Former Vice President Kamala Harris sparked some online ridicule when she made a “word salad” remark about the nature of “community” while speaking to firefighters in California.
On Monday, after her term as vice president ended, Harris visited the Los Angeles Fire Department in Altadena and spoke to the media.
“As I say to these brave and extraordinary firefighters, you know moment of crisis It really shines a light on the heroes among us,” she said. “We went to visit World Central Kitchen. I mean, there are volunteers out there, some of whom have lost their homes, who are out there doing jobs taking care of complete strangers, and they see their neighbors in front of strangers. “
She continued: “These are people who understand the power and value of community, and everyone comes together as a community with a shared sense of purpose and identity.”
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Harris was repeatedly mocked during her tenure as vice president for her penchant for repetitive rhetoric or “word salad,” such as declaring, “I grew up understanding that the children of the community are the children of the community.” In a similar statement at another event, she noted , “Community banks are in communities.”
Her critics are everywhere social media. We were soon teasing her latest world salad again.
“A community is a community. Made of people. Write it down,” author Rob Jenkins sarcastically quips.
“Kamala is reminding America why she is now unemployed,” Paul A. Szypula, a conservative commentator and former U.S. Senate candidate, wrote on Twitter.
“She may have left Washington, but remember: Somewhere in the world, someone is suffering from Kamala’s ‘deep thoughts’ word salad,” radio host Jay Weber joked.
“The unemployed person has thoughts about things that happened 3,000 miles away from where she is,” wrote Wall Street Journal film critic Kyle Smith.
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“She’s not handling it very well,” said political commentator David Freeman. “It won’t be long before she becomes completely irrelevant.”
City Hall columnist Derek Hunter asked: “Aren’t these people suffering enough?”