Kamala offered WHAT to black men for votes?!



Kamala Harris’ campaign has created an “Opportunity Agenda for Black Men,” and it’s even more ridiculous than it sounds.

The list included supporting education training and mentorship programs that lead to good-paying jobs for black men, including pathways to become teachers, protecting cryptocurrency investments so black men who make them know their money is safe, and launching a national health initiative focused on the illnesses that disproportionately impact black men.

Also on her list of wild ideas is providing 1 million loans that are fully forgivable up to $20,000 for black entrepreneurs and others to start a business — and legalizing recreational marijuana.


Glenn Beck of “The Glenn Beck Program” is focused on the most ridiculous part of the list.

“If I even said that as a joke, I’d be off the air. ‘You want to buy their vote, you want to buy black men’s vote, give them free weed,’” Glenn tells Stu Burguiere, asking, “Isn't it kind of racist to say that black people like drugs?”

“It sounds like a David Duke campaign proposal,” Stu jokes.

“Now white women, you get Ugg boots and Starbucks gift certificates. Venezuelans, we already gave them free apartment buildings in Colorado,” Glenn says.

“Well, they worked for those,” Stu adds.

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Critics blast Harris over pandering scheme that prioritizes marijuana legalization for black men



Kamala Harris unveiled a race-based "opportunity agenda" Monday, revealing both her desperation to win back increasingly disenchanted black male voters and her prejudicial presumption of what might ultimately motivate members of the cohort.

Critics have ridiculed the vice president's identitarian messaging and her cynical attempt to win over black men with the promise of legal marijuana nationwide, noting both that she previously helped prosecute multitudes of black men for marijuana offenses and that there remain far more pressing issues facing all Americans deserving of a presidential candidate's attention.

American men, generally speaking, aren't particularly fond of Kamala Harris. This is not only true of likely white and Hispanic male voters, but increasingly of black men as well.

A recent NAACP survey found that 26% of black men under 50 years old intend to vote for President Donald Trump, reflective of a broader increase in black support for Trump as compared with the 2020 election.

"If Harris doesn't get above 90% [with black men], then she's in trouble," Republican strategist Shermichael Singleton recently told The Hill. "She really needs to energize black voters and figure out a way to get them to turn out, particularly men."

Harris surrogates — including former President Barack Obama — recently rushed to brand those black men who might vote for Trump as misogynists, urging "the brothers" to fall in line.

Since the strategy of belittlement was clearly not working, Harris has instead tried pandering.

A campaign memo titled "Vice President Harris Will Deliver for Black Men" revealed this week how Harris would try to help Americans from that voting bloc now souring on the Democratic Party.

"Today Vice President Harris is laying out an Opportunity Agenda for Black Men to provide them with the tools to achieve financial freedom, lower costs to better provide for themselves and their families, and protect their rights," says the memo.

Harris promised to:

  • provide 1 million loans up to $20,000 to black entrepreneurs;
  • support education and mentorship programs to help black men "get good-paying jobs in high-demand industries and lead their communities";
  • give race-based financial support to struggling farmers;
  • support a regulatory framework for cryptocurrency and other digital assets;
  • launch a "National Health Equity Initiative" focused on black men; and
  • legalize recreational marijuana nationally.

Concerning the legalization of marijuana, which is presently legal in the District of Columbia and 24 states, the memo stressed that Harris "will also fight to ensure that as the national cannabis industry takes shape, Black men — who have, for years, been overpoliced for marijuana use — are able to access wealth and jobs in this new market."

Harris' "opportunity agenda" was met with ridicule.

'I'm not really shocked you see us as this dumb.'

Critics suggested, for instance, that Harris' concern over the fallout of drug laws rings hollow, given that she cheerily enforced them while San Francisco district attorney.

Some users on X dusted off footage from the 2019 Democratic primary debate where Tulsi Gabbard noted, "[Harris] put over 1,500 people in jail for marijuana violations and then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana."

According to the Mercury News, Harris oversaw over 1,950 marijuana misdemeanor and felony convictions in San Francisco. Apparently she did so with unusual zeal. After all, the prosecutors working for her reportedly "convicted people on marijuana charges at a higher rate than under her predecessor."

Although now a champion of legalized marijuana, evidently figuring it for a winning proposal among black men, Harris fought a ballot measure for marijuana legalization in 2010, going so far as to co-author an opposition argument in the voter guide. In 2016, she remained relatively neutral on the matter when a subsequent ballot initiative passed.

The vice president only changed her tune in May 2018 when it became politically expedient to do so — around the time she began plotting her first presidential run.

Years later, she told the titular host of "Late Night with Seth Meyers" that "nobody should have to go to jail for smoking weed."

Not all critics took issue with Harris' apparent hypocrisy and brazen opportunism. Others noted that the vice president appeared to be insinuating that black men disproportionately needed the drug.

Matt Antar, chairman of the New York Young Republican Club, noted, "Why is illegal marijuana an 'unjust barrier' for black men? Is she insinuating that all black men are potheads? This is racist."

Keith Barry, on the ads team at X, tweeted, "Of all the policy issues, this is what you choose *specifically* for black men? I'm not really shocked you see us as this dumb and that our top concern is to get high or sell drugs."

Former NFL running back Herschel Walker wrote, "Every election, men of color become a focal point for Democrats — offering money and now marijuana but no focus on education or jobs. It's all about securing your vote, not creating sustainable change. Where was VP Harris the last 3 years?"

Veterans on Duty chairman Jeremy C. Hunt told Fox News' Harris Faulkner that Harris "has this kind of caricature of black men in her head, that we're just these, you know, some California potheads that are sitting there looking for a government handout."

While Harris is talking to black men about drugs and crypto, Quenton Jordan, vice president of the Black Conservative Federation, told The Hill that Trump's alternative "message is resonating because he's talking about issues that families talk about at the dinner table and men talk about in the barber shops."

Pew Research noted in September that the economy and health care are among the top issues for black male voters in this election.

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‘People Shouldn’t Go to Jail for Smoking Weed’ Says Kamala Harris, Who Sent Thousands to Jail for Smoking Weed

Vice President Kamala Harris continues to embrace policy positions completely at odds with her previous actions as an elected official. "I just feel strongly that people shouldn't go to jail for smoking weed," she said Monday during an appearance on the video podcast All The Smoke, a video podcast hosted by former NBA players Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson. "We need to legalize it."

Shockingly enough, the hosts did not follow up and ask Harris about her controversial record as attorney general of California, something she struggled to defend as a candidate for president in 2019. According to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), at least 1,974 individuals were imprisoned for marijuana-related offenses on Harris's watch.

The post ‘People Shouldn’t Go to Jail for Smoking Weed’ Says Kamala Harris, Who Sent Thousands to Jail for Smoking Weed appeared first on .

USC becomes first NCAA athletic program to partner with a cannabis brand



The University of Southern California is the first college athletic program in the country to partner with a cannabis company after striking a deal with Cookies.

The USC Trojans announced a partnership with the brand owned by Gilbert Milam Jr., a Billboard-charting rapper and entrepreneur who goes by the name Berner.

'Cannabis is not a performance-enhancing drug.'

Cookies will partner with the USC football team as well as the men's and women's basketball teams, CBS Sports reported.

As Business Wire noted, fans will see Cookies' integration on the sports teams' digital channels while Cookies will also provide exclusive promotional items and tailgate experiences.

The announcement comes just a few months after the NCAA decided to remove cannabis from its banned substances list.

"Cannabis is not a performance-enhancing drug and that a harm-reduction approach to cannabis is best implemented at the school level," the NCAA committee said.

The Cookies CEO said he is thrilled to partner with such an iconic athletic department at USC.

"California is our home state and for Cookies to be involved with a premier athletic program, in the oldest private college in the state of California, is incredibly exciting for us," Berner said in a statement. "We are honored and excited to be a sponsor and Trojans supporter alongside other globally recognized brands. Fight on!"

The San Francisco-based company has received several healthy valuations in the last few years, ranging from from $150 million to upward of $1 billion.

Vice president and general manager of USC Sports Properties Drew DeHart called Cookies an "innovative brand" and a "global leader in CBD."

He added that the company was "deep in life-style culture and wellness."

Berner has had an interesting career path, partnering with rappers like Wiz Khalifa for long-term music ventures while facing lawsuits that have alleged bad business practices.

The rapper has also accused website Benzinga of publishing an AI-generated interview with him. After Milam Jr. himself declared the interview to be "not real," a reporter asked him if any of the article's quotes could be attributed to him.

"Absolutely not ! Not one word is mine," the rapper replied on X. "That's why I've always done my own quotes or interviews in my own voice. That ain't me at all," he added.

The entrepreneur has prided himself with being transparent and has often tried to expose fans to shadow-banning and social media bias, stating that allegedly that his content has been hidden and deleted on Meta platforms due to the nature of his business.

In an Instagram post, Berner called it "epic" to see his brand alongside companies such as Coca-Cola, Monster, and United Airlines as USC partners.

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