Candace - I Spoke With Kamala's Uncle! | Candace Ep 78
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Transcript
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I am absolutely giddy today, you guys.
I did it.
I spoke to Kamala's uncle officially.
And by the way, he's a gem.
10 out of 10.
I really wish that he was running for president
instead of her because he comes across
as a very honest man.
I'm gonna tell you all about that conversation
and how it's now led me to many more questions.
So many more questions that I have
about Kamala and her true heritage.
Also, she's once again been asked
about her racial identity.
This happened just three days ago
and suddenly she's a little iffy on the answer. Kamala and me are now in a very particular kind of relationship.
I'm like Maury and she's essentially my guest. I'm asking her a question. Kamala,
during your run as president, we asked you if your genealogy was actually Irish Indian.
You said no. The lie detector determined that was a lie.
Oh, welcome back to Candace.
Where to begin, where to begin. OK, so two days ago or three days ago, Kamala was asked again
about her Black heritage, and suddenly she is getting a little iffy on the details. You can
see she does not want to engage in the conversation, and the answer that she actually gives
is fantastic. It is just fantastic, and we need to now pick it apart. So she appeared on a show
called All the Smoke,
and she was interviewed by the hosts, which are NBA, former NBA players, Matt Barnes and Steven Jackson. I want you to pay very close attention to her answer here. Take a listen.
What do you think when you hear people kind of questioning just the fabric of who you are?
Well, one, I don't listen to it. I'm really clear about who I am. And if anybody else is not,
they need to go through their own level of therapy. That's not my issue. My mother was
very clear. She was raising two black girls to be two proud black women. And that was never,
it was never a question. You know, it's funny because over the years, journalists, some, not most, will want to talk about it.
And I say, okay, if you want to have this conversation, I'm prepared to have it.
But sit down and get comfortable for a few hours.
If you want to start talking about race in America, you want to talk about the one-eighth rule?
A drop.
Right. You want to talk about what it means in terms of what, who you are
perceived to be and the impact that can have on the rest of your life, regardless of who you
actually are in terms of your God-given capacity and the rights that you have and should have.
So, you know, I don't mess with that. I think that's other people trying to figure some stuff
out that they need. They need. They got some issues. They got to deal with that. I think that's other people trying to figure some stuff out that they need. They need. They got some issues. They got to deal with it. Wow. So she just doesn't answer the question
at all. Right. So before we had her really leaning into being black, now all of a sudden she's not
she does. She doesn't even mess with that. I don't mess with that. I don't even mess.
They need to go to therapy. She's pulling this Freudian technique. Obviously, you know,
I've spoken to you about Freud, who was a disgusting human being who essentially gaslit women who were actually being abused by their
fathers.
So what she's doing is this exact same Freudian technique of gaslighting people by being like,
actually, you need therapy.
The problem is you.
The problem is actually you for asking the question.
No, Kamala, we're asking the question because you made this a theme in your bookie book,
which we're gonna get to in a little bit, okay?
So you don't get to now just
not address the question whatsoever.
Put yourself in her shoes, okay?
I'm gonna put myself in her shoes.
I'm running for president of the United States, okay?
And these questions keep popping up
about whether or not I am black.
Do you know how simple it would be
to simply answer the question?
List your black relatives in four seconds. I would be like, this is my grandma. This is my grandpa. Suddenly she's
not, she's a little iffy on the details here. Why didn't she just say, yes, my, obviously my
grandmother is Beryl. Here's a picture of her. She's black. I'm disgusted with the people that
are even calling this into question. Here's my great grandmother, Iris Finnegan. I am obviously
black. Instead she goes, oh, do Finnegan. I am obviously black.
Instead, she goes, oh, do you really want to talk about it? That's what I say to these girls. Do you
really want to talk about race? Do you really want to talk about the one eighth rule? I mean,
how dare she? And the answer is yes, Kamala. Actually, I would like to talk about it. Yeah,
I'm actually totally up for talking about the one drop rule, the one eighth rule.
Let's discuss history.
That's what those journalists should have done.
That's what those former NBA players should have done, not given her a free pass.
I would have been like, no, ma'am, name your ancestors.
And why are you bringing up the one eighth rule at all?
Let's talk about the history here, OK?
The one drop rule was actually a legal doctrine in the United States that was used as a means
of racial classification.
It really dates back to the antebellum period in Virginia, where people of color were considered legally white if they had less than 25% African ancestry. So we're talking about something that
was pre-Civil War, but then the classifications became especially relevant throughout Jim Crow
in the South, obviously because of segregation. So they're like, are you white or are you black? So they needed to know how to quantify
whiteness and blackness. The laws were first officially codified in Tennessee as one of
Virginia's racial integrity laws. They wanted birth certificates to just be very clear whether
a parent was legally white or legally a Negro so that it was known which laws in society you had to abide by.
What about Indian Americans? Because strangely, she brings up her mom. You would think the first
thing she would do would be to bring up her dad. Instead, she brings up her mom. She's like,
my mom was very clear that she was raising two Black women. Your mother is Indian,
like fully 100% Indian. So the fact that the first person that you recall is a non-Black
person is suspicious. And regarding Indian Americans, just to be clear, in 1923, the Supreme
Court decided in the United States versus Bhagat Singh Thind that Indians were classified as
Caucasians, as they had been by anthropologists. They upheld that, but they also made it clear that
they were not considered white. So that is probably the answer as to why her mother put
Caucasian on her birth certificate. That was actually the legal classification for Indian
women. Now, also regarding this one-drop rule, Kamala Harris was never subject to it ever in her
entire lifetime.
She was born in California.
Just to be clear, that was the very first state to end segregation, and they did that
back in 1947.
So they did it seven years before the Supreme Court decision of Brown v. Education, which
federalized desegregating all of the schools. So it actually infuriates me that she does this, that she essentially goes back and pretends that
she's lived through something like, oh, well, let's talk about the one drop rule. Why are we
discussing the one drop rule? By the way, even if you were subjected to it, you probably would
have passed since none of your parents are listed as Negroes on your birth certificate. Like,
what are you doing mining the history of Black people that came before you and who you are still refusing to
name? You put them in a book once, but that was it. Now you don't want to talk about Grandma Beryl.
What's up with that? Now you don't want to talk about great-grandma Iris Finnegan. What is up
with that? And by the way, as I was considering that, her upbringing and how strange it is that
she keeps leaning into this idea, like she was born two years before my mother was born, and my mother
didn't live through segregation. My mother didn't live through any of this stuff. These are not her
memories. These are the memories of my grandparents. My grandfather lived through segregation. I'm
going, why does Kamala keep doing this, like acting like she grew up in the 40s and in the 50s
with these sorts of memories? And then I remembered suddenly that
she did this on stage a while ago where she got almost teary-eyed and emotional talking about
busing and desegregation. I'm going to roll that back for you just to jog your memory. Take a listen.
You also worked with them to oppose busing. And, you know, there was a little girl in California who was part of the second class
to integrate her public schools. And she was bused to school every day. And that little girl was me.
Okay. Guys, so you watch that clip. Okay. You're an American. You see she's getting a little choked up and you can instantly assume
that what she means is that she was like a Ruby Bridges. Yeah. Like that little girl was me
in second grade. I was a part of the second class to be desegregated. Like that instantly signals,
given the emotionality of it, that she was a Ruby Bridges. Talk about mining
black history. Well, let me be clear. She intentionally misled people here to make them
believe that she was a young Ruby Bridges. This is how disgusting and despicable this woman is.
She wanted people to go back in their minds to all they learned about Ruby Bridges,
the images of Ruby Bridges having to be protected by police as she entered into that
school in Louisiana. She wanted people to go back in their minds to that. That's why she's getting
all choky. She's like on the brink of tears. That little girl. So to be perfectly clear here,
that little girl went to Thousand Oaks Elementary School in Berkeley, and far from that impression she's
giving, she did not live through any desegregation or any real desegregation at all, because as I
mentioned, the schools had already gone through that before she was born, literally before she
was born in 1947. In fact, the school district had to issue a statement after that performance on stage,
and this is what they had to put up on their website for clarification.
They wrote, there has been some confusion in the media and social media around the Berkeley
schools and integration due to the fact that our high school was already integrated, as
evidenced, for example, by high school yearbooks, which show children of many race and ethnicities at school together prior to 1968. In Berkeley, we only have one comprehensive high
school, so it was integrated by default. Our elementary schools, however, reflected the racial
composition of our neighborhoods, which, like many neighborhoods across America, reflected the
history of segregation, stemming from policies which restricted the opportunities of non-white residents. So then they go on, we recently
celebrated the 50-year anniversary of our voluntary busing plan. And you can find additional details
here. So let me clarify to you what actually happened in her childhood. There was no desegregation
effort that she had to live
through. She was not Ruby Bridges. Rather, what they realized was because of the past in which
you had Black people all living in one neighborhood, and this was contributed sometimes because of
redline districting, you had Black people living in one neighborhood, you had white people living
in one neighborhood. What ended up happening was that you had schools which were majority Black
and which were majority white. And so what
they wanted to do in Berkeley was to be the first to offer a busing plan to turn that around so that
the buses would pick up students that lived far from the white school and bring them over there
so that the schools would be more evenly mixed. That's what she's describing. So after they put
and implemented this busing plan, Kamala was the second or third class
since they had implemented this busing plan.
Nothing to do with desegregation, just an effort to say, okay, we're realizing now if
people are just districted according to where they live, you're going to have these schools
that are like 85% black and some schools that are 85% white.
That's what it is.
So just thinking about
the emotionality and how tricky she's being here, again, trying to allude to like some Ruby Bridges
scenario really makes me angry. It is just so unacceptable. I just can't stand this fraud.
And it's so important to state also that the one drop rule was declared officially
unconstitutional in 1967.
That was just three years after Kamala was born.
This is just not her childhood at all.
Not her childhood at all.
This is just what she does.
She lies and she lies and she lies.
But it gets better.
It gets better.
But first, I'm going to remind you guys about pre-born, because Kamala is indeed the first
vice presidential candidate to ever visit an abortion facility.
And Tim Walz supported a bill in his home state which legalized the denial of life-saving medical care to infants born alive after botched abortions.
The media has dubbed this the abortion election.
We have to stand up to this evil.
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That's pound 250 baby. Or you can go to preborn.com slash Candice. That's preborn.com
slash Candice. So like I said, it gets better
because yesterday I was going through her book that I downloaded. I downloaded that so that you
didn't have to because I wanted to send a picture of her grandma Beryl to someone. So initially when
we started looking into the story, my producer had downloaded the book. I had downloaded the book,
but he had stumbled upon the picture of Beryl. So I hadn't actually flipped
through the ebook that I had downloaded. And so remarkably, it was kind of the first time I was
going to the picture segment looking for Beryl. And I realized Beryl's not in this book. I was
going, wait, what's going on? This is her book. Where is the Beryl picture? And I said to my
producer, did we make a mistake? This is definitely in the book. He pulls his up. He has a picture of barrel. Mine doesn't. I'm going,
is this a different edition of the book? And yes, it was. There were actually two publications of
the book, one in January of 2019. And then five months later, in May of 2019, they published what
is known as a young readers Edition. Basically, it's exactly
what it sounds like. It's meant to be for younger readers, and it's typically more pictorial, right?
So they want to change a couple of words, essentially kind of dumb it down to make it
easier to read and include more pictures. Yet in this edition, they decided to remove pictures.
And it's just, I guess, ironic that the pictures that they removed for the young reader's
later edition were pictures of Black Iris and Grandma Beryl. There were more pictures that
were removed, but the family members were all still there, except for Black Iris and Grandma
Beryl. I found that to be extremely interesting. But suddenly I realized that I had never flipped
through the book that had more
pictures than the edition that I was holding. And I started going through them. And you guys are not
even going to believe just how diabolical Kamala Harris is. It was just, I'm going to have to just
go through this calmly because I am telling you as a black person, it's actually offensive how hard
she tried to blackify herself.
And it made me think of the entire Emmanuel Macron, Brigitte Macron scandal, because the
journalist that broke that story essentially said that what they do when they're running
is they publish a book.
And that is the legend that is established, essentially, because people in their minds
think, oh, well, if it's in a book and a publisher agreed to publish it, Harper Collins
published this book about Kamala, they must have fact-checked this and all of this must be true.
People have this wrong perception that if a book is published as nonfiction, that there was some
effort of due diligence, which means that everything that you're reading is not fiction.
So they do this. It's like a rite of passage. I'm publishing this book and I'm expecting everyone
to just accept this as the legend of Kamala Harris. I'm going through these pictures, okay? And aside from Iris,
aside from Beryl, she also decided to include some other what I would describe as noteworthy
pictures of herself, like this one where she writes, Sporting My Fro, Summer of 1970. But
basically, you just know when you go through this that they
essentially sat down as a team and were like, we're creating the legend. We need you to be
black. This was published again in 2019. And they're like, we need that black vote. Let's
make it easy. Give me the blackest photos of you that you can possibly find. To put the caption
of her afro is just signaling to black people, hey, I'm black, which is ridiculous because there's
so many other races that have afros. Puerto Ricans have Afros. Spanish people have Afros.
Jewish people have Afros. Mark, my director, is Jewish. He has an Afro, okay? It is not like
proprietary to black people, but she's publishing this because like you're just supposed to look at
the picture, look at the picture and go, oh, she's got an Afro. I guess she's black. She literally
wrote that, okay? Then, of course, if you can imagine this team sitting down trying to process how to sell black, you
would go, well, Harlem, right? You got to put some pictures of Harlem here. And there are pictures
of her in Harlem. Look at this photo. She just posts up right here, visiting my Uncle Freddy
in Harlem. Harlem was always a magical place for me. Now, what's interesting about this picture is the man behind, I don't know if that's actually her Uncle Freddy, right?
Like, that came to my mind. I'm like, is this just like a guy working on the side of the street,
and she's just like, including him because this picture shows a Black man that's in Harlem,
and again, signals to Black people that like, she's with her uncle up in Harlem,
kind of feels that way.
But then I realized that she featured some more pictures of her black aunties and her black
uncles. And we see uncle Fred again, take a look at this photo. This is, this is going to drive
you guys crazy. Cause I just, I still can't believe it when I read it. So you see three,
obviously black people in this photo, You would not question the authenticity of their
blackness. And the caption reads, I'm blessed with an amazing family. I'll never be able to
thank Auntie Chris, Uncle Freddy, and Aunt Mary enough for their constant encouragement and
support. They always showed up for me as they did here at a campaign event for my DA's race
that we held at a San Francisco,
you guessed it, jazz club. Because hey, we're talking Harlem, we're talking black people,
we're talking afros. Let's also post a picture of you in a jazz club with your aunties and your
uncles. And like black people will just accept that you only have all these photos because
you're like super black. But then I said, wait a second.
She doesn't have an Aunt Mary or an Aunt Chris or an Uncle Fred.
I've been deep in this woman's genealogy.
Who are we talking about here?
These people do not exist.
And I said, is it possible that like somewhere in the book that she's alleging,
probably assuming that no one is going to actually read through,
she acknowledges that these aren't her real aunties and uncles.
And the answer is yes, my friends.
There's a passage about Aunt Mary and Uncle Freddy in this book,
The Truths We Hold,
which is really just the greatest trick ever played on Black America.
She writes this,
My mother surrounded herself with close friends who were really more like sisters.
My godmother, a fellow Berkeley student whom I knew as Aunt Mary,
was one of them. They met through the civil rights movement that was taking shape in the early 1960s
and was being debated and defended from the streets of Oakland to the soap boxes in Berkeley's
Sproul Plaza. As black students spoke out against injustice, a group of passionate,
keenly intelligent, politically engaged young men and women found one another, my mother and Aunt Mary among them. They went to peaceful protests
where they were attacked by police with hoses. They marched against the Vietnam War. And for
civil rights and voting rights, they went together to see Martin Luther King Jr. speak at Berkeley.
And my mother had a chance to meet him. She told me that at one of these anti-war protests,
the marchers were confronted by the hell's angels. She told me that at another, she and her friend were forced to run for safety
with me in a stroller after violence broke out against the protesters. But my parents and their
friends were more than just protesters. They were big thinkers pushing big ideas, organizing their
community. Aunt Mary, her brother, my uncle, Freddie, my mother and father, and about a dozen other students
organized a study group to read the Black writers that the university was ignoring.
So you guys, what can I say here? I'm at, I am being reduced to sound effects.
She wrote this book and she starts the sentence with her
family. She's visiting her family in Harlem. She wrote, I have the best family and shows
multiple pictures of an Uncle Fred that isn't her Fred. Why did she do this? It's not her uncle.
Okay. It's just not her uncle. It's her mom's friend. And she dedicates so much time
to him and the protest. And she's dropping Martin Luther King. And she's dropping W.E.B. Du Bois.
And she's dropping so many other people that are Black in this book. For what reason? Because she's
performing. Because this is a slight of hand, because they quite literally likely sat around
in a boardroom and they said, how can we make you black? I want to see every photo of you ever
taken. And I'm going to tell you what in people's minds will just read like blackness.
So we've got Ruby Bridges now in people's memory, being embedded in people's memory. Now we've got this idea of her marching aunties and
uncles in Harlem. It's just so unacceptable. It is so unacceptable. After going through all these
photos, I made a joke to my producer and director. I was like, oh, what's next? Is there going to be
a picture of her just like eating collard greens and cornbread? Is she going to be like, this is me eating collard greens and cornbread. I'm in Harlem.
And they said back to me, no, no, she's done that. I said, no. I said, shut up. That's not true.
She's not done that. There's no way. They said, yeah, no, there are clips of her.
Speaking about collard greens, I said, I cannot believe this.
Produce me the clip.
And they did.
Here it is.
I have a friend who had a Christmas party, Christmas Eve every year.
And she asked me to make the greens for a party every year.
And I am not lying to you that I would make so many greens that I'd need to wash them in the bathtub.
I'm telling you the truth.
So how do you make your greens?
Do you put turkey in them?
Bacon.
Nice.
My grandmother used to put bacon.
She used to put vinegar. Garlic.
I put white vinegar.
I do.
So I start with, I slice up my garlic.
But first I chop up the bacon and get all that fat going. Then I put garlic,
some chili peppers, and then a lot of water and a little chicken stock. And I let it go
for a while before I put the greens in. And then, right, so you get that going and all
that flavor. And then I put the greens in for a couple hours. Then I do vinegar.
And then I cheat and do a little Tabasco.
No, that's okay.
Yeah, but Tabasco of all, like I like Louisiana hot sauce,
but Tabasco has that right amount of vinegar.
Yeah.
And so that's how I do my greens.
I see why you get invited every year.
And she brought it up again at another event.
Take a listen.
All right, Marlon.
So I know how to make a mean product greens.
In fact, people used to ask me to make greens for them for Christmas.
One year, I had so many that I had to wash that we ended up washing them in the bathtub.
So I am not playing around.
Black America, listen to me. I'm speaking directly to you because I am not playing around. Black America, listen to me.
I'm speaking directly to you
because I am not playing around either.
If I catch you voting for this woman,
I'm going to haunt you.
I'm going to haunt you in your dreams.
There will be nowhere that you can go
where I will not haunt you.
This is just, we have to come together.
At some point in society,
we have to come together to declare this unacceptable. Like, I don't care where you sit on the spectrum. This is the most not OK thing that I have ever seen in the history of politics uncles and aunties that are black while conveniently
ignoring all of her aunties and uncles that are white. And people are just eating this up,
eating this up. Let me find that woman that was going, okay, to all that vinegar put into her
collar. Okay, let me find her. I'm going to haunt her. I promise you that. But of course, guys,
let's get to me speaking to her uncle, because that actually happened.
Like I promised you yesterday, I said I had a phone call.
I was trying to wait for it to happen yesterday.
Well, it happened last night.
Part one of our phone call happened last night.
We briefly spoke on the phone, I would say for about 10 minutes.
And I first want to say just how much I liked this guy.
I just, I knew, I just had a feeling.
Okay, I'll be honest.
I have a Caribbean
bias. My former producer made it very clear to me that I have a Caribbean bias because she'd
pitch me stories or like, say like Rihanna did this. And I'd be like, I'm not going to say
anything bad about Rihanna or like Nicki Minaj. And she's like, but you, I have a Caribbean bias.
This guy's got a Caribbean accent. My grandma had a very thick St. Tomian accent. So it was just
like, I could sense his Caribbean calm.
I can't explain to you.
And I could just also sense that he was being incredibly honest and forthright.
And he was speaking to me and it was actually like very, I guess I would say just beautiful
in a way because he cared about this.
He wanted to reach out because he cares so much about the Oris, you know, and he doesn't want whatever is going on with Kamala to make people have this perception of
the Oris. And I told him right away that it was never my intention for him to get inundated. So
I want to be clear. My understanding is that it's the press calling, but I want to make sure that
there are no Candace Owens viewers that are going out there calling any of these relatives that are still
alive because we can find information online, but we definitely should not be harassing her
relatives who have nothing to do with her running and in many cases don't even agree with her
politics. Like this person that I spoke to is a Candace Owens fan, conservative, as many Caribbeans
are conservative because like, you know, on the islands that there's just not a lot of wokeness. I'll leave it at that.
You know, why are you gay kind of a vibe going on? You are gay. It's a little bit more of like
an island vibe. Anyways, I just said to him, look, we're just trying to get questions answered
about Kamala's heritage because of her father's paper. I said, I have a lot of questions
about your brother, Donald Harris. I just am not understanding anything in this paper. I said, I have a lot of questions about your brother, Donald Harris.
I just am not understanding anything in this paper.
And I went through the holes in it.
I went through the fact that, you know,
he mentions this person growing up,
like they all kind of grew up on a farm together,
but you're asking the question,
like Beryl married this person.
Why is he trying to make it seem
like everyone grew up as one happy family?
Why didn't he even mention Fioras at all, which is kind of the dog that didn't bark? And I asked him directly
if he knew the Miss Iris that he is referring to in this book, the Miss Iris that Donald J.
Harris is referring to in his piece, rather, who he says is Iris Ney Finnegan. Again, very strange because Iris should have never been Ney Finnegan. Finnegan was her married name.
And he said, I can't answer that. I don't know that name. I want to be very clear. He has a
relationship with Donald. He is close with Donald. They grew up together. He considers Donald his
full brother. He has no idea who Miss Iris Finnegan is. This is Donald's brother that we're talking about.
So I said, okay, that's of course of some interest to me.
I asked him why it is that he's even then mentioning this Miss Iris.
And he told me that he wanted to clarify something which was of most importance to me.
He wanted me to know that before Viores and Oscar Harris got
married, Oscar Harris already had three children, okay? One of them being Donald. Now, to be clear,
he is younger than Donald, a lot younger than Donald, so he wouldn't know much about if there
was some family secret. He would not be aware of it. But to the best of his knowledge, like this is what he was told that they had three children before Viores and Oscar got married. And I asked
him, quite frankly, if he knew or heard of Beryl. He told me he does not know Beryl.
Instant red flag to me. I'm like, what do you mean? How do you not know if you have a half
sibling that you are close to and have been close to your whole life? How do you not know, if you have a half sibling that you are close to and have been close to your whole life,
how do you not know who their mom is?
He said, I don't know who his mother is.
You don't know who Donald Harris's mom is.
The woman who started this entire thing, Beryl Finnegan,
the person who just flagged me as weird,
something is not right here.
We now know that Donald Harris's brother
does not know him, okay?
Like I said, he said that Oscar Harris
had three children before he married Beoris. He mentioned that Donald was very close to them.
He also said that Oscar Harris's children, they all had businesses, that Donald, when he was
coming up, Donald was in university. They kept very close to him. He said that Donald has always been very, very private and he doesn't like publicity. And I find that to be
very interesting. But what people, yeah, sure, there are some people who are exceedingly private
and there are some people who are exceedingly private because they have something to hide.
And I, again, do not feel that Donald Harris was telling the truth about his upbringing. I think he gave some truths and kind of made it very murky in his Jamaican heritage piece,
but some things that were objectively proven to be untrue.
He told me that Kamala definitively knows Fioras, that he also knows her, that she visited
Jamaica twice with her father, And that sometime after she had
graduated college, she went down to Florida with her sister and she visited Viores. So she had a
relationship with Viores. Unfortunately, Viores did not make her book. And I think we know why
Viores did not make her book. Now, I have no reason not to believe the person that I spoke to.
I just felt that he was being very authentic and he was there to simply clarify some things
and that he didn't know the answers to some things.
He authentically didn't know.
And if he is telling me something that is not correct, then the reason why those things
are not correct is not because he's trying to lie, but it's because he is not aware of
them.
So it leads us again to more questions about Donald Harris. Who is this
guy? Who is his mother? Where is Beryl? Okay, where is Iris Finnegan? Why won't Kamala, who felt so,
I guess, close, close enough to Beryl and Iris to include them in their book,
why won't she even mention them as an easy way to debunk what is being said why is she even
mentioning the the one-eighth rule what are you talking about kamala if you're telling us that
your grandmother is beryl she looks pretty black to us like that would make you more than one-eighth
black what's going on here why are we getting all the details we've got a couple of lingering
questions here and i'll tell you what we are starting to think about.
But first, I want to remind you to drink coffee
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25% off your order. Okay, now let's get into some other leads. So we have a couple of interesting
things that are happening, some things that we are exploring. Someone has found, okay, and this is,
by the way, we'd be inconspirational. We've got nothing more than like a visual, and I can say
by the visual, this woman does look like the Beryl that is pictured
with Kamala that I said looks like a 60-year-old woman. I'll show you the photo right here.
Okay. So somebody came across a woman who has the same name, Beryl, who is still alive. Very,
very, very old. Now, this woman is not at all related to Kamala, judging by who her son is and
doing that sort of a thing. She's not related to Kamala. But again, she has that same name.
She's still alive. And we have confirmed that she is from that same town, that same place,
Brownstown, Jamaica. So we know she would have been there at the same time. And like I said,
she resembles the person that Kamala is trying to pass off as her grandma.
Could this be the help?
Could this be a woman that they just took a picture with?
We're going to explore that lead.
But first, a bigger lead.
Now I can just send all of you guys to hunt and figure things out.
By the way, I'm depressed because next week I'm on vacation, which means that we're going to have to stop this.
Tomorrow will be the last day of the investigation before we have to pause for a week and come back after Columbus Day. But anyways,
here is something that you guys can help with. So remember in Donald J. Harris's piece,
he mentioned only a sister, despite the fact that he has at least five other siblings. He only
mentioned Enid Maud Harris. He just calls her Enid. We were able to find her because one of you guys
sent us a file and it is confirmed that Enid is the sister that Donald Harris had, which predates
Oscar Harris's marriage to the Oris. And it turns out that she is just a half-sister. We were able to determine this because we found her marriage certificate where both
of her parents' names are listed.
I'm going to show that to you right now.
So you can see that Enid Maud Harris got married at St. Peter's Church.
This was in New York.
And that she married a man named Hugh Ashton Watts.
Okay.
And you can see listed under her parents,
we have Oscar Joseph Harris,
and we also have a Perlene Curry.
We cannot find Perlene Curry
and we cannot find Hugh Ashton Watts.
Now, both of these people would be dead today.
Okay. So again, we're just asking you to
crawl through online, looking for documents to determine who these people are. It's like without
a trace. We know that Enid is still alive. Obviously Enid is very advanced in age. So do
not call Enid and ask any questions. We are not okay with that. We are not here to harass elderly
people. We're just looking for answers because there is a plausibility that
maybe Perlene Curry is his true mother that he's not telling us about. Maybe Perlene Curry
is Kamala Harris's grandmother and not Beryl, right? So again, we have questions here. And
the fact that we can't find Perlene Curry, we just want to know what race she is, what she looks like.
That's really kind of the information that we're looking for.ene Curry. We just want to know what race she is, what she looks like.
That's really kind of the information that we're looking for.
And again, a good start here
is you can find Pearlene Curry
or if you can find Hugh Ashton Watts.
And we know that they got married in New York.
We know that they lived at least for a short time
in the Bronx.
We're sending you guys out to explore those leads
as we continue to try to get to the bottom
of Kamala's heritage,
because I personally do not accept
that I need therapy, as she says.
If you are even asking a question, you need therapy.
No, no, no, no, no.
Like I said, we are only here
because you sent out your media goons
to go after Janet Jackson
and to try to paint her as crazy. We're only here because we have out your media goons to go after Janet Jackson and to try to paint her as
crazy. We're only here because we have now arrived at the stage where you've gone from bringing
Megan Thee Stallion out to shake her butt. You're walking out to Beyonce. You're talking about
collared greens. You're dropping fake black relatives to kind of persuade people that you
have this black upbringing. You're talking about Harlem. You don't get to pull a 180 and pretend
that it's irrelevant, okay? Because you know when Trump was, you don't get to pull a 180 and pretend that it's
irrelevant, okay? Because you know when Trump was on stage and he said to you, look, I don't care
whatever she is. Well, let me tell you, I disagree with him. I care. I care. You've now caught my
attention, okay? And common sense says to me that if any person was put in a seat and asked about
their heritage and someone said, what do you think about these rumors that you aren't black?
All you would do is start listing your relatives that are black and say how foolish it was. And she's not doing that.
She's instead running Operation Gaslighting. And you know what? Shame on those people. Shame on
Matt Barnes for not pushing her. Put her feet to the fire. You don't get to just mine black history
and black pain to try to present yourself as the first black female
presidential candidate. It doesn't work like this. It's completely unacceptable. Nobody would have
cared if you ran and you said, I am Indian-Irish. Not a single soul would have cared, okay? You did
this. You did this, and we're not going to let it go because nobody messes with Janet Jackson.
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All right, let's read some of your comments.
We're reading this from yesterday's episode
because I have an event tonight, so I prere-recorded this a couple of hours earlier.
This person, Tricia, writes, at this point, Candace knows more about Kamala's heritage
than probably Kamala herself. I know. Actually, what's funny is I obviously am slated to speak
to that relative again, hopefully later today, but I did via text ask, by the way, what do you
think about the Jewish thing? Is that is that actually, is that part true?
And he didn't say no to that.
So maybe he's just learning it.
Maybe he knows it or maybe he's just learning it.
But I thought that was pretty interesting.
I probably literally do maybe know more than some of the relatives.
And maybe he's learning as he's watching this going, I didn't even know this.
And yeah, why don't I know like who my brother's mom is?
Like that is kind of weird.
Like, is there a secret that's being kept from me?
Yes, I could be. I really might be more. Is there a secret that's being kept from me? Yes, I really
might be Maury. I may be exploding family secrets at the moment, but that's what happens when you
run for president. Nangi writes, these series about Kamala are so interesting. As a former
resident of Montreal, Canada for almost 30 years, I can assure you there was nothing middle class
about the neighborhood where she lived. It's one of the most high-end neighborhoods of the city.
She's such a fraud. Keep up the amazing research work. May God protect
you, Candace, your team and your family. Yeah, I am really feeling some type of way about the level
of fraud that she has aspired to here. And like I said, when I was just going through those pictures
and really understanding, getting the full picture of how hard they tried to establish the legend of
her blackness, I was infuriated. I was just like, no, this is not acceptable. We have to have
some ground rules here across party lines. We have to agree. I don't care if you're like a lefty
that's scared about the environment and you want to drive a car that's electric. That's actually
cool with me. We can lock arms here as long as we can agree that this is unacceptable. Like you cannot do this.
You cannot Ruby Bridget.
You just can't.
Happy Hearts writes, she could be mixed with hyena
and some will still vote for her no matter what.
It is true.
Some people are deluded and they're like,
oh, she talked about collard greens.
That's black enough for me.
What?
She said it was in a bathtub.
What?
That actually doesn't even sound really sanitary to me
if I'm being honest.
Imagine the skin. Lynn writes, I wonder what Janet Jackson thinks right now. She made a random
comment about Kamala's race in an interview, and now Candace turned into an investigator.
Yeah, Janet Jackson, where are you at? Reach out to me. We'll have you on the show. I would love
to sit down and speak with you about what you said. And I have your back. I'm like, Randy,
I have your back. And the people that instantly tried to pretend that you were crazy rather than answering the questions, it's not acceptable. We're not allowing that to
happen anymore. They did it to your brother. They're not going to do it to you. Nina Gumbo
writes, thank you for your journalism. I am from Europe, but I am scared because whoever will be
in charge of the United States, it will affect all of us. You are brave to tell the truth and
we will be watching. Thank you so much. It is true. America tends to cause that sort of ripple.
And this woman scares me. I just, there's something about someone that can move that easily in and out of an identity that should
frighten all of us all across the world. We should be frightened by it. Billy Jolene writes,
lastly, so she came from a wealthy family, but stresses that she grew up middle-class bull. Yeah.
Yeah. She will say whatever it is that she has to say to secure the black vote.
And that is exactly why we must forcefully reject her.
Not just black Americans, white Americans as well.
You guys should be mad that she's denying your heritage.
Like, what's so bad about being white?
I'm angry for both of us.
I'm angry for white people because there's nothing wrong
with just saying that you are Irish, okay?
There's nothing wrong with it.
I'm angry for black people
because she does not get to Ruby Bridget. Ladies and gentlemen, if you want to keep supporting this investigation,
head to Locals.com. As I said, we're uploading documents there as we continue to look into
everything. Sadly, tomorrow will be the last day before we have to take a five-day break because I
am going overseas, but it's okay because I have content for you, but it's just not going to be
about Kamala. But it allows me more time to research things. So continue to email us at info
at candiceowens.com or post things onto our locals page. We can share, collaborate.
So much of you guys have presented. So many of you guys have presented so much
information that we really couldn't have done this without you. So we'll see you tomorrow. you