Well, it’s a relief that a stalwart for “justice” like Shaun King is only changing his opinion because Kamala Harris has grown sufficiently in his eyes.Cynics might have seen it as happening because he’s a spineless, hypocritical grifter who wants to get on the good side of the Democratic presidential ticket and stay popular with all cool kids in the Democratic Party.Newsweek giving credence to this guy is 2020 in a nutshell… He’s just carrying the water for his betters. But I’m nothing but glad to see the growth. She’s finally living up to his standards, of course.“I can only speak for myself, but when I harshly critique leaders, it’s with the hope that they will grow and evolve. We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. Asking for a friend.Of course, King and Harris aren’t the only two Democrats who have beclowned themselves falling into line for Biden.It seems like an eternity now, but it was only six months ago that the Biden campaign was on life support and Sanders’ socialism was ascendant on the left.As soon as that fell apart in the Feb. 29 South Carolina primary, Democrats flocked to Biden’s banner, with Harris endorsing Biden in an early March video Byron York, chief political correspondent for the Washington Examiner, described it perfectly in a But sincerity isn’t what Harris is selling — anymore than Shaun King or any other Democrats who were opposed to the idea of Biden and Harris until they became the only show in town.For Democrats, power is the only organizing principle that matters, and it’s going to be at center stage between now and when the November ballots are counted.The eight years of the Obama White House proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that for Democrats, The circus surrounding the Biden campaign is showing that even the potential for power does a pretty good job of it, too.Do you think Kamala Harris will help Biden in the November election? He to will fall short of the fascists ideal.He speaks like a person committed to his principles. Harris' and Biden's "dismal history on criminal justice reform over their entire careers" was the problem King cited in 2018. “In the places where he spent a ton of time campaigning, legitimately trying to earn people’s votes, from Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada — he got crushed.”“He didn’t come in second, or third, or fourth in some places,” Moore chimed in.“And there was zero enthusiasm,” King added.
Joe has spent more than 30 years as a reporter, copy editor and metro editor in newsrooms in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Florida. As long as those principles include a person of color. In fact, when Joe Biden was 65 years old and ran for President in 2008, Black folk weren’t feeling him then. Is what it is. "That's it for me. “People were basically making a clear statement that we had a chance to really, really inspect his candidacy, his policies, and we prefer these other three or four people over him, and in states like Nevada and others, the gap was enormous.”“I ask people, like, ‘Did you ever like Joe Biden before he was Obama’s vice president?’ And people, almost universally, would say no,” King said.
“I think we all know we’ve gotta get rid of Trump,” he said, adding that he has heard of an Instagram group called “Settle for Biden.”“They post these things like, ‘Yeah, okay, alright, I’ll settle for Biden,’ and they’re gonna vote,” Moore explained.“Young people have had to learn a lesson,” he continued. First off, Joe Biden said the only year he participated in the Civil Rights Movement was in 1960 when he was 17 years old. Republicans and conservatives do the same.But when Democrats like King step down from their moral pedestal and suddenly start praising the very people they savaged only a short time before, it’s a turnaround of road-to-Damascus proportions (or would be, if liberals could understand the allusion).If King had been a conservative activist who was suddenly changing his tune on, say, Donald Trump’s candidacy in 2016, it’s easy to think how liberals would have mocked such a transparently boot-licking change of heart.But in the liberal media, the rules are different for Democrats, as everyone knows. It’s rarely things dreams are made of,” King wrote. Is what it is.”I can only speak for myself, but when I harshly critique leaders, it’s with the hope that they will grow and evolve.Kamala has done so, in very specific ways, on issues of justice.I’ll remain a critic.
Tap here to add The Western Journal to your home screen.We are committed to truth and accuracy in all of our journalism.
“At first I was like, ‘Are they serious?’ and I went and I watched the Sunday clips, and they were dead serious,” he said. And when you don’t get that — you have to be more pragmatic than you want to be.
'”With the Democratic National Convention (DNC) looming — scheduled to be held from August 17 to 20 at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin — Biden is expected to announce his pick for vice president any day. Joe Biden is 76 years old. And he wants to show how inclusive he is.Now I’m confused! Shaun King has faced a backlash from Twitter users after claiming Rachel Maddow reported the Democratic Party was interfering in the primaries to stop Bernie Sanders. In 2018, Shaun King expressed disdain for Kamala Harris and said he did not intend to support her or Joe Biden in the Democratic primaries due to their positions on criminal justice. So it’s OK to have a horrible history as long as there is positive change? “Imagine if Trump said, ‘I’m not doing the debates.’ Man, the uproar would be crazy, and so I hate, like, we’re in this period where it seems like Democrats, their goal is just to, like, keep Joe Biden as quiet as possible until he wins.”Moore jumped in to clarify that this criticism of Biden does not mean refusing to vote or committing to vote third-party.
You also agree to our You're logged in to Facebook. Shaun King, activist, author, podcaster, said absolutely in 2018 that he would not be supporting Sen. Kamala Harris' or Vice President Joe Biden's presidential campaigns. Other times, though, you don’t get that. Kamala has done so, in very specific ways, on issues of justice,” he wrote.“I’ll remain a critic.