On the latest episode of The Drill Down podcast, Peter Schweizer and Eric Eggers examine Kamala Harris’ promotion of dangerous falsehoods to sow discord among Americans — especially around issues like race and identity.
After foreign actors called in dozens of fake bomb threats into Ohio schools, Harris inexplicably blamed the rhetoric of Donald Trump and JD Vance — even after it was clear that the GOP ticket wasn’t behind the threats.
“More than 24 hours after Ohio Governor Mike DeWine admits that these bomb threats were not a result of incendiary rhetoric, not because of Donald Trump, J.D. Vance, but in fact, bad foreign actors, Kamala Harris goes on stage and says this,” Eggers said before rolling a clip of Harris in which she said:
Children, children, a whole community put it in fear. You really ought to understand at a very deep level how much your words have meaning, especially when you have been, and then seek to be again president of the United States of America. It’s got to start. And we’ve got to say that you cannot be entrusted with standing behind the seal of the president of the United States of America, engaging in that hateful rhetoric that, as usual, is designed to divide us as a country.
Schweizer weighed in: “Now, what’s interesting about that clip and interesting about Kamala Harris, you know, sort of making these exaggerated claims is, as they say, she has a history. She has a history of doing this. I mean, in instances where she plays a particular card, it’s oftentimes the race card. And even though the facts and the evidence clearly show that something is not true, she sort of doubles down on it.”
“The one that comes to mind for me, of course, is the Jussie Smollett case,” Schweizer added.
Watch the clip above.