Con artist or not, he does bring out some good points in his tweets. Especially when it comes to the disparity of the judicial system.
Kamala is a loosing argument for Black men. Black women will see any indifference towards Kamala as a slight against all Black women. I'll give you an example; a Black female friend of mine is excited about Kamala and hopes to vote for her, saying we can use a Black woman in the White House.Especially given her credentials in Calafornia and that fact that she whent to an HBCU (my friend did not go to an HBCU, but acts like she so pro-Black) and she pledged AKA.
I told her none of that matters, there are white girls that went to HBCUs and pledged a Black sorority, should they are they Black? Should they get a pass? (you know the response to that.LOL )
I then said; "Kamala is not Black" she replied she is, I told her, Kamala's dad is Jamaican and her mom is Indian. She is not Black. She reiterated that Kamala is Black. I just said "ok" and left it alone.
Jamaicans and Indians will tell you definitively that they are not Black and will get angry if you call them Black. Most of them think they are better than those of us born and raised in America.
And to add to my argument today I see this...
Indian-American Kamala Harris, running for US president in 2020, is being hailed as top candidate: All you need to know
Kamala Harris' 2020 US presidential run excites Indian-American community
I'll leave this litte confusing nugget from back in 2016:
Kamala Harris will be the first Indian American U.S. senator and California's first black senator
Honestly, I don't care what she considers herself. Black, Indian, or Jamaican, the Democrats or Independents need a strong candidate to defeat whomever the Republicans put on the ticket.
If she has the Black woman vote on lock and she appeals to white people then she's more than halfway there and white people don't really care about her record as DA and AG in California, prison reform is not one of their hot button issues.