untermensche
Contributor
So now it's she got her decades mixed up?
Well that is pointless.
Well that is pointless.
But even Envy switches gears and asks "was it Snoop?" in reference to Char's interjection. Then he restates his original question and she answers with a more contemporary reference. It is quite a stretch to think that she wasn't answering Char's question when she said Snoop and Tupac.It's especially a stretch when she turns to Charmalagne to laugh, and then turns back to Envy when she answers, particularly when she spends the entire interview looking directly at the person who she is discussing something with.
They can say it, and they would be doing the same useless (as a gaffe is not really a big deal) apologetics, but the original video is quite clear.And I'm not the only person to say this - here's the Breakfast Club, including Charmalagne and DJ Envy, who you recognize as "the people that conducted the interview in question", discussing this in a video titled "Meghan McCain, Fox News Try To Smear Kamala Harris' Breakfast Club Quotes" and calling them, and Breitbart, "Donkey of the Day".
I am neither. Nor am I saying she is inauthentic, but if we can point out white male politicians' gaffes, why should gaffes by female blackish politicians be out of bounds?Basically, this is being pushed by conservatives, black misogynists, and Sanders fans to say "Look, she's so inauthentic, she's pandering.
Now THAT was pandering. Just like her blaccent.They did the exact same thing with Hillary Clinton when she said she always carried hot sauce with her.
I wonder if Hillary ever took Bill to Red Lobster as well.People tried to say "Oh, she's copying the new Beyonce song" and ignored three decades of interviews in which she and others discussed her obsession with hot sauces.
I like some of them, dislike others. Like with any other politician.If you don't like Harris' policies, then criticize those. But these outlets are just flat-out lying about what happened.