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In this episode of The Martin Memo, Zachary Martin deconstructs Kamala Harris’s memoir, 107 Days, exposing it as a 320-page exercise in blame-shifting and political delusion.
Zach dives into the internal chaos of the Biden-Harris administration, highlighting bombshell admissions about "filtered" data used to manage the President’s moods and Harris’s retroactive labeling of the re-election bid as "reckless." From her defense of radical social policies to the identity politics that fueled her VP selection, the episode argues that the memoir serves as a definitive epitaph for a campaign that prioritized "joy" as a slogan while harboring bitterness as its foundation.
Ultimately, Zach reveals why the Harris-Walz ticket didn’t just lose but imploded, offering a sobering look at a candidate who remained fundamentally disconnected from the American public.
By Zachary MartinIn this episode of The Martin Memo, Zachary Martin deconstructs Kamala Harris’s memoir, 107 Days, exposing it as a 320-page exercise in blame-shifting and political delusion.
Zach dives into the internal chaos of the Biden-Harris administration, highlighting bombshell admissions about "filtered" data used to manage the President’s moods and Harris’s retroactive labeling of the re-election bid as "reckless." From her defense of radical social policies to the identity politics that fueled her VP selection, the episode argues that the memoir serves as a definitive epitaph for a campaign that prioritized "joy" as a slogan while harboring bitterness as its foundation.
Ultimately, Zach reveals why the Harris-Walz ticket didn’t just lose but imploded, offering a sobering look at a candidate who remained fundamentally disconnected from the American public.