Kamala Harris is still around. Most Democrats wish she weren’t. And she insists on reminding everyone of why. It’s gotten so bad that there should be a TV show, “Kamala says the darndest things.”
This is just from one brief appearance summarized in one article.
“There will be a marble bust of me in Congress. I am a historic figure like any vice president of the United States ever was.”
Yes, like Walter Mondale, Spiro Agnew and Aaron Burr, Kamala belongs to the ages.

I don’t know that we should really be treating Congress like a junkyard or rummage sale. And the future really doesn’t need a marble bust of Kamala.
Sure history is a collection of key facts and moments, but it’s also full of stuff that we could always forget. We’re not too sure where California’s name comes from. Do we really need that Kamala bust?
“Thousands of people are coming to hear my voice. Thousands and thousands,” she said. “Every place we’ve gone has been sold out.”
It’s like Kamala is a badly implemented AI chatbot with no real sense of what it’s appropriate to say out loud.
“I can’t be relevant if I don’t have a sense of where people are,” she explained after meeting with some younger male gig musicians.
And where are people at?
She called Zohran Mamdani, the incoming mayor of New York City, the day after he won, offering advice on how to hire his staff and serve as an executive.
Kamala and Mamdani have about the same amount of executive experience, so I don’t think she’s got anything to share. Mostly she’s trying to be relevant.
Onstage in Nashville, she was asked, basically, if Mr. Biden had done her dirty. If he had doomed her by dropping out so late and privately urging her not to distance herself from him.
Her answer began with “I think there are many variables that were at play” and eventually landed on “perhaps.”
That’s our Kamala. If you don’t like her position, wait 30 seconds.
















