Kamala Harris continues to showcase her penchant for baffling word salads as she makes the rounds in her campaign. With the upcoming election looming, Harris, alongside her running mate Tim Walz, is desperately attempting to connect with voters. However, this effort seems more like a car crash in slow motion than a surge to victory. From questionable editing practices in her interviews to awkward public speaking gaffes, the once-lauded media darling is finding herself increasingly ridiculed.
In a recent appearance at the Koinonia Christian Center in Greenville, North Carolina, Harris took a strange detour into the realm of hurricane “disinformation.” It’s curious how she chose a location that wasn’t even impacted by Hurricane Helene to make her pitch. Instead of addressing the real concerns of hurricane victims, she opted to lecture on the purpose of community, claiming some individuals are spreading “disinformation.” One has to wonder if Harris took a moment to glance in the mirror before throwing around accusations of dishonesty.
Say WHAT?! – Kamala's Word Salad: Sunday Edition
"Because what we see is so hard to see, that we lose faith, or a vision of those things we cannot see but must know."
You get all that? pic.twitter.com/yl4W6S4ZR7
— Conservative Brief (@ConservBrief) October 13, 2024
The rhetoric used by Harris in her sermon-like speech reveals a disconnect from the very struggles she claims to care about. In her howl against political divisiveness, she ironically adds to it by insinuating that questioning the government’s response to crises is somehow unconscionable. The very foundation of democracy, which emphasizes the right to dissent, seems to be lost on her. Harris’s narrative appears less about supporting victims and more about preserving her and Biden’s failing administration’s reputation.
Harris invoked a biblical message about perseverance from Paul’s letter to the Galatians, but her words seemed more like a political strategy than authentic encouragement. Attacking opponents while trying to preach unity is not what the churchgoers signed up for on that particular Sunday. It’s one thing to seek solace in faith; it’s another to use the pulpit as a platform for political posturing.
The speech took a turn for the absurd when she proclaimed that “what we see is so hard to see that we lose faith.” One has to wonder just how much faith one must lose before realizing it’s all a smokescreen. Even with teleprompters in hand, Harris served up confusion, leaving her audience scrambling for clarity. And while she delivered clichés about weeping and joy, it feels as if she’s merely performing for the cameras rather than genuinely connecting with attendees.
As November 6 approaches, many anticipate a change in leadership that will restore common sense and accountability to the government. Harris may have brought her theatrics to church, but voters are ready for a real message, one that isn’t cloaked in irony and insincerity. The people crave genuine discussions rather than her muddled concoction of political grandstanding wrapped in religious garb.