'Please delete your account': President Biden and Kamala Harris mocked for Kwanzaa social media posts

'Please delete your account': President Biden and Kamala Harris mocked for Kwanzaa social media posts



The Biden administration, including the president and vice president themselves, unilaterally posted celebrations of Kwanzaa across all of its official social media channels.

The obscure holiday, invented in 1966 by noted black nationalist Ron Everett, aka Maulana Ndabezitha Karenga, was praised for its "seven principles of Kwanzaa — especially those of unity and faith," by President Biden.

Of course, the president declined to mention that the first principle of Kwanzaa also calls for racial unity.

"To strive for and maintain unity in the family, community, nation and race," the Umoja principle explains, according to CNN.

"We’d love to hear about your childhood Kwanzaa memories and traditions," a sarcastic top comment to the president read on X.

"Kwanzaa is not a real holiday just like Joe Biden is not a real president," another reply stated.

While others simply noted the president's poor approval ratings, reactions to Vice President Kamala Harris were more ruthless, likely because she has claimed to be a practicing Kwanzaa enthusiast.

"Please delete your account," was included as one of the many more direct, insulting replies to the country's most powerful woman.

Remarks such as "Kwanzaa is fake. Stop" and "this holiday is almost as fake as your laugh" populated the vast majority of the vice president's feed.

@VP Please delete your account
— (@)

Harris' followers may be reminded of her 2020 video celebrating Kwanzaa, for which she was widely criticized for the "most epic pandering," possibly of all time.

Viewers pointed out that Harris was born in 1964 before Kwanzaa existed and that neither of Harris' parents are African.

"Somehow I find it hard to believe that she has a deep childhood attachment to a holiday that didn't exist when she was born," the Daily Wire's Matt Walsh said.

"This is such an obvious lie. She was born in 1964..Kwanzaa was created in 1966. It didn't really take hold until the late 70s and early 80s. For her whole family to be devoted to it in her childhood is incredibly unlikely... she's a liar," another person responded.

Across the Biden administration, other departments posted similarly vague messages in celebration of Kwanzaa.

"A joyous #Kwanzaa to everyone celebrating the Seven Principles!" the Department of Education wrote on Facebook. Similar messages came from the Department of Health and Human Services, as well as Pete Buttigieg's Department of Transportation.

As recapped by the Dartmouth Review in 2001, Kwanzaa's founding father started a black identitarian group called the United Slaves Organization, which clashed with the less-radical Black Panthers at the time.

Five years after inventing the holiday, founder Karenga was allegedly sentenced to one to 10 years in prison for felonious assault and false imprisonment.

He was accused of helping torture women who he thought tried to kill him by putting "crystals" in his food.

The Los Angeles Times reportedly described that Deborah Jones and Gail Davis were whipped with an electrical cord and beaten with a baton, with Davis also being burned with an iron.

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Kamala Harris gets blasted for 'most epic pandering' over Kwanzaa celebration video



Vice President-elect Kamala Harris was accused of political pandering over the weekend after posting a video celebrating Kwanzaa.

What did Harris say?

In her video, Harris claimed that she grew up celebrating Kwanzaa. In fact, Harris, said that "multiple generations" of her family celebrated Kwanzaa, an African holiday that was first celebrated in 1966.

Harris said:

You know, my sister and I, we grew up celebrating Kwanzaa. Every year our family would – and our extended family, we would gather around, across multiple generations, and we'd tell stories. The kids would sit on the carpet and the elders would sit on chairs, and we would light the candles, and of course afterwards have a beautiful meal. And, of course, there was always the discussion of the seven principles. And my favorite, I have to tell you, was always the one about self-determination, kujichagulia.

And, you know, essentially it's about be and do. Be the person you want to be and do the things you want to do and do the things that need to be done. It's about not letting anyone write our future for us, but instead going out and writing it for ourselves. And that principle motivates me today, as we seek to confront the challenges facing our country and to build a brighter future for all Americans. So, to everyone who is celebrating, Happy Kwanzaa from our family to yours.

Happy Kwanzaa from Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoffwww.youtube.com

What was the response?

The video generated a significant reaction on social media, where Harris was accused of the "most epic pandering."

The criticism centered on several key details about Harris' background, including the fact that Harris was born in 1964 before Kwanzaa existed, the fact that neither of Harris' parents are African — she is the daughter of a Jamaican-born father and an Indian-born mother — and the fact that Harris spent a significant portion of her childhood in Canada.

  • "Somehow I find it hard to believe that she has a deep childhood attachment to a holiday that didn't exist when she was born," conservative writer Matt Walsh said.
  • "[T]his is such an obvious lie. She was born in 1964..Kwanzaa was created in 1966. It didn't really take hold until the late 70s and early 80s.For her whole family to be devoted to it in her childhood is incredibly unlikely... she's a liar," another person responded.
  • "Considering that Kwanzaa was invented in 1966 and Harris was born in 1964, I highly doubt her family 'across multiple generations' would have celebrated the holiday.This just comes across as another one of her lame attempts to sound human and in touch with the average voter," one person said.
  • "As some one who was born & raised in Africa I can tell there is no such thing as Kwanza.Kamala knows nothing about it because she is an Indian Jamaican who grew up in Canada," another person responded.
  • "We 'Jamaicans' do not celebrate Kwanzaa. Also, being first-generation myself, I'm confused as to how you could celebrate with multiple generations. This is such a fake post, I understand it's intent, but please do not be fake about it. Just say happy Kwanzaa," another person responded.
  • "Why would a Tamil family celebrate Kwanzaa in Canada? This seems to be much more likely to be a case of you listening to Tupac in College than grounded in reality," another person said.