Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris participated tonight (between Saturday and Sunday, Israel time) in an election rally at the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. During the conference, a pro-Palestinian protester interrupted her words and accused Israel of genocide. Harris did not let him finish his words – but she said: “What he is talking about is real.”
📺📺📺DISGUSTING: KAMALA AGREES WITH ANTISEMITE WHO SAYS ISRAEL IS COMMITTING GENOCIDE📺📺📺
‘What he’s talking about, it’s real’
At an event Thursday, Kamala agreed with an audience member who interrupted her to accuse Israel of committing “genocide.”https://t.co/fkdt6mnbv3 pic.twitter.com/zxxAIWVXcO
– Shelley G (@ShelleyGldschmt) October 19, 2024
The protester arrived at the conference with the participation of dozens of students, wearing a scarf around his neck, and accused Israel of committing genocide. Harris said: “I know what you’re talking about. I want the ceasefire. I want the hostage deal done. I want the war to end.” The protester continued to repeatedly interrupt her, repeating the claim that Israel is committing genocide. “I respect your right to speak, but now I’m speaking,” Harris said.
Harris’s words were applauded by the participants, and the protester was forcibly turned outside by the security, while shouting at her about the murder of the 19 thousand children in Gaza and the “genocide” in the Gaza Strip. Harris, who heard his words, said: “What he (the protester) is talking about – it’s real. It’s not the issue I came to talk about today, but it’s real. I respect his voice.”
Contrary to the claims that surfaced on social media, Vice President Harris did not say out loud that there is “genocide in Gaza” and only claimed that the issue the protester is talking about is real. However, she did not come out as a buffer against the statement that Israel is deliberately committing a murder of the Palestinian people in the Strip.
Harris: The elimination of Sinwar – an opportunity for a ceasefire
At the same conference at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Harris referred to the assassination of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, saying that “justice has been served.” She called SinuAr “the brain” behind the October 7 massacre, and claimed that his death created an opportunity to end the war in Gaza.
“This (the elimination) gives us an opportunity to finally end the war in Gaza, and it must end so that Israel will be safe, the abductees will be released, the suffering in Gaza will end and the Palestinian people will be able to exercise their right to dignity, security, freedom and self-determination,” said Harris. According to her, “the time has come for the day after to begin without Hamas in power.”