Kamala Harris Jamaican Family Speaks Out

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Lie #3: Kamala Harris spent her entire life around white people
Age 1-7:
Evanston, illinois = majority white
Urbana, Illinois = majority white
Madison winsconsin = majority white

When you're a toddler, all that matters is who your family is and who they hang out with. And Kamala was raised by her Black Jamaican father and Indian mother who were both deeply involved with the Black activist community and constantly had radical Black people around them. Claiming that she was just around white people is a completely fabricated lie.





Age 7-12:
Berkeley, california = majority white

Except that when her mother divorced, she explicitly moved to a Black neighborhood in Berkeley to reconnect with the Afro-American Association where she was surrounded by Black activists who provided her entire support structure.


Into the vacuum stepped Ms. Gopalan Harris’s old friends, connections from the Berkeley study group. She was a single, working mother of two, far from her family. Not until her oldest daughter was in high school could she afford a down payment on her own home, something she desperately wanted, Senator Harris wrote in her memoir. A web of support — from day care, to church, to godparents and piano lessons — radiated out from the Afro American Association.

“Those ties became the village that supported her in rearing the children,” said Ms. Dashiell, the sociology professor who was a member of the discussion group. “I don’t mean financially. They surrounded those children.” Mr. LaBrie introduced Ms. Gopalan Harris to his aunt, Regina Shelton, who ran a day care center in West Berkeley. Mrs. Shelton, who had been born in Louisiana, became a pillar of the young family’s life, eventually renting them an apartment upstairs from the day care center.

....But there was always a snack and a hug at Mrs. Shelton’s. If it got too late, the sleepy children would go to bed at her house, or Mrs. Shelton would send her daughters to tuck them in at home. One of Senator Harris’s favorite stories from childhood is of preparing a batch of lemon squares with salt instead of sugar; Mrs. Shelton, her face puckered, said they were delicious.

On Sunday mornings, Mrs. Shelton would take the girls to the 23rd Avenue Church of God, a Black Baptist church. This, Ms. Porter said, was what Shyamala wanted for them. “She raised them to be Black women,” Ms. Porter said. “Shyamala really wanted them to have both.”

Ms. Dashiell said she was certain that some influence of the study group survived in the Harris children. “The thinking within the association was deep,” she said. “You would look at, what are the underlying causes of the problems that we find ourselves in as Black people? And that is something that would have translated, through these families, to Kamala.”

In the years since, Senator Harris has often reflected that her immigrant mother’s chosen family — Black families one generation removed from the segregated South — powerfully shaped her as a politician. When she took the oath of office to become California’s attorney general, and then a U.S. Senator, she asked to lay her hand on Mrs. Shelton’s Bible. “In office and into the fight,” she wrote in an essay last year, “I carry Mrs. Shelton with me always.”





Age 12-18:
Montreal, Canada = majority white

Except that her high school in Montreal was 40% Black, her closest friends were Black, and her best friend from the very beginning of her getting there moved in with her for her entire senior year. And she continued visiting her father on holidays and summers.


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Ms. Harris did, indeed, move to Montreal as a 12-year-old with her sister in 1976, when their mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was recruited to conduct breast-cancer research at Jewish General Hospital and to teach at McGill University’s medical school. Over the next five years, Kamala Harris continued to shuttle between Quebec’s largest city and California to stay with her father, Donald J. Harris, an economist at Stanford, and a family friend during holidays and vacations.


Kamala Harris' childhood best friend has told how the kindness of the Vice President- elect's family 'changed the trajectory of her life' when they took her in as a teenager.

Wanda Kagan, an administrative agent from Montreal, met the Harris after they both joined Westmount High School in Quebec and said the pair 'instantly bonded'.


The pair found themselves in a high school that was about 60 percent white and 40 percent Black and drew from a variety of neighborhoods that cut across economic lines.

They developed an unusually close friendship. When Ms. Kagan told Ms. Harris that she was being sexually abused by her stepfather, Ms. Harris had her move into her family’s apartment in a middle-class neighborhood.

“It’s not just that she took me in,” Ms. Kagan said. “It’s that human side of her, that empathetic side of her that could be so compassionate to realize that there was something going on.”





Not only that, but her mother was a doctor who did research at universities who lived in upper scale college communities so she lived amongst wealthy white people. Kamala was raised in an Indian household from age 12-18. You’re acting like she came home to her mother was watching “good times.”

Her mother was so deeply involved in the Black Power movement that as late as 1983 (when Kamala had already left for Howard), the famous Black academic and activist Cedric Robinson thanked her in the acknowledgements of his best-known book, "Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition", for helping him to get the project rolling. That was a full 21 years after Kamala's mom first joined the Afro-American Association, met Douglas Harris, and became a part of Black Power circles.

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And claiming she lived among "wealthy white people" is completely false. She couldn't even afford her first mortgage until Kamala was in high school and her communities in both Berkeley and Montreal were heavily Black and not at all upper-class. In Berkeley she was living in a rented apartment upstairs from a Black daycare just down the street from the Black Community Center, and you had the nerve to lie and claim she was living in upper-class white neighborhoods.




She then went to a majority white college in Canada for 2 years before attending Howard university.

She only spent one year at Vanier College, which is actually one of the most diverse colleges in Canada and has produced a disproportionate number of Black celebrities and public figures. I'm not even sure it's majority white, I believe it's majority-minority or somewhere close to it. And then she went to Howard after that, of course.



You're losing this argument on every level.
 

Left.A1

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Great post, but I AM saying she wasn't raised in Black culture. No culturally Black people GAF about Kwanzaa like that (no pics of that, of course), or wash greens in a bathtub:scust:

I could be wrong though, maybe she WAS cooking Kwanzaa bathtub greens while listening to Pac in '86 :troll:
These goofy nikkas can't even get their talking points on the same page :russ: hilarious
 

that guy

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You are wrong, and your analogy shows you don’t have a good grasp on racial relations or history of Caribbean nations

When they’re here, they try and let it be known as a sign of respect for themselves and others here that they are foreigners, from whichever country. At home…that’s an Indian man, or coolie.

Black Jamaicans are black when they speak to you in Jamaica.

I never made an analogy anywhere in that post. How are you discussing race when you don’t even know what an analogy is?

When they’re here, they try and let it be known as a sign of respect for themselves and others here that they are foreigners, from whichever country. At home…that’s an Indian man, or coolie.
Indians who have mixed with the people of African descent do not call themselves “foreigners”

The man in the video is clearly of Indian descent and he’s calling himself Jamaican as all mixed raced people in Jamaica do.

Black Jamaicans are black when they speak to you in Jamaica.
Jamaica doesn’t even have a “black” racial category. Jamaicans will tell you they are black meaning they’re part of a global diaspora or people of African descent. They do not say they’re race is “black”
 

that guy

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Yup. That's why I didn't bother responding to him. It's clear he has never been to Jamaica or know any Jamaicans.
There’s nothing you can respond to. Feel free to post the Jamaican census that lists the racial categories created by the US. :unimpressed:
 
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