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Is Kamala Devi Harris Vice President Democrat Nominee a Threat To Pakistan!

Five faith facts about Biden VP Kamala Harris
Yonat Shimron - Religion News Service August 11, 2020

(RNS) — Few, if any, vice presidential candidates have had as much exposure to the world’s religions as Kamala Harris, the 55-year-old senator from California who Joseph Biden just picked as his running mate.

Harris’ ethnic, racial and cultural biography represents a slice of the U.S. population that is becoming ascendant but that has never been represented in the nation’s second-highest office.

Here are five faith facts about Harris:

She was raised on Hinduism and Christianity.
Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was from Chennai, India; her father, Donald Harris, from Jamaica. The two met as graduate students at the University of California, Berkeley.

Her name, Kamala, means “lotus” in Sanskrit, and is another name for the Hindu goddess Lakshmi. She visited India multiple times as a girl and got to know her relatives there.

But because her parents divorced when she was 7, she also grew up in Oakland and Berkeley attending predominantly Black churches. Her downstairs neighbor, Regina Shelton, often took Kamala and her sister Maya to Oakland's 23rd Avenue Church of God in Oakland. Harris now considers herself a Black Baptist.

She is married to a Jewish man.
Harris met her husband, Los Angeles lawyer Douglas Emhoff, on a blind date in San Francisco. They married in 2014. At their wedding, the couple smashed a glass to honor Emhoff’s upbringing (a traditional Jewish wedding custom).

It was Harris’ first marriage and his second. An article in the Jewish press described her imitation of her Jewish mother-in-law, Barbara Emhoff, as “worthy of an Oscar.”

She was criticized for not proactively assisting in civil cases against Catholic clergy sex abuse during the years she served as a prosecutor.

After graduating from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, Harris specialized in prosecuting sex crimes and child exploitation as a young prosecutor. But two investigations by The Intercept and The Associated Press found that Harris was consistently silent on the Catholic Church’s abuse scandal — first as San Francisco district attorney and later as California’s attorney general.

Survivors of sex abuse at the hands of priests say she resisted informal requests to help them with their cases and refused to release church records on abusive priests that had been gathered by her predecessor, Terence Hallinan.

As attorney general, Harris filed a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to refuse Hobby Lobby’s request to deny women health care coverage for contraception because of the craft-store chain owner’s religious beliefs.

In her 2014 brief, supported by 15 states and the city of Washington, D.C., Harris wrote that if Hobby Lobby were allowed to withhold birth control coverage on religious grounds, it might lead other corporations to demand similar exemptions from the nation’s civil rights laws.

In the landmark decision, the Supreme Court ruled that family-owned corporations can’t be forced to pay for insurance coverage for contraception under the Affordable Care Act if it offends their religious beliefs.

Later, as U.S. Senator, Harris co-sponsored a congressional bill to weaken the Religious Freedom Restoration Act to ensure it is not used to permit discrimination in the name of religion.

The measure, called the Do No Harm Act, was first introduced in 2017 and again in 2019. RFRA originally passed in 1993 to prevent the government from “substantially burdening a person’s exercise of religion.” Do No Harm’s backers believed that RFRA “should not be interpreted to authorize an exemption from generally applicable law.”

Had it passed, it would have ensured that religious employers could not deny health care coverage for employees or claim exemptions to civil rights laws.

When running for president last year, she often used the New Testament parable of the good Samaritan.
Jesus tells the parable about an outsider who helps a man beaten and left on the side of the road. Harris has said it has helped her clarify who one’s “neighbor” is.

“Neighbor is not about having the same ZIP code,” Harris said at a Poor People’s Campaign forum last year. “What we learn about in that parable is that neighbor is someone you are walking by on the street. … Neighbor is about understanding and living in service of others — that we are all each other’s brothers and sisters.”

In other speeches, Harris has invoked liberation theology, the strain of Christian thought that emphasizes social concern for the poor and political liberation for oppressed peoples.

“Justice is on the ballot,” Harris said at an event hosted by the Iowa Democratic Party last year.

“Economic justice is on the ballot. ... Health care justice is on the ballot. ... Education justice is on the ballot. ... Reproductive justice is on the ballot. ... Justice for children is on the ballot. ... Here’s the bottom line, Iowa. I do believe that when we overcome these injustices, we will unlock the promise of America and the potential of the American people.”

https://www.americamagazine.org/pol...five-faith-facts-about-biden-vp-kamala-harris
 
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If she believes in what her grandfather told her, that it is a land of equality, regardless of their circumstances at birth, and she is proud of that heritage; then she will be the perfect candidate. Such a candidate isn't a nationalist, but a humanist. What BJP is doing in India is opposite to what she is proud of.
 
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Five faith facts about Biden VP Kamala Harris
Yonat Shimron - Religion News Service August 11, 2020

(RNS) — Few, if any, vice presidential candidates have had as much exposure to the world’s religions as Kamala Harris, the 55-year-old senator from California who Joseph Biden just picked as his running mate.

Harris’ ethnic, racial and cultural biography represents a slice of the U.S. population that is becoming ascendant but that has never been represented in the nation’s second-highest office.

Here are five faith facts about Harris:

She was raised on Hinduism and Christianity.
Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was from Chennai, India; her father, Donald Harris, from Jamaica. The two met as graduate students at the University of California, Berkeley.

Her name, Kamala, means “lotus” in Sanskrit, and is another name for the Hindu goddess Lakshmi. She visited India multiple times as a girl and got to know her relatives there.

But because her parents divorced when she was 7, she also grew up in Oakland and Berkeley attending predominantly Black churches. Her downstairs neighbor, Regina Shelton, often took Kamala and her sister Maya to Oakland's 23rd Avenue Church of God in Oakland. Harris now considers herself a Black Baptist.

She is married to a Jewish man.
Harris met her husband, Los Angeles lawyer Douglas Emhoff, on a blind date in San Francisco. They married in 2014. At their wedding, the couple smashed a glass to honor Emhoff’s upbringing (a traditional Jewish wedding custom).

It was Harris’ first marriage and his second. An article in the Jewish press described her imitation of her Jewish mother-in-law, Barbara Emhoff, as “worthy of an Oscar.”

She was criticized for not proactively assisting in civil cases against Catholic clergy sex abuse during the years she served as a prosecutor.

After graduating from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, Harris specialized in prosecuting sex crimes and child exploitation as a young prosecutor. But two investigations by The Intercept and The Associated Press found that Harris was consistently silent on the Catholic Church’s abuse scandal — first as San Francisco district attorney and later as California’s attorney general.

Survivors of sex abuse at the hands of priests say she resisted informal requests to help them with their cases and refused to release church records on abusive priests that had been gathered by her predecessor, Terence Hallinan.

As attorney general, Harris filed a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to refuse Hobby Lobby’s request to deny women health care coverage for contraception because of the craft-store chain owner’s religious beliefs.

In her 2014 brief, supported by 15 states and the city of Washington, D.C., Harris wrote that if Hobby Lobby were allowed to withhold birth control coverage on religious grounds, it might lead other corporations to demand similar exemptions from the nation’s civil rights laws.

In the landmark decision, the Supreme Court ruled that family-owned corporations can’t be forced to pay for insurance coverage for contraception under the Affordable Care Act if it offends their religious beliefs.

Later, as U.S. Senator, Harris co-sponsored a congressional bill to weaken the Religious Freedom Restoration Act to ensure it is not used to permit discrimination in the name of religion.

The measure, called the Do No Harm Act, was first introduced in 2017 and again in 2019. RFRA originally passed in 1993 to prevent the government from “substantially burdening a person’s exercise of religion.” Do No Harm’s backers believed that RFRA “should not be interpreted to authorize an exemption from generally applicable law.”

Had it passed, it would have ensured that religious employers could not deny health care coverage for employees or claim exemptions to civil rights laws.

When running for president last year, she often used the New Testament parable of the good Samaritan.
Jesus tells the parable about an outsider who helps a man beaten and left on the side of the road. Harris has said it has helped her clarify who one’s “neighbor” is.

“Neighbor is not about having the same ZIP code,” Harris said at a Poor People’s Campaign forum last year. “What we learn about in that parable is that neighbor is someone you are walking by on the street. … Neighbor is about understanding and living in service of others — that we are all each other’s brothers and sisters.”

In other speeches, Harris has invoked liberation theology, the strain of Christian thought that emphasizes social concern for the poor and political liberation for oppressed peoples.

“Justice is on the ballot,” Harris said at an event hosted by the Iowa Democratic Party last year.

“Economic justice is on the ballot. ... Health care justice is on the ballot. ... Education justice is on the ballot. ... Reproductive justice is on the ballot. ... Justice for children is on the ballot. ... Here’s the bottom line, Iowa. I do believe that when we overcome these injustices, we will unlock the promise of America and the potential of the American people.”

https://www.americamagazine.org/pol...five-faith-facts-about-biden-vp-kamala-harris

So she seems more Christian, and judging from this article, she seems very nondecisive as well. Either way, I don't think it doesn't make a difference who comes to the presidency. In the end, the foreign policy is made by the collective sum of the Government and its institutions, not just the president.
 
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Don't give monkies who come and stays in America. For Pakistan, that shipped sailed long time ago. Our future and stragetic alignment is with China.


On the subject though, there is difinetly silence in New Delhi. You don't get to see to the usual Bollywood mirch masala. May this is the reason?

Kamala Harris decries Jaishankar's decision of not meeting Jayapal
The first US Senator of Indian origin, Harris said she stands with Jayapal

By PTI December 21, 2019 10:54 IST
kam-jaishankar.jpg
Foreign Affairs Minister S Jaishankar | Reuters; US Senator Kamala Harris | AP
Top Democratic Senator Kamala Harris on Friday came out in support of her fellow Indian American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, with whom External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar refused to meet during his visit to the country early this week.

also read
"It's wrong for any foreign government to tell Congress what members are allowed in meetings on Capitol Hill," Harris, who dropped out of the Democratic presidential race early this month said in a tweet.

The first US Senator of Indian origin, Harris said she stands with Jayapal.

"I'm glad her colleagues in the House did too," she said responding to a news report in The Washington Post which said that Jaishankar refused to attend a meeting of House Foreign Affairs Committee, because Jayapal was also scheduled to be present in that meeting along with other lawmakers.

Earlier in the day, Senator Elizabeth Warren, and a leading Democratic presidential candidate came out in support of Jayapal.

"The US and India have an important partnershipbut our partnership can only succeed if it is rooted in honest dialogue and shared respect for religious pluralism, democracy, and human rights," she tweeted.

Warren said the "efforts to silence" Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal "are deeply troubling".

She retweeted a report by The Washington Post which said that External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar refused to attend a meeting of House Foreign Affairs Committee members that included Jayapal.

Jayapal, the first Indian American women to be elected to the House of Representatives, has introduced a resolution in the House on Kashmir.

The pending resolution on Kashmir introduced by Jayapal in the House is not a fair characterisation of the situation in Jammu and Kashmir, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar told a group of Indian reporters on Thursday.

"I am aware of that (Congressional) resolution. I don't think it's a fair understanding of the situation in Jammu and Kashmir or a fair characterisation of what the government of India is doing. And I have no interest in meeting (Jayapal)," Jaishankar said when asked if he asked for a meeting with Jayapal.

Jayapal thanked Senators Harris and Warren for their support.

"We're rapidly entering a world where it's not only acceptable but encouraged for foreign governments to shun the president's domestic political opponents. This isn't a situation in which a coherent foreign policy can be developed," she said in another tweet on Friday.

Congressman Jim McGovern also came out in her support.

"No foreign government should dictate who is or isn't allowed into meetings on Capitol Hill," he said.

"I stand with" Jayapal and "applaud" Congressman Eliot Engel, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee "and others for doing the same," he said.

"The partnership between the US and India must be grounded in open, honest conversation between friends," McGovern said.
 
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She's a female version of Barak Obama and Obama hated Pakistan, especially the military.

He was determined to teach Pakistan a lesson and used Balochistan against the state.

His anti-Pakistan policy was, shut up and accept the humiliating drone strikes against the sole Muslim nuclear power (to scare Iranians into signing the nuclear deal) or lose Balochistan.
 
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Believe me, I know that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have issues, but at this point, I think a ham sandwich might be better than Trump.

Don't abuse our great president Trump :(
We still voting for that Cheeto
 
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No.

She's no more a threat than any other Vice President would be.

US policy towards Pakistan (and most of the world) rarely deviates on the personal whims of an individual. Even a maverick like Trump barely made much of a dent, and neither Biden nor Harris come even close to Trump on that count - they are unlikely to 'rock the boat'.

Expect the US Establishment to continue setting the agenda on policy towards Pakistan and India, under the shadow of their Don Quixotic obsession with China.
 
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Most "Indian Americans" are more American than American themselves.

All of them are proud of their "origins" just in words. They dont do nothing for their original country.

Currently, we have Indians as Google CEO and M$ CoE as. For all purposes they are Americans (except may be watching a world cup cricket match with Sachin Tendulkar from the VIP stands) and do NOTHING special for India or Indians. An American may do something worthwhile for India. An average Indian American may do his/her bit too. But expect nothing from these VIP "Indian Americans"

Pakistan should stop giving too much importance to Kamala Harris. Even Indians dont give her much importance. In case it matters, she is a baptised 'born again' xtian.
 
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Folks need to jump off this bandwagon quick. The democrats are anti-Pakistan by stealth, the republicans are also anti-Pakistan by slightly less stealth.

Kamala will slot into this model neatly. Do Pakistanis think an Indian Congress government will suddenly surrender Kashmir or even the Valley to us? What planet are you living on? USA under the dems will continue the 73 year long bile production by declaring India the "world's largest democracy that is exercising its right to self defence against terrorism in Kashmir".
 
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Most people don't understand that democrats are usually leaned towards India not necessarily against Pakistan but their pro India stance make them work against Pakistan. Kamala Harris is a Democrat and an Indian origin which may influence her decisions/suggestions against Pakistan.

Republicans are usually neutral type with slight leaning towards Pakistan.
 
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Most people don't understand that democrats are usually leaned towards India not necessarily against Pakistan but their pro India stance make them work against Pakistan. Kamala Harris is a Democrat and an Indian origin which may influence her decisions/suggestions against Pakistan.

Republicans are usually neutral type with slight leaning towards Pakistan.


Yes, Democrats are usually leaned towards India not necessarily against Pakistan. Republicans are usually neutral type with slight leaning towards Pakistan.
 
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Don't worry guys ...Trump will remain Pres for the next term ...
This is a pretty divisive ticket within Democrat circles in the US - the progressives within the party feel completely left out.

Biden over Bernie was going to be a tough pill to swallow for many progressives, but many were hoping for a more progressive VP selection. If this turns away many progressives come election time (and I'm hearing a lot of grumbling on social media), then the election remains wide open.
 
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