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Vice President Kamala Harris is having trouble appealing to black male voters who feel her pandering to get their support is too little, too late.

Among the many now speaking out is one rapper who doesn’t appreciate being lectured and shamed into voting for the Democratic presidential nominee, arguing that he may just end up voting for former President Donald Trump instead.

“This woman, to me, is not qualified to run, you know, a Dunkin Donuts or a 7-11, let alone the corporation that we call the United States of America,” rapper, producer, and actor Lord Jamar said in an interview with “The Art of Dialogue.”

**LANGUAGE WARNING**

(Video Credit: The Art of Dialogue)

He blasted the vice president for thinking “We are stupid and that we are just gonna vote for her off of identity politics.”

“People want to act like Trump is the worst motherf—– in the world, but guess what? He was already president and all this s— that you’re talking about didn’t happen,” he said. “He didn’t make himself a dictator and this whole s— about ‘he’s going to make himself a dictator’ is really taken so out of context that it’s ridiculous. He said he’d make himself a dictator on the first day, you know, to do some – implement some s— and then, you know, but that was, trust me, said tongue-in-cheek, it was not said seriously,” Jamar said.

The 56-year-old, whose real name is Lorenzo Dechalus, referred to the Democratic Party policy as “Project 2024” in a jab about the fear-mongering on the conservative “Project 2025” which Trump has repeatedly said he is not associated with.

“Y’all already living in Project 2024 okay? You worried about Project 2025 when they already ran Project 2020 on you with the scamdemic and all that f—— bulls—-,” he said.

“Y’all trying to act like… Scare me into thinking that he’s so much – so bad that I should just vote for this broad just because?” he continued. “But guess what? I feel that she’s so bad – I – she’s the one that scares me! So I feel that she’s so bad that guess what I might just go f— around and vote for Trump and this is my first time saying this out loud but y’all motherf—— think you’re gonna shame somebody or bully a n—- into voting for this b—-? Absolutely not.”

Black Americans “in the real world” aren’t supporting Harris, according to Jamar who is a founding member of the hip-hop group Brand Nubian.

“Trust me the sentiment on the street in the real world is a lot of people are not f—— with this woman. They see right through her, and they’re trying to blame it on Black men, but no, I see a lot of Black women that are not f—— with her neither,” he said.

Indeed, black male voters find Harris’s pitch insulting, as content creator Anton Daniels told Fox News Laura Ingraham.

“Instead of making sure that we are safer, that we have opportunities, that we have lower taxes, that we can get the jobs that we want, they want to dangle more fruit in front us – low-hanging fruit – in order to get us back into the Democratic plantation,” the YouTuber said. “It’s not going to work. It’s just more disrespectful.”

Entrepreneur Jay Jackson blasted Democrats as “enemies within our country” and asked for more than empty gestures from the Harris team and the party.

(Video Credit: Fox News)

Meanwhile, Jamar praised Trump for having “no wars” on his watch and for his “gangster” approach to keeping Americans safe.

“There was no wars going on while Trump was president. This mother—— was doing gangster s— to n—– like in the Taliban showing them pictures of their house from a satellite,” he said, adding that the former president’s message to enemies was essentially: “Touch a hair on an American’s head we going to bomb the s— out of your crib. For 18 months after that, no American was touched.”

Jamar also noted the stark difference in supporters themselves, remarking on the treatment of one interviewer by Trump supporters at a recent rally in Long Island, NY.

“He said as a black man he felt no racism whatsoever out there, he was – they actually like… brought him in type of s—, you know what I mean? Like, he felt welcomed to be there by the people that was there,” he said. “Who he didn’t feel welcomed by were the demonstrators that were against Trump, they were the ones looking at him like ‘Oh! What are you doing over there!?’”

Frieda Powers
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