somewhere that talks about her taking money from the roach motels and they we're able to put .

that one mailer out. But IT ended .

up not not convinced .

more about the future and possibly feeling a little anxious about IT. So what can you do to secure your future? Well, probably a lot of things, but maybe one of the first, and this is not glamorous, but get some life insurance.

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But why is sale before the black friday sale? Bell tire, you said a tire man always doing right by our customers is just another way we are changing tires. Bell tire. So talker, I mentioned to you that um SHE blewed through those campaign finance limits yeah and um SHE was given a past if SHE issued corrective apology and disclosures to the public so how SHE did that was he had a um a door hanger and those of us were involved in politics, you know, you go to walk doors, you knock on the doors and you hang a door hanger with your material.

So SHE replaced her door hanger with this uh kala Harris fold a door hanger and then in the tiny st possible print would you like? I'll put mine on, let me show you. I mean, due to an area by the commonly Harris campaign, the voter information camping light indicates that the campaign as a voluntary limit campaign spending.

This is incorrect. We take responsibility for this error. Now this is printed on the top of this hanger, so you hang IT on the door and no way Normal, the Normal wage slave coming home from their actual job where they worked to know a full day, unlike commodate irs, would go and let people .

who not .

get people know, those of us taxpayers who have private sector jobs. You come home, and the first thing you do with this annoying piece of crap is turned off, right? So this is the part that would fall to the ground when you tear r IT off and maybe clutch your mae and taken and nobody read this like three point disclosure on this thing and so because her patronize boyfriend had fixed IT for her SHE got away with this.

Nobody else would be able to get to IT away with this today I can guarantee you um and so no shame and that's how you got to start in politics by by breaking the rules and so I mention to you these no show as well. He had the lowest attendance record of any of the attendees of these two commissions either so on top of having a job or SHE got paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to do very little SHE didn't even show up and do that. But there's one more fact about this. You in the city attorneys office, they had to keep time sheet. Now, you know a lot of lawyers, you you've gotten bills from lawyers.

Yes, I we built .

by the hour yeah supposed to record our time intense seven hour OK 啊。 So in the city eternals office you recorded your time that way.

And so someone in one of these various campaign she's been in over the years did a public react request for these hours and her predecessor in her job at the city attorneys office was um a now um uh I think retired or sam retired judge uh Katherine fine stein, the daughter of Diana instead the former a united states senator so fine stein had the job and then coma haris had the job. So if you compare their hours, you see that commonly, herr's, I think, worked one day over eight hours. And all the three years, if SHE worked there, dian finance, dan's daughter, regularly worked. Long, Normal lawyer.

worked one day over eight hours in how long?

Three years? Yeah like yeah and there were a number of days where he had block eight hours phone calls, research something eight hours. So SHE didn't work full days in that job.

That's that's what any supervisor i'm a supervisor about two twenty five lawyers. If I saw time sheet like that, I would call that person and to put them on probation because they clearly aren't working a full days worth of work. They're block billing.

They are putting down time. They're doing a lot of adman time, days and days of add time, meaning I didn't work that day, I read the newspaper, I did continuing legal education, I did some background research. SHE did not work those full days. So that's that's what any supervising lawyer being honest would tell you.

So that's pretty striking because as IT is your you know only expected to work you know sort of ninety five, unlike those of us who are you know working in the private sector, working much harder to make a living and keep our jobs yeah there is no such accountability and the jobs that she's held. And so when SHE ran for da SHE claimed i've tried hundreds and hundreds of serious felony cases and SHE got butted by the tenants union and actually you have tried ten cases and um then he had a sort of over the years on that maybe SHE was affiliated with hundreds of cases. SHE didn't actually try them. And look, as you get more senior as a lawyer, you don't try every case I get IT. But in those early years of your career for your building yourself as a top cop and a top prosecutor, um Normally people do, but that is not come Harris you have an .

excEllent memory um well in general but for this period twenty years ago um and you around common Harris living in that world matter all that when you see come on here is now does he seem like the same person to you?

So this is interesting talker. I got the impression from the first time I met come herr's when SHE throwed into my friends apartment in that small fundraiser of an extremely confident, confident, articulate person.

Now, yes, I don't think she's a great lawyer, and I think she's hardly had much quarter experience, but SHE exuded competence and confidence, and the commonly heroes you saw as vice present in the united states seems to be a completely different person in articulate, lacking confidence. Almost like days, they are medicated in some way. And I don't know that. Of course, i'm just telling you that impression of somebody extremely confident and confident and able to talk about their record, their recent record, even falsely, with a degree of confidence. Simba vado, there is a couple of dynamics there. First of all, I think the record that she's been running on his way in the past and so it's become part of her own personal hideo graphs that she's uh this brilliant, accomplished, stunning you top cop who people criminals quake in their boots to see her that's not true but you know it's she's adopted IT but it's also way in the past but secondly, IT feels like she's not able to articulate herself there seems to be fail of inability to string together complete and coherent sense afraid to .

me in shot in the opening moments of her debate with trump. Er I thought that he did well ah as the debate continue but in the opening moments it's worth looking at the tape again. You see her eyes. This one is terrified there.

Maybe it's in posture syndrome. I don't know what IT is playing well, imposture sydney, as somebody who is successful, has reached certain levels of at least outward appearance as a success. Maya is plagued myself. Doubt that maybe I don't belong here.

What am I doing here? poor.

How do I find myself here like a bad dream, like those dreams we all have before the exam that you know.

you go out and you haven't studied and it's .

pya as your pyjama as or whatever. And so but IT isn't one IT can happen to any about something we offer.

Sometimes in tense situations we've all seen her on the national and international stage doing increasingly incoherent words, salad statements um we've just seen the incident with sixty minutes substituting a completely incoherent answer that he gave to a question with something else that he did in another part of the interview or maybe even taped afterwards. Who knows? I have no idea how sixty .

minutes came up with that.

but sixty minutes has been caught blindly fixing her in here for her. And you know, that has been the case with the mainstream media. I think this is a theme throughout her career dating back to that two thousand and two thousand and three is SHE gotten her leg up in life by, uh, shortcuts, not by meritocracy.

And then SHE finds herself in a position that is beyond her capabilities. And then he asked to lie and exaggerate to maintain that position and get to the next level, but with the assistance of the democratic machine in california. SHE to be fair to her, she's not the only person. I mean Gavin newson is another example of somebody who has faked his way to the top um hobby er bara who's in the cabinet today, is a guy who had basically one year of legal experience before he became the attorney general of california and so california's machine has produced a number of underqualified and over a confident does but this person is seeking the top job of the united states was was an exaggerated record with a tattered history of sorted uh the ways that he got to where he is of numerous legal violations that could have resulted in criminal prosecution. Just the campaign finance violations alone and so no, I can understand why somebody might have an impostor in rome, and that's .

their history. Sad thing is, california used to be famous for producing things from the world's best egg to ero space to great movies. And now it's like filed late rail projects in common, Harrison, ga.

Newsome and glide ting gas lighting the voters on so many level. So I mean, haris promised to france go voters to get elected, that he was going to be tough on crime. The murder rate skyrocket during her years as a desert attorney.

And why did that happen? Well, gangs in the whole bear, they do talk which other? I was talking to a prosecutor in her office, uh, a couple of days ago in preparation for our interview.

And this this prosecutor said, how me these criminals, you may think older, like, you know, criminals are on the margins of society. They are sub human. No, they're very smart.

They communicate with each other. They know that if you are doing um certain crimes and safran cisco, you're gonna get a pass. If you are doing drunk driving and safety ces go, you are going to get a pastor in coma.

Haris ten year uh if you did IT an alami account, cemetary county, marin county, you would get prosecuted. So guess what? The criminals came to and Francisco to do their drug dealing, to do their uh brains, their hot proud burglaries, their low level offences. Commonly, Harris was notorious for being hard on gn position by legal taxpayers, but extremely lenient to the point of multiple criminals who possessed guns committing murders after he left them off for the slap on the rest or no punishment at all. So there was a double standard there in her prosecution.

And that's a theme throughout the state where you they've legalize, stealing and steal from stores and tell no one can do something about IT. But any store owner who tries to defend themselves against violence or homeowner who tries the same will be prosecuted. That's right.

why? What is that impulse? That tree? Where does that come from?

Well, there's two aspects of at first of all, it's treating the successful people in society as criminals and putting them in a box. I mean, i'm a legal gun owner um and you know the scrutiny have to jump through to get a gun legally and california is incredible a but if you some are an illegal alien, you get a free pass for a sanctuary. We were a sanctuary city before we were a sanctuary. So commonly heros has long been in the camp of protecting those folks by simply looking the .

other way um breaking .

the breaking law.

And how is that not interaction, by the way? I mean.

I think it's look, you know the criminals have guns and they get away with that. But how is IT not I mean.

she's always running around calling all the j six of the diabetic grandmothers linguists ing in prison interaction ist but how was IT not in interaction against the united states of amErica to allow foreigner in your in your state against federal law? Well, I completely agree.

I think it's even worse than that. There was an interesting situation where, uh, a criminal committed a crime in some Francesco while he was a district attorney, and that criminal was free to commit that crime because SHE had pushed for that criminal to be part of a program of rehabilitation.

So there is a rehabilitation programme if you did some job training as someone arrested for a serious crime, you could avoid prison time well, and illegal alien is not entitled to hold a job. So san Francesco taxpayers, california taxpayers under commoner heras leadership, were paying for jobs training for illegal alien criminals to get out of their criminal sentences. And then they weren't even eligible to go on to hold those jobs. So one of those people, uh, committed a serious violent crime shattering the skull of a taxpayer and safran cisco. And he was able to do that because combo haris signed them up for jobs training when he isn't illegally allowed under you.

Why you want that? I mean, you clearly trying to overthrow the society.

You know, you're pandering to a particular element of society. I think eventually democrats have wanted to illegalities all of the illegal alien in the country. That's not a secret now.

They tried to lie about in the past, but today that's a campaign promise of hers that he wants to legalize all these illegal aliens in the country and get their votes. So it's a long term vote, uh, recruitment program by these folks. But look, you can't forget .

the detail over the states .

government .

and system and destroy democracy and invalidating our founding documents are core freedoms. I mean, that all loser, all species of interaction, that would seem to me SHE sounds like a criminal.

Well, she's broken a lot of laws over the year, just in the White collar of laws, but she's enabled hundreds, if not thousands, of criminals to go on to commit violent crimes and even even fatalities. Police officers in san Frances who who lost their lives because carmilla herr's was soft on the criminals who went on to kill them as one of their dozens of offences.

There's a long trail of victims in san Francisco and now california who have suffered because of commonly haris soft on crime policies. And she's lied about IT and gotten away with IT. And it's kind of incredible that someone who failed to increase the murdering by many percentage points who who prosecuted almost no violent crimes in saffron cisco during the many years he was a district attorney SHE SHE failed up to becoming the attorney general where he went on to violate the rights of criminal defendants on a much more massive scale. Um but even before that uh talker, what are the interesting incidents is in the last two years of her uh race of her ten years as distractor ney SHE was embroiled in a major scandal involving the systematic violation of criminal defendants rights and in safran is go in the drug lab there was a drug technician who was supposed to test the drugs and um this person was sampling the drugs, taking them home and sapling them and also making numerous areas this was an open secret in the district journeys office so after you know people mentioned IT in numerous case ions, judges chastise the district attorney's office.

Eventually a top manager in the office scenic cover your s email two common a haris saying, hey, by the way, I think the the head of this uh drug lab section is actually taking drugs and regularly violation protocols in handling evidence common areas instead of doing her immediate duty as a district attorney to inform all defense counselling all the cases in which this lab and had handled the drugs for testing SHE SAT on IT for a period of three months and IT only came out um not through come Harris disclosed sing and so the judge in that case, uh, Christine mozilo, exported the district torney office now by this time commonly heroes in the district attorney for six years. In the six years he was a district turny SHE created no protocol for disclosing to defenced council this what's called a brady violation of violation, which is so massive that you have to disclose to the other side that there's going to do potential due process violation that could be a sculptor, ory. So SHE got in trouble for that.

He went on after that two years later, to become the attorney general of california. So there's literally no accountability for, by some accounts, fourteen hundred cases, either convictions or pending cases, had to be dismissal in safety ces go. Because of this due process, violation of the rights of the accused, I personally litigated a case against calla Harris myself and I saw the same pattern, so I had an important civil rights case involving a sick applicant for a prison guard job in the um in the prison department in segmental county.

Come Harris was the attack. Y general, when this case went to trial, was getting prepared for trial, and I had won this case administrative level, so I was able to prove that an administrative hearing for state employees, the civil rights of my client, had been violated because he was denied a job with the prison department because of his articles of faith. He had a beard, had a turban.

And under, uh, federal equal employment law and state law as well, you are you know the state has to accommodate that. They had to offer him the opportunity to take a different gas mask test, improve that he could do the job well. I want that case of the administrative level, which should have been a slam dunk for the state to agree that he should have this job, will commonly haris fought that that decision all the way to eve of trial.

And I remember, uh, you know, getting the united states, the problem of justice involved in this case. And I was only after the united states to problem of justice opened up a civil rights investigation from the office of civil rights into the state corrections department, and how the state was handling this particular case, and after I got a national coalition of civil rights organizations, ranging all the way from the american civil liberty's union to the becket fund, a conservative organza. So a whole panic of almost thirty sillar rights organizations, only when I had a master press conference on this issue did come.

Haris, four years into this case, finally agree to settle the case. So, you know, and why would why would you do that? Well, um the prison guard union IT turns out only wanted accommodations for certain people, but not others, and they didn't want this newcomer coming into their ranks.

So those are great violation of my client civil rights. But I finally won, but only after exerting outside pressure. And this has been her pattern.

Typically she's only willing to back down, not because she's wrong, but who she's embarrassed or confronted publicly. And even then, she's had such a entire career of faking her way to the top that there is just no shame there. And you know, she's willing to continue to line how .

he got to be attorney general of this state, california, after fAiling as a prosecutor for sam scope cani.

Well, again, it's the machine politics of california. You mention Gavin newsom. You know, at the same time, there was consideration of whether comparison might run for a governor.

And basically in the Opera loans of democrats politics in california, these things are all worked out in advance. You multiple people might want the job, but I can guarantee you that happening right now. In the case of Nancy polo, you are reaching the end of her career at some point of her, you know, little little naturally expire.

But a lot of joking like that, you know which constituency is are going to be gay, is are going to be asian, is are going to be black? Who's going to get the Price? So it's kind of like that. So so that's .

all that matters.

All that matters as identity politics so you know at that point time um SHE was a district turn and SHE could have run for multiple different offices. Senate wasn't open at the time, so SHE ran for the torney general position. Uh and so despite this massive and I could go on for hours, I have a doc of horrific instances of gross civil rights and human rights violations that occurred on her watch.

SHE had the resume and SHE had the powerful backing. And SHE checked the boxes of identity politics, first woman, first african american, first indian american so SHE checked those boxes SHE ran now SHE ran against a highly competent season um district attorney of los Angeles county Steve cooly, who I consider a friend and who's been a fellow warrior in the poor life movement with me. Steve cooley ran the strongest campaign that year of older campaigns and um he narrowly lost by just a handful of votes he was winning on election night.

This is a familiar story to um people who've been watching elections recently. He was winning on election night. And then in california, we don't have election day.

We have election two months. People are able to vote for thirty days before the election, and then they have thirty days to count the vote. Florida, by the way, they typically, and out the results of an election on election night, like in civilized countries. But in california, we don't do that.

so just makes you to cheat IT here.

to cheat the percent. So SHE want extremely nearly, I think IT was like two thousand votes statewide. And in a state of forty million people, SHE won extremely early. And he won weeks into the election, counting about counting.

I think we can maybe prove we can assume cheating.

You know, that was certainly suggested. I I can't prove IT today, but I can say that when you're talking about a single party state machine politics, differential application of safeguards on how votes are counted, like some counties match the signatures, some counties don't bother to do that even though that's required under the law. Um some counties uh look the other way on our regularities on things like is the validated some don't um some counties los Angeles county is a prime example, have over a million voters on the voter roles at that time who were not entitled to be on the rules dead having moved multiple ways over a .

million and twenty .

seventeen uh after a lawsuit by judicial watch in los Angeles county showed that in los Angeles county alone there were over a million people on the roles who should have been removed and they entered into a settlement and I think four years later, they still had to remove those people from the voter roles. And so when you have state, you add you add code to that for four years after twenty seventeen is is covered and you start having all male voting because of covered. Suddenly there are a million extra mal.

not the a kind of male, but M A male ballot voting .

because all male voting .

would would not allow me here to that's correct.

That's correct. So so in in our system they are in california, which by the way has now become the national system by default because crazy california politicians are now running the country in many ways or seeking around the country. Um it's a very dangerous situation for election integrity and the person seeking the top job in the united states got her start with campaign and election violations, got away with IT, has one elections while getting away with IT and is now seeking that top job so if anyone thinks that he would calm um or have any second thoughts about violating the law to get what he wants, she's done IT many times in her career.

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What kind of attorney general was SHE?

Well, he had a couple of big flash cases involving so called consumer protection, but civil rights organizations criticized her for repeatedly violating the rights of the accused. Um there are several instances of actual innocence claims by convicted violence who claim that IT was a case of false identity or otherwise and her attorney generals office regally took the position that on a technical, for example, that someone had failed to raise this claim in a timely manner because they are an uneducated criminal, they should lose the right to prove their innocence claim. SHE won on some of these and SHE lost on some of these.

Um we had prison overcrowding lawsuits in california during the time that he was the atterley general and federal judges ordered california to release lower level criminals from prison due to prison overcrowding. Comella Harris was uh nearly held in contempt of court for fAiling to do this and the reason that her office gave under her direction for not a being a federal court order to sustain the civil rights of these inmates was because california has a lot of wildfires and prison inmates are used as cheap labor to fight those fires and who's going to fight the fires if we don't have the free or cheap labor of the prisoners to be able to do that? I mean, it's the kinda who is going to pick the cotton if we free the slaves. And that's an argument made by our attorney general come later is and there are ten of .

millions of illegal aliens in california. You wouldn't think they would have a labor problem.

no. But you know that's that's a whole other, uh, that's a whole other argument there. I mean, I think they are left to systematically counting on the votes of people aren't entitled to vote in multiple different ways in order try to win this coming election.

I mean, they have gone to court repeatedly, uh, the mark lias through the democrat machine that como heroes now enjoying the full support of to block voter ID laws. It's illegal in california as for voter ID and this is after some jurisdictions try to pass at a local level huntington beach um voter ID requirements when you registered to vote when you vote. And um so the left in this country wants to make IT illegal to ask for ID and just about every other and every other ways I mean resist to check and to a hotel. Last night I just show my ID, of course, to do anything.

So if you don't have to produce A I D to vote to choose the government, why do you need to produce one to buy a firearm?

indeed. Right.

right indeed. So um SHE seemed to have just watching having flood in myself california decades ago, just watching this on the news. But he seemed to have um special animals toward pro life people.

Yes, thank you for raising that. So I represent David delighted, who is one of the most courageous Young americans. I've had the privilege to represent my thirty one years of practicing law. David went undercover ing a long form undercover investigation, spending years post as a purchaser of fetal tissue in order to expose plant parent hood and national abortion federation systematic violation of federal law. It's illegal in the united states, as IT should be in every civilized place to buy.

Future remains for any reason, but there is a in fact of brisk trade in fetal remains and plant part hood and um its members of the national abortion federation members were circumventing or flooding federal law by um by openly by offering Priceless for different parts of future remains. And this is this is a call on multiple levels. So women who were unsure when they went into a abortion clinic what they should do there in a crisis, their boyfriend has abandoned them, one of the selling points used by these abortion merchants well um the remains of uh of your child will go to a good cause.

They'll be used for research. It's illegal to sell those remains but actually plan parent hood clinics were caught offering them for sale to researchers and so David busted them by tapping in safran cco hotel lobbies at abortion trade shows believe in are not a national abortion federation runs trade shows for abortion providers. He collected this testimony um this evidence by himself and with a couple of other helpers over the years and then exposed IT in in um video of recordings that he made public. Now this was in journalism.

It's called IT .

used to be called journalism. Hardly anybody does that work anymore ah going undercover like you did and I was very brave and IT was IT was explosive. As a result of this testimony, several states opened up investigations and in some states um public funding was strip from these clinics who did this horrific act of selling human body parts, arms, legs, livers.

I mean there was a Priced list that these people were circulating and so this was obviously very upsetting to uh, big gaborone so big abortion, which is a big supporter of commonly Harris, another big time democrats in california, they can be counted on regularly to contribute millions to their campaigns. So bigger version went to commute Harris and asked her to prosecute David delight. And now there's this particular problem called the first amendment.

And the first, AManda allows citizens to do journalism. And so multiple jurisdictions in the united states have ruled that journalists going undercover, even if there's a wiretapping statute, uh, are not to be prosecuted for that because because of the first amendment there, they're exercising their free speech rights. Well, california has a wiretapping law.

It's never been used against a journalist, so it's a single party consent states. So under the rule, both people after consent to the taping. Now the exception is if it's in a public place, which most of these tapings arguably all of these tapings in california are made in a public place. Um so comella haris ignored the first amendment and um custom made the first prosecution of a journalist in california history to David delight and was invited for a for undercover journalism seven years ago and his case has been pending now for seven years and safran ces go superior court judge after judge after judge has not been willing to send a journalist to prison, not been willing to bring IT to ahead and so people just keep changing assignments and David remains on the hook uh, paying all this money to defend himself elf from the charge of doing journalism. I mean.

what penalties does he face?

He faces years in prison if he's convicted.

What did common Harris prosecute any of the companies? Were people illegally selling baby parts? No.

of course not. There's been no accountability for them.

So SHE prosecuted the person who told the truth about what was happening, but not the people who are coming a crime that's correct. That seems evil. Well.

IT is evil. I mean, it's it's its characteristic of her double standards and lack of morality throughout entire professional life. I think that I think it's look, I mean, when when people are looking and when SHE is embarrass does the right thing. I mean, there is a case of a death penalty inmate who was wrongfully convicted. And IT was only after somebody circulated the embarrassing nights circuit argument where her office made ridiculous arguments that you reversed herself and dropped her office.

Opposition to letting this person go free so um now what's scary about this, tucker, is, as you and I both know, without elon musk being willing to invest in x and allowing us to have a free speech platform, we wouldn't be able to have this conversation publicly right now, right? Well, comella Harris wants to make IT illegal for journalists to expose the wrongdoing that public officials regularly commit. And so if you don't have the media accountability and you don't have the ability to speak freely and criticize these politicians, they get away with crimes themselves.

And so he has made IT a hallmark not only of her current campaign, but dating back to her campaign for a president in in twenty twenty, that, uh, people shouldn't be allowed to speak freely on the internet. We must be able to mean SHE confronted eliza's war and during one of these debates, trying to get eliza th war, no shrinking Violet herself to agree that we must have censorship online. And word kept trying to change the subject to her credit. You know, SHE didn't want to agree with comer's said, yes, we must forced x and every social media platform sensor commentary that might be dangerous, not just false, but so called mal information.

right? Something that criticizes bad leadership.

exactly. So he wants to make IT illegal for us to have this kind of a conversation. And in commoner Harris united states, IT would be illegal for us to criticize the government because I might be dangerous and might give people the wrong.

They might lose control.

They might lose control, and it's their hostile to free speech. I mean, you know, you saw the vice presidential debate recently where a sitting governor of the united states, her running mate. Spouted wrong think and wrong information about the first amendment, saying that for example, um you can't shout fire in a crowded theatre which is dict from A A overrule case that IT was a shameful case involving censorship of flyers during world war one of criticism of the government that um that a shameful cly a shame .

cause and .

the people who objected .

to getting into the most pointless war of all time, which is the first war for no reason whatsoever other than the ambition of our politicians and to critics that want to jail.

why people did go to jail, people did go to jail. But he also try to state the karar that hate speech is not protected by the first amendment. Hate speech is absolutely protected by the, and there's no such thing as hate speech.

Hate speech is a relative term which is whatever you don't people, whatever you don't like, exactly whatever you don't like. And so um the freedom that we enjoy today on social media in some circles x specifically would go away under como Harris regime. And he has gotten power and abused IT repeatedly throughout her career, and we saw her shameful performance in the cabinet.

Hearings are, for example, where he used to a platform to they pretend to be this big prosecutor and a whole red cabin on accountable on zero evidence. But it's very selective, you know, when when someone close to her is accused of sexual misconduct and violence, her husband SHE silent, you know. So let's .

let's explore that in a little more detail. So SHE marries a guy called dug m hf 要 who is um kind of a moral gold himself。 His job has been to school the rest of us for moral in furori, I have noticed. But who is he exactly?

So dug m. Hf is a lifetime, long term partner at big american firms. And so he came of age, you know, around the same time as kamala. In nineteen nineties era, he became a partner at the slaw from venables, big partner in los Angeles. Can I say there's .

no sleeze ier group i've ever met? I mean, they a lot of big law partners. I would rather make up like a rapper, the godfather of my kids. And those people started.

want to say, and I grew up in that kind of setting in new york, and you're absolutely correct. So in, I mean, if anyone seen the the fictional series mad men advertising agencies, well, that was law firms in the nineteen and ninety and even two thousand. Some people say to this day where powerful man exploited less powerful women for their sexual gratification, cheated on their wives, you know, you want to make partner at some big of rooms.

And the time I was growing up, you had to sleep with a partner to do IT. I myself accuse a partner at my first job of sexual harassment. And you know, that person went on to still be a partner this day at other big, powerful law firms.

And so it's really common place. okay? So this guy isn't that vain of that era of of, I would really call IT regressive male centric law firm partnership.

So dog hamm half has a couple of kids. He was married to A I think a hollywood executive, hollywood producer, and divorced from her. You know, they remain on good terms. In fact, dog gamut s law firm has represented his x wife in uh in litigation actually involving uh A A entertainment dispute so there are on good terms, maybe done her some favors or what have you but commoner Harris um dated Wilson wn and dated some .

other powerful men .

over the lions. You know there's been allegations that SHE dated phil bronstein, the um you who .

and the safran .

cis cochran ico .

for many years and she's dated .

a lot of powerful SHE is pretty much only dated powerful guys, let's be honest. okay. I don't know any ordinary joes who have come out that would .

work to say the plan.

And I IT is, is, is. She's a, she's a user. I think she's up you ambitious person, and she's only you wanted to climb the wrongs of power by by aligning herself in a very medieval way with people who can further her a geopolitical interest, if you will.

So m half fits that bill. He had access to the millions of hollywood. He had access to the law money. And he he was a person who gave her on tray that really helped her out a lot in her senate fund raising and so forth. So no, she's married this guy in recent weeks it's come out that he is very credibly accused by a woman whose told her story to multiple publications um of publicly slapping her at the can film festival where this lady had invited in the face so hard that SHE spun around from IT and he did IT because after a couple of cocktails he was apparently very jealous and he went up to a valid to try to jump the line a little bit after waiting over an hour after the film festival got out and was trying to tip him to let them cut the line and he got jealous of this and publicly assaulted her in the face hater in the face and he immediately reported this to multiple .

friends .

of hurts and and the law this is considered what we call an excited uterine so if you tell somebody something horrible that happened to you in the immediate seconds and minutes afterwards, IT has assigned a higher degree of credibility under here, say, law and otherside. Yes, right? Because you people are more likely to be truthful when they've got the adjournment and running through them in the moment, exactly just happen.

So um because of the dynamics of the situation, SHE allegedly got into the car. The valley s were shocked by this disgusting scene and you know let them go. He forces wait to the same car. So all she's in the car with this person the story goes but the daily mail has um reported a SHE called somebody who knew back in the united states and told them what was happening when he also reported IT to a couple of friends of hers and so her story is currently being consistent, according to the witnesses to the press in interview and that's one instance but the more shocking part of the story is that this woman recounts that m. hf. Casually told her in the days or weeks before the incident because he was he was being what he called love bombed by him and he was allegedly you pursuing her from marriage you know, this is actually got divorce from his wife and they were dating for a period of months SHE finally know sort of I think I must have come up how did you get divorced like what happened to your marriage and um apparently he told her that he had um he had been accused by his elementary school teachers babysitter of getting her pregnant his elementary school .

age children, children's teacher and .

create sorry, that's correct. So yeah two elementary school kids at the time and this teacher was serving as there after school, babysitter, slash, nani, tutor, whatever you want to call IT, getting her pregnant and causing the miscarriage, the loss of the pregNancy.

causing the misr.

causing the the, causing the termination of the pregNancy. Not explicit to abortion, but maybe through a miscarriage. That's violence through violence the face exactly exactly. And so um now america, he told .

her this .

casually so american media beating what IT is today you know.

kind of a big deal. The vice president's husband, whose redefining masculinity and lecturing is all about bike all the time, satin prick that guy is, that guy is accused of hitting a woman in the face and causing another woman, tavis carriage.

right? And, I mean, not dating back to my ears. In law school, I took forty hours of training and become became a councillor for victims of domestic violence. I gone to court for many women who have been abused.

And it's a it's, you know, science behind IT that someone who hits a woman once in a public place is almost in the face, in front of hundreds of witnesses in a live. This person has done at another circumstances. I would, I would, I would virtually guarantee that IT doesn't happen one time. It's it's the cultivation of pattern, of years of experience. Another story has come out about the gamp's s conduct at his own law firm variables very apparently higher day um lady to be his parallel al or secretary sitting on his desk and heard him was caught a to the point that other partners, other male partners in in the office demanded their own cota demanded their own illegal to sit on on their desk and um this kota episode happened during the time that calla Harris was engaged to be married to off you may have come at a contact with this is .

the implication .

is he uses women as objects and doesn't treat them as equals and doesn't respect them I think that's fair.

Probably not too surprising that he's like some power feminist now, right? Well, I think have you ever met a male feminists to treats women?

I I one should always be suspicious of the male feminist. That's my experience.

I i've never met anybody more likely to have a woman in the face or caused him misCarried that a male feminist. I mean they're all abuse. I ve never met when he was not an abuse er of women ever.

Well, what concerns me as a thirty year plus activist on domestic violence is the prospect that somebody like that might be in the White house. I think that's very scary and that the president of the united states might be an enabling of somebody like that. That really bothers me.

Well, yeah, so that's the obvious question. I mean, this sounds like these are create. This is not, but cabinet stuff. These are I think .

it's very credible, these stories resources with multiple sources and I think there's probably more that's gonna come out. I won. Be surprised.

Um and this is an actual human being making these allegations.

actual human being making these allegations and you know. They are making them do a person who has a history of looking in the other way, enabling being the beneficiary.

That's the question. Come on, Harris, a huge defender of girls. And because she's for women, what's her position on this?

SHE hasn't commented. And you know when he was running for district attorney, i've looked at her resume at the time and SHE listed as one of her credentials being the being the um chairman of the board of a domestic violence advocate organization. SHE has promoted her self SHE has promoted herself as a prosecutor who has been a in a protecting women from sex trafficking and human trafficking. And I can tell you, like, I mean, this equality of life issue and safety. Ces, i've lived for the last almost twenty five years now is that you you .

can't get elected in differences.

Go without checking the boxes. M, different constituencies. And one of those is the chinese american chinatown community, which includes a lot of organized crime and sex trafficking. And in her years, as just a .

deterred SHE never .

touched the sex trafficking dance and said, in chinatown, I walked through chinatown on my way to work before I got, you know, super dangerous and conferences dangerous. Now safran is go as dangerous. I think there is any safe place .

in safe IT was worn on .

the safe cities in the country. And it's tragic because it's a beautiful cities someone called the paris of the united stay beautiful city. And um during her years there SHE really allowed sex trafficking to flourish. Um SHE was notorious as a prosecutor for only taking up a the slam dunk cases and even there he had a very low prosecution written her later .

years and so I mean, if you just send you know to twenty five thousand feet, she's this member, the law enforcement in community he says she's the prosecutor in both sam s go and then stay wide larger state and both the city of services go and the state, california became more dangerous than chaotic during that that same period.

hundred percent. And so nothing happens overnight. So today's final ban that you see on every corner in santana go, the gangs of Young criminals come into the city to rip IT off. You can trace all of that back to combat harasses leadership.

When he ran for district attorney in two thousand and three, SHE proudly noted that he was one of the prosecutors, one of the few prosecutors who was opposed to a proposed law, a proposition that would allow prosecutors to treat juvenile who committed violent crimes, prosecute them as adults. He was opposed to that he wanted to protect the juvenile, violent criminals and the people who would go on inevitably to create, to commit greater and greater crime. So she's been soft on crime at the same time.

Calling herself a top prosecutor all these years mean he has been open about what he is in many ways. But you package IT in very slick terms. And because he is a woman and because she's a minority, and because so much of our culture pandas to the identity politics, she's been able to somehow get away with the markus substance of what he has been. She's ity.

I mean, unless your panic, you are a minority in california. No Better way you look like where your ancestors are from, right? I mean, in a state like california where there's not a White majority, can you still is still meaningful to close yourself a minority?

Well, you know in Francisco and in these circles um somehow there's this coordinate response about IT you right and you know what's even I bring I come back to ai's Brown, who SHE did her first known violation of the campaign finance laws for in two thousand and SHE um was a consult for his campaign just last year he traveled to ghana with a ams Brown on a mission on behalf of the united states where he promised a billions of dollars of aid to ghana and I .

just suppose that I ghana.

africa in general, I don't know some um expiation of White guilt in the united states. You know that somehow we're responsible for crimes and improvers ment that has occurred over there, I don't know why but uh you know we we as a country, the biden and her administration, I promise billions of dollars to africa at the same time that White epl. Atta is drowning.

And we've had this flood, uh, damage in north CarOlina. A I grew up and no one's promising them even millions of dollars, much less billions. And so this this is the administration and you know this is Normal. No one even comments on IT.

IT seems yeah things you're totally at the control. There is no dout about that. How does he get from a tourney, general california to the senate?

Well again, IT was the machine politics of of california. And you know, in california there's usually a game of musical chairs. And so one politician is annointed for the next office.

And then, you know, there's joking behind the scenes and then people take their turn. I will say to the democrats credit that they are usually very disciplined about these issues. And you know they'll have their vicious uh, game of identity politics behind the scenes, right? But then one person will emerge from that in some deal making.

Okay, you run for this. You're on for that. You're run for the other. You wait your turn.

So this commonly heroes turned to graduate from her two terms as atterley general to run for the senate. And the pathway was cleared for her to do that. So then.

I mean, if you when you win the democratic primary in california, you're done a the opposition.

we always do as republicans. And i'm i've been a leader in the republican party. We always recruit somebody and run somebody and they do their best and they're usually Better than the democrat.

But the democrats funding mechanism is such and the voter registration advantage is such. In california, that is virtually impossible for republicans to win statewide office. And indeed, it's been many years since we've won a statewide any office in in, in california.

And so so IT just IT is a one party.

It's a one party state and one party states become corrupt and there's a lack of accountability and the quality of the legislators goes down and down and down. And so the the gene pool, if you will, for these higher offices in california decreasing. And I mean that there was a point in time when you had a Jerry Brown, now, of course, very liberal. I didn't agree with him on just about anything, but at least he was a you accomplish person academically, a .

dynamic, interesting person, actually didn't. Two is a big liberal. But Jerry brand was .

not mediocre. He was not media OCR, talented, intelligent. That is not the caliber of california democrats today. I and I told you, for example now, uh, cabinet member in the bite administration, hova bara, had barely practiced law before. He was deemed to be appropriate to replace coal Harris as the eternity general in california when he became a barely .

practice law.

I believe IT was one year that he had practice law, so he had an inactive law license for period time. We reactivated seriously that became the attorney. Eric, that's the standard IT doesn't matter.

It's just a waiting room for the next office in the next office. So it's going to become interesting. The sea who um who's annointed by their machine to replace gabin newsom. But we are in california behind this the iron curtain of the left. You know payers are just at the mercy of these increasingly media OCR marxists in california.

So this is why the productive people have laughed .

yeah it's something that every taxpayer definitely has to think about and it's .

what do you pay all in would you saying california, what percentage of your gross income goes to the government?

I pay a wallow over fifty percent. Um let me me gave us you know some facts and sam is go there's a paul tax. So those of us who are in a wage in schon csco and i'm an employer and safran this have to pay a payable tax on every employee.

It's over a percentage point of every employee that I hire over there. Um if you're making over a couple of one hundred thousand dollars, your bank thirteen and a half percent income tax and conferences go in california rather and then on top without your paying the federal taxes as well. So for that, what do you get um you can go into a drugstore in california today and pick up a the ot and take IT to the counter.

You have to call an assistant to come and unlocked for you in any city in california because we have a law that effectively legalized this theft under nine hundred and fifty dollars. And so I have witnessed gangs of criminals come into my cbs or wall Greens and to steal hundreds of dollars of stuff right in front of my eyes, thousands of dollars of stuff they they bring in bags they put into the bags they walk out. And the employees of these stores are disciplined by their employers if they take any steps to try to interfere sale.

Arseny, absolutely. And by the way, I would be dumb to interfere with them because they have weapons, and you, as a citizen, don't have a weapons typically, and it's virtually impossible. And safran, this goes still.

There's only in the dozens of people I think have gotten concealed Carry permits to Carry after the supreme court has effectively made that Mandatory as a shell issue. So there's a huge baLance there and the criminals are on the ascendency and the democrat politicians who made that so keep fAiling upward. And common hero is the most glaring example of that.

So there's a legislature in the state, california, who he's the one who legalized the intentional spreading .

obaidi Scott winner the .

state or or Scott winner the most. Obviously evil politicians tries the least hard to hide IT do you see if any connection to come on hers?

Only in the sense that they are both areas of the same machine. He's part of that machine. So you know, he is, he is. I've shown you some flyers here of the people who ve endorser he was annointed as the next senator after mark leno. It's been considered to be a gay senate seat you know that's how they identify the politics .

there and so to .

yeah like that's it's reserve for the you know gay democrats politician whose next in line and safety ces go so and .

we sure they are gay.

There's pretending to be gay. I think you're pretty sure is Scott wennberg gay? He's a regular fixture at the full sum street fair where bonded gear and is is very out about .

that now responded form, totally cool. Yeah, that's not weird. So I was really surprised during the democratic primaries of two thousand and nineteen to discover how unpopular commonly herri was in the state. california. Yes, that was really as a native california, the first woman I realize voters don't play a meaningful role and kind of anything in california, right?

I mean, so what's interesting is you ve got a lot of politicians out there who are democrats who have some charm, some Christa somewhat even called to .

somebody earlier, bbb, a boxer, or I disagreed thing, barber boxer. Very charming woman.

just being honest. I mean, dian finance dan even had a Better pulse on the the people. When commonly herr's as a district, torney refused to seek the death penalty for a cop killer in san Francisco in her first year as distro attorney, dan vince, dan called her out on IT and SHE said, if there were ever a special circumstance, it's a ganging banger shooting a cop and cold blood.

And, you know, he had the common touch. He had the charm. And commonly, herr's is just lack in charming. No, you try to unpack them and analyze that well, if you have had everything handed to you from a fairly early age and he started getting her leg up, if you will and the age of twenty twenty nine um in politics .

i'm stealing you is catty, is IT awesome.

You don't have to earn IT don't to try very hard. And she's unlike a ball. She's got that school, the school army way about her, preachy way about her. And SHE doesn't have to be SHE hasn't had to be liable to get to where he is.

You think about her choice SHE was not the obvious choice for um for vice president uh for many of us and I know people would have said reach and White mr. Somebody from the midwest you know someone who's adding something to the ticket but the politics of the democratic party have become such that their most loyal constituency today is african american women. And so, you know, joe biden himself was a marginal candidate.

And so the calculation was made that we need to pick the best african american female canada. And they they had a list of three. And common Harris was selected to fill that rule. SHE wasn't the most talented SHE wasn't the most careless matic but SHE checked a couple of boxes for the democrats and that's how he was. He was um paired with her.

And if joe biden and joe biden had thought about IT, they might have gone back and asked parents, Helen and who gave commonly Harris restart and safran ago, how that went for him? How did to go for him to hire her into the office and give a chance? Well, he took us. He ate his lunch pretty quickly, and that's exactly what happened. We have calm a hair as Susan scheming eyes suspect since the day on getting into the White house, undermining joby and and you eventually claude her way to the top of the ticket.

And SHE have created anything that you know of.

well, she's responsible for many debts of innocent people in in isco. SHE is created a lot of tragedy for victims of crime yeah in our state she's created a lot of civil rights violations. SHE has um SHE has not created anything in the sense that you are I would consider proud accomplishment I can think of anything leave I think you know .

so she's famous .

for saying that I have one client and it's you know you the people SHE has one client and it's combo herr's SHE believes in commute herr's getting ahead. I think that's at her core, all that he fundamentally .

believes. So SHE doesn't even detectable philosophy, ideology, principle, commitment to any set of ideas.

Well, not that I can tell him anything. Early on, he adopted the persona of advocate for the downtrend in african american use. But I I mean, that was that itself was focused, tested. I think .

growing up in country, all the daughter reference exactly.

exactly. And you know, I wrote a piece in the wall street journal in twenty fifty when he was running for president, highlighting her flip flops as a prosecutor on marijuana. Trinny, on even, you know, many other forms of crime and other policy issues.

And she's unashamed about IT. And she's she's says why i've evolved circumstances of change. She's evolved on just about every single issue. And what that tells you is there is no fundamental core there. And now you can look at a berny Sanders, for example, complete marxist, far left, but he's kind of been consistent, told you know where you stand with them using going to suddenly embrace drilling or you know uh any particular issue that he's been opposed .

to you t in the seventies. So know what if you think of your son for mont, he seems to mean .

that he's authentic. Yeah and you can't say the same of como Harris. She's pronounced her name differently over the years. He's adopted different persona depending on who she's speaking to. She's flip flopped on marijuana usage, on gun ownership. SHE claims he owns a glock today I would you know I don't think he knows how to load a weapon. I seriously .

doubt he knows .

we pay for. Yeah exactly. And so um SHE supposed advocate for victims of domestic violence and yet silent when her husband is credibly accused .

of the face. If is my last question, if he is elected president the second week of october is were having this conversation. Trump is ahead substantially he had appears to be um in internal polling, which I think is real but you know the democratic party cheats.

They're gna cheat. This election we can say confidently if SHE becomes president. What is the country in ford do you think based on what you've seen?

Well, the democratic party of today has become the party of big business and um and farma so I think they're also the party of the war MERS yes so I think you can expect uh big war mongering and neocons to be happy with the level of court court investment in other people's countries.

Um you can expect the force taking of drugs um that job and tried to force on all american employers to return force on their employees the and effective covet vaccines that don't prevent what they claimed and other drugs. You know amErica is one of only two countries in the world that allows rugs to be advertised on television. And in the democratic parties, definitely both parties, but certainly the democrats are um definitely taking from from that side. But the most scary thing to me is the conversation that you and I are having that presumable a lot of people are going to see will not be possible. And commonly, Harris united states SHE is openly called for the censorship of viewpoints that SHE doesn't agree with and um you can expect the permanent change to the united states supreme court of stuffing term limits otherwise corrupting IT away from the vision of the founders and I think you can expect uh, so many other innovations that democrats have talked about, innovations like uh eliminating the electro al college national popular vote as our way of um uh permanently putting rural americans under the heel of the crop costal elites. So the way of life that my parents brought me to the united states as a small child to enjoy will not be available to americans under the vision of come here that she's openly promising.

how will you respond if she's the president in and be part .

of the resistance? That's the only way to live. I will not live on my knees. So we will have to fight that in whatever corners of the country and whatever court it'll still hear us until .

we are silenced. So if the laws change and he is promised to change them and SHE has the supportive of the atlantic magazine and all the basically everyone and washed and um and free speeches in america, you could be punished for saying things the regime doesn't like. Will you stop talking?

I will not stop talking and I know you want either. I won. No.

i'm going to able to do that. Um do do you think americans mean distant? We can know, but they took the cove at vex.

I gotto say what I say, that with great embarrassment, people did stand possibly by, and allow their civil liberties to evaporate during covet. Do you think people will do the same when they are free? Speech, right, is taken from them.

People are doing IT people did IT people did IT in the years after twenty, twenty, in the years before twenty, twenty. Um so many americans have passively allowed and then I then I would date this back to the to the patriotic in two thousand and one when I was one of the few republicans who stood up and said, IT is wrong to interrogate americans on the basis of their background.

IT is wrong to survey americans and all of our communications and today, in the name of national security, republicans and democrats have repeatedly enabled the deep state in the big state to collect all of our communications and surveilLance and and for our own good, force us to take drugs and sensor what we're allowed to see. And so those americans who are getting their news from, you know, cable and the lightning news and the networks are are seeing a version of plato's forms, it's a distorted vision of reality. And so without the free speech that the founders so wisely guaranteed as our first of those civil rights in the world of rights and the second amendment, which allows us to defend those rights, this isn't a country anymore. And I think that's the apocalyptic future that are facing.

I remember you right after nine and eleven, I should say for those who don't know this, but you're from a religious tradition, that's a small religious minority in india and route mistaken ferragine IT sounds funny now even to say radical muslims um I guess it's not funny at all but there are a lot of people lost their lives .

in the wake nine eleven because they are mistaken six or mistaken as people from afghanistan, middle east and but completely .

different religion.

nothing really different religion, totally different up you know in fact six hot against muslim invade s in india and safeguarded um that holds up continents from innovation. And so it's no joke to us to get to have our right to exercise our face to not be, have the FBI show at your door because of ignorance and start entering.

By the way, if I should just say, as a matter of principal, in fact, I know million great muslims personally who had and so either if they had been muslims, IT wouldn't hassle people because of their religion.

And the acu, and which I you joined back then because of this specific issue, was the only voice in amErica against muslims being rounded up and interrogated in los Angeles in two thousand. And one, it's it's important and snacks of japanese concentration camps and other dark periods in our american history. And today, those voices aren't there.

So american conservatives have always relied on liberal civil rights activists to safeguard those rights. Hey, you know what's conservatives? Sometimes to get IT falsely arrested for crimes. And today those liberal groups have abandoned those principles. So today it's republicans and conservatives to go to cords.

You know, why not profit, the center for american liberty that goes to court to defend the rights of students, to hear differs viewpoints on campus, or to defend Young girls from being mutilated by a abusive doctors and the name of transgender, a craziness. And so today we are the civil libertarians. IT will prepared, as we are institutionally, conservatives are the last bastion to defend our country. I think you're absolutely.

and they're waking up. I want to add to the list of things to apologize. For over the years, including iraq war um I didn't perceive just have scary and anti american the patriot was, uh, you were one of the very first, very first people on the right you are death. The first person in the right I saw, say that, and bus you for for catching that immediately.

Well, you know, again, we go back to the constitution. And when I look at the selection, cma Harris has shown herself, over all of her decades of public service, exactly who SHE is SHE.

Someone who is ruthless, who has ignored the law when IT benefits her, who has even ignored, as a guardian of the law, the constitution repeatedly, the rights of the accused, yes, the rights are the wrong, fully convicted, the rights of the citizens SHE has sworn to defend, and those laws that he is sworn to uphold, SHE has ignored them when convenient. And I think that's particularly when you take on the mental of on the top cop and the borders are on the prosecutor. I'm america's top of enforcement person.

It's scary that that person wants to be the number one person with the most power in the free world. And so that's what it's taken in the selection. So what isn't about mean tweet IT isn't about style. It's about what country we want in the next four years.

So wonderful. Imation me. don't. Thank you very.

very much. Thank you for having me talker.

Thanks for listing and tuck a cross and show if you enjoyed IT, you can go to tucker cross in the calm to see everything that we have made the complete library, tucker carlson dot com. We had a pretty remarkable interview with elan musk the other day, right after his appearance with Donald drummed with the rally in buler township. Ella mosques all in.

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