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The Jury Is in on Kamala’s (Alleged) Drug Use as Far as I’m Concerned

AP Photo/Paul Sancya

I’m probably not legally allowed and definitely restrained by journalistic standards to claim to definitively know what kind of drug Kamala fancies most in preparation for her public appearances.

Doing so would also land me in one of Hillary’s gulags for sure if her totalitarian ambitions ever succeed.  

Related: Hillary Clinton Demands ‘Criminal Penalties’ for Americans to Deter ‘Misinformation’

I’d love a brave insider whistleblower from the campaign to spill the beans to me so I could break the story, but I imagine that the list of people who might be in a position to expose whatever alleged substance use might be afoot is quite short and extremely insular.

Hence the caveat “alleged” here.

But for all intents and purposes, I’m pounding the gavel in the court of public opinion; I’d be willing to stake my last dollar that Kamala’s little helper is lots of Xanax — like, more Xanax than could legitimately be considered therapeutic. (Or Valium or Ativan or any of the benzodiazepines.)

Benzodiazepines are hellacious drugs that I would never recommend anyone use for anything other than as a one-off remedy for a single panic attack — and only then as a last resort.

I know they are hellacious because I have battled my own demons in the past and paid the price for it. In so doing, I have come to intimately understand what these drugs do.

And what they do is exactly what Kamala Harris looks like whenever she’s in front of a camera: kill any sense of inhibition, fully relax the subject, and enable stream-of-consciousness rambling that might otherwise be filtered and curated for social consumption under normal neurological conditions.

Exhibit A: whatever this totally incoherent, excruciating monologue was when Mamala recently appeared with Oprah for a pep rally.

We love our country. I love our country. I know we all do. That’s why everybody’s here right now. We love our country. We take pride in the privilege of being American. And this is a moment where we can and must come together as Americans understanding we have so much more in common than what separates us. Let’s come together with the character that we are so proud about who we are, which is we are an optimistic people. We are an optimistic people. Americans, by character, are people who have dreams and ambitions and aspirations. We believe in what is possible. We believe in what can be. And we believe in fighting for that. That’s how we came into being because the people before us understood that one of the greatest expressions for the love of our country, one of the greatest expressions of patriotism, is to fight for the ideals of who we ae., which includes freedom to make decisions about your own body, freedom to be safe from gun violence, freedom to have access to the ballot box, freedom to be who you are… freedom to just be. And that’s who we are. We believe in all that.

 

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