>don't like J.D Vance
This anon agrees, sketchy
Technocracy insane hillbilly
Left are terrified
Technocrats are drooling
[They] won't want him being president
What was it people called bad VP picks?
Insurance policy?
>don't like J.D Vance
This anon agrees, sketchy
Technocracy insane hillbilly
Left are terrified
Technocrats are drooling
[They] won't want him being president
What was it people called bad VP picks?
Insurance policy?
>yet here you are…
And says Don't let the name calling…proceeds to call names
Just another libtard pretending to be someone else
o7
>lesson #2: Who do they rule the world for?
Shhh no spoiling the end of the movie
Yes they are just lieutenants
Dementia Makes You Taller
https://iotwreport.com/dementia-makes-you-taller/
Can Kamala Harris win the presidency? Nearly 70% of Americans doubt veep has what it takes: poll
https://nypost.com/2024/07/24/us-news/nearly-70-of-americans-doubt-harris-has-what-it-takes-to-win-presidency-poll/
The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee is showing signs of momentum in the days since President Biden decided not to run for a second term.
But strong fundraising, a well-attended rally, and endorsements from virtually every major Democrat not named Barack Obama haven’t translated to faith among the general public that Kamala Harris can win — at least not yet.
In a poll of 1,605 people (1,435 of whom are registered voters) YouGov conducted between July 21 and 23 — a period that encompasses Biden’s announcement not to run and the quick coalescence of Democratic elites around Harris — only 31% think the vice president has what it takes to earn a promotion this year.
And there’s no gender gap in pessimism about Harris’ prospects — that 31% applies to both males and females.
Conversely, 52% of respondents see Trump as the likely winner.
Democrats, predictably, give Harris whatever boost she can claim in this metric, with 67% of people in her own party saying the veep will win, another 14% predicting a Trump victory and the rest unsure.
GOP registrants are much more sold on their candidate’s viability.
Just 3% of Republicans surveyed expect Harris to win, while 91% think the race in November is Trump’s to lose.
Independents also seem to think Trump is inevitable, with 53% of unaligned voters believing he’ll emerge victorious, versus just 23% of indys who believe Harris will win.
One significant cohort believes Harris has what it takes, though — and they just happen to be, historically, the key to Democratic chances in national elections.
Forty-five percent of black respondents believe Harris will win, while just 33% predict a Trump triumph.
While voters may not believe Harris can win, it doesn’t mean they aren’t supporting her.
When asked about “presidential vote intent,” 41% of those polled back Harris — putting her just 3 points behind Trump, well inside the +/- 3.3% margin of error and tracking with polls from NPR and Marist that likewise show a race that is too close to call.
When it comes down to the other 15% in the YouGov survey, a third of them aren’t sure who they back, a third back Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and the rest are dispersed among a smattering of marginal candidates.
Trump has effectively consolidated Republican respondents in this survey, taking 92% of them, with 3% backing Kennedy and 2% backing Harris.
Democrats are still more diffused for the time being.
While Harris has a respectable 86% support level in her own party, 5% aren’t sure who they back, while Kennedy takes 3% and Trump takes 2% of Dems.
Independents are still up for grabs, but YouGov’s sample says Trump holds serve — taking 37% of them to Harris’ 32%. Of the remainder, 11% support Kennedy and 9% are still undecided.
Harris has majority support among black voters (63% to 14% for Trump), Hispanics (44% to 40%) and — in a potentially important metric that could swing battleground states — self-described “moderates,” with a 41% to 31% lead over Trump.
As Democrats might hope, a gender gap is also emerging in the preference poll.
Family tree of Kamala HARRIS
https://en.geneastar.org/genealogy/harriskamal/kamala-harris
https://archive.ph/pO7tZ
Born Kamala Devi HARRIS
Kamala Harris was born on October 20, 1964, in Oakland, California, to a Tamil Indian mother and a Jamaican father. Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, was a breast cancer scientist who immigrated to the United States from Madras (present-day Chennai) in 1960. Her father, Donald Harris, is a Stanford University economics professor who emigrated from Jamaica in 1961 for graduate study in economics at University of California, Berkeley. Despite this, Kamala Harris is most often referred to as African American rather than Caribbean American. CNN's April Ryan has suggested that due to the history of slavery in Jamaica, Harris may indeed be of partially African descent. Recalling the lives of his grandmothers, Donald Harris wrote that one was related to a plantation owner while the other had unknown ancestry.
>HOW HARD HAVE (YOU) WORKED TO BRING IN NEW PEOPLE HERE?
Old enough to remember when that was the opposite of what was desired
>NEVER HAS AND NEVER WILL BE.
When it first started after the migration from 4skin it was outlined to NEVER SHARE THE DIRECT LINK to QR (was a private board/still listed as such even though visible now)
Traffic can be driven to /pnd, but you are fake news if you deny this historical fact
>RECRUIT OR WE DIE, ITS THAT SIMPLE
Fortunately this anon is patient and very versed at working with special needs individuals, so you don't have to worry about a thing.
DRIVE TRAFFIC TO THE WEBSITE
NOT THIS SPECIFIC BOARD
you halfwit technological savant