As Western North Carolina lies in ruins from the deadly aftermath of Hurricane Helene, where hundreds have tragically lost their lives, Kamala Harris is focused elsewhere. Instead of addressing the real issues facing the country—catastrophic storm damage, a still-struggling economy, inflation worries, out-of-control illegal immigration, and wars erupting in the Middle East—Harris has chosen to make an appearance on the vulgar “Call Her Daddy” podcast.
“Call Her Daddy” is notorious for its explicit content, often involving sex workers and controversial subjects, which makes Harris’ choice to appear there puzzling, to say the least. While Americans are fighting to survive natural disasters and economic hardship, the Vice President seems more concerned with entertaining audiences on a podcast that couldn’t be more out of touch with the struggles of everyday citizens.
When asked by host Alex Cooper why she doesn’t do many long-form interviews with serious news outlets, Harris responded with a typical incoherent word salad. She praised the show for “being real” and “talking about things people care about.” Really? Hall passes and raunchy topics are what Americans care about right now?
Kamala delivers a giant, incoherent word salad when asked why she decided to do a podcast entitled “Call Her Daddy” but not substantive interviews where she’s actually pressed on the radical positions she holds pic.twitter.com/L435Nl4Vzv
— Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) October 6, 2024
Kamala Harris has her priorities. She’s going to do some hard-hitting interviews with Stephen Colbert and The View this week.
She was also on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast because she thinks the topics it covers are what people really care about.
Just two episodes ago, 1 hour and 13 minutes were spent on ‘bl*w jobs, hall passes, and frat daddies.’
“I think you and your listeners have really got this thing right, which is one of the best ways to communicate with people is to be real, you know, and to talk about the things that people really care about. I mean, what I love about what you do is that your voice in, in your show is really about your listeners.”
Video:
NEW: Kamala Harris says she went on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast because it talks about “things that people really care about.”
Just two episodes ago, 1 hour and 13 minutes were spent on ‘bl*w jobs, hall passes, and frat daddies.’
“I think you and your listeners have really got… pic.twitter.com/hgGZwGnA9P
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) October 6, 2024
Desperation at best. Here is the full list of the past 9 podcast episodes:
Not surprised you tried to cherry pick one episode.
Kamala has no interest in policy or saving America.
Brian Stelter explains Call Her Daddy to viewers: “It’s usually about s*x and relationships. Sometimes risqué — even raunchy conversations about s*x.”
This is what Kamala was doing while North Carolinians were suffering. pic.twitter.com/BR15pr1ZTh
— johnny maga (@_johnnymaga) October 6, 2024
Meanwhile, as Kamala Harris was chatting about trivial matters, the residents of North Carolina, who were devastated by Hurricane Helene, were given little more than $750 in aid and a few toiletries to help them cope. The real concerns—rebuilding after disaster, fixing a broken economy, and addressing rising global tensions—apparently aren’t on her radar.
It’s clear: while Americans suffer, Harris is too busy prioritizing appearances on podcasts like “Call Her Daddy.” Her focus on irrelevant issues reveals just how out of touch she is with the problems facing the nation.
Mark Van der Veen offers some of the most analytical and insightful writings on politics. He regularly opines on the motives and political calculations of politicians and candidates, and whether or not their strategy will work. Van der Veen offers a contrast to many on this list by sticking mainly to a fact-based style of writing that is generally combative with opposing ideologies.
The post Kamala’s Interview on Vulgar Sex Podcast ‘Call Her Daddy’ Proves Just How Out of Touch She Really Is (Video) appeared first on Right Journalism.
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