West
Kamala Harris in her own book reveals 12 things Americans must know about her
Sales of Vice President Kamala Harris’ 2019 memoir have skyrocketed in recent days, following her ascension to the top of the Democratic ticket to take on former President Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential election.
“The Truths We Hold: An American Journey” currently ranks at No. 1 among female biographies on Amazon. It’s No. 2 among all biographies, behind Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance’s 2016 personal memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.”
“This book is not meant to be a policy platform, much less a 50-point plan,” Harris wrote in the preface.
JD VANCE’S HOMETOWN OF MIDDLETOWN, OHIO WAS BUILT BY STEEL INDUSTRY: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT IT
“Instead, it is a collection of ideas and viewpoints and stories, from my life and from the lives of the many people I’ve met along the way.”
As former President Donald Trump on Wednesday night at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, called Harris “more liberal than [Sen.] Bernie Sanders, can you believe it” — here are 12 insights and highlights from Harris’ life story as she shared in her own book.
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event on June 28, 2024, in Las Vegas. Her book from 2019 is now a hot ticket on Amazon. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
1. Her name is pronounced ‘comma-la’
Early in the book, Harris tried to settle the great American debate.
“First, my name is pronounced ‘comma-la,’ like the punctuation mark,” she wrote.
“It means ‘lotus flower,’ which is a symbol of significance in Indian culture. A lotus grows underwater, its flower rising to the surface while its roots are planted firmly in the river bottom.”
2. She ate her sorrows away on Election Night 2016
With family and friends around her and all of them glued to the television, she recounted the scene on Nov. 8, 2016, when Republican political newcomer Donald Trump surprised American elites across the nation with his election to president over longtime political insider Democrat Hillary Clinton.
“No one really knew what to say or do,” wrote Harris about Trump’s stunning victory that night.
“I sat down on the coach with Doug [Emhoff, her husband] and ate an entire family-size bag of classic Doritos. Didn’t share a single chip,” she admitted.
3. She savages Trump
In her book, Harris fired off a barrage of Democratic talking points about the 45th president after he was elected in Nov. 2016. (Getty Images)
Just two paragraphs after sharing how she devoured a giant bag of Doritos, Harris fired off a verbal barrage of Democratic talking points about the 45th president after his triumphant election.
MILITARY VETERAN’S BOOK, ‘THE WAR ON WARRIORS,’ MAINTAINS WEEKS-LONG PROMINENCE ON NY TIMES BESTSELLER LIST
“In the years since, we’ve seen an administration align itself with white supremacists at home and cozy up to dictators abroad; rip babies from their mothers’ arms in grotesque violation of their human rights; give corporations and the wealthy huge tax cuts while ignoring the middle class … [and] sabotage health care and imperil a woman’s right to control her own body,” she wrote in part.
Trump, she also insisted, has fought to harm the environment, women’s rights and free media.
4. Her parents were immigrants with an American dream
The vice president was born in Oakland, California, in October 1964, to immigrant parents.
“My father, Donald Harris, was born in Jamaica in 1938,” Harris wrote. “He was a brilliant student who immigrated to the United States after being admitted to the University of California at Berkeley.”
AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ: TEST YOURSELF ON PRESIDENTS, COUNTRY QUEENS AND THE BIG KAHUNA
Her dad is a professor emeritus of economics at Stanford University today.
“My mother’s life began thousands of miles to the east, in southern India,” wrote Harris. “Shyamala Gopalan was the oldest of four children … Like my father, she was a gifted student.”
Pro-Palestinian protesters gather in front of Sproul Hall on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley in Berkeley, California, on April 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Haven Daley)
The vice president’s mother also studied at Berkeley, and became a doctor of endocrinology and breast cancer researcher. She died in 2009.
Harris’ maternal grandfather was a prominent Indian diplomat.
5. Berkeley politics shaped her outlook
Harris’ parents “met and fell in love in Berkeley while participating in the civil rights movement,” the vice president noted.
“My parents often brought me in a stroller with them to civil rights marches … Social justice was a central part of our discussions.”
She discussed the network of leftist activist friends she developed in Berkeley and San Francisco political circles.
Harris discussed the network of leftist activist friends she developed in Berkeley and San Francisco political circles. Among them: Lateefah Simon, a Bay Area social justice warrior and 2024 congressional candidate.
“Lateefah was a genius,” Harris wrote. “In 2003, she became the youngest woman to ever win the prestigious MacArthur ‘Genius’ award.”
Simon today sits on the Bay Area Rapid Transport board of directors and has enjoyed leadership positions with far-left groups such as the Rosenberg Foundation and the Akonadi Foundation.
6. Harris took ballet, spent her teen years in Montreal
Her parents divorced when she was five years old, and when she was 12 she moved with her mother and sister Maya to Canada.
Members of Montreal’s Indian community are shown marching in Canada Celebration on St Catherine’s Street. (Pedro RUIZ/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
“My mother was offered a unique opportunity in Montreal, teaching at McGill University and conducting research at the Jewish General Hospital,” Harris wrote.
“It was a difficult transition for me, since the only French I knew was from ballet classes, where Madame Bovie, my ballet teacher, would shout, ‘Demi-plie, and up!’”
7. She was a sorority sister at Howard University
Harris skipped Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s appearance on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to speak before a meeting of historically black sorority members of Zeta Phi Beat in Indianapolis.
“There were hundreds of people and everyone looked like me.”
Sororities and historically Black education are foundations of her life.
5 MUST-READ BOOKS WITH LIFE LESSONS TO GET YOUR CHILD COLLEGE-READY THIS SUMMER
“‘This is heaven!’” she wrote about arriving at Howard University in Washington, D.C., for her freshman year.
“There were hundreds of people and everyone looked like me.”
Vice President Kamala Harris arrives to speak at a Rally for Reproductive Rights at Howard University on Tuesday, April 25, 2023 in Washington, D.C. (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
She pledged to a sorority, “my beloved Alpha Kappa Alpha, founded by nine women at Howard more than a century ago,” she wrote.
“On weekends, we went down to the National Mall to protest apartheid in South Africa.”
8. Harris learned about George Washington Carver before she learned of George Washington
Dr. George Washington Carver was the pioneering scientist born into slavery in Missouri who rose to fame for his research in American agriculture.
General and later President George Washington was the father of our country.
Washington crossing the Delaware, near Trenton, New Jersey, America, Christmas 1776. George Washington (1732-1799), first president of the United States. From English and Scottish History, published 1882. (Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
“The first George Washington Maya and I learned about when we were young was George Washington Carver,” Harris wrote in the book.
“We still laugh about the first time Maya heard a classroom teacher talk about President George Washington and she thought to herself proudly, ‘I know him! He’s the one who worked with peanuts!’”
9. She wants constitutional protection for abortion
Harris treaded lightly on the pro-choice/pro-life debate in her book. She mentioned the word “abortion” only twice and the phrase “right to choose” twice, in her 318-page memoir.
“If you are a woman, period, you know we deserve a country with … abortion, protected as a fundamental and constitutional right.”
She stated her position quoting a speech she gave at the Women’s March in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 21, 2017, the day after President Trump’s inauguration.
“If you are a woman, period, you know we deserve a country with equal pay and access to health care, including a safe and legal abortion, protected as a fundamental and constitutional right.”
10. She holds a stark view of race and tolerance in the USA
The only-in-America rise to global prominence of millions of people has not brightened the vice president’s stark view of race and tolerance in the United States.
An image of Vice President Kamala Harris is shown in a field in Lawrence, Kansas, created by Stan Herd of Earthworks. (Stan Herd/Earthworks)
“We need to speak truth: that racism, sexism, homophobia, and antisemitism are real in this country, and we need to confront those forces,” Harris wrote early in the book.
She reconfirmed her commitment to American injustice near the end of “The Truths We Told.”
“There are so many ongoing struggles in this country – against racism and sexism, against discrimination based on religion, national origin and sexual orientation. Each of these struggles is unique. Each deserves its own attention and effort.”
Kamala Harris’ sudden rise to the top of the Democrat ticket for president has spurred a rise in sales of her 2019 biography, “The Truths We Hold: An American Journey.” (Sait Serkan Gurbuz/AP; Bonnie Cash/Getty Images)
11. She claimed Americans ‘fear immigrants’
“For as long as ours has been a nation of immigrants, we have been a nation that fears immigrants,” Harris wrote of the most successful immigrant society in human history.
“Fear of the other is woven into the fabric of American culture — and unscrupulous people in power have exploited that fear in pursuit of political advantage,” she also wrote.
12. Harris shares a MAGA belief about globalization
Trump’s Make America Great Again movement is built on the belief that globalization has come at a severe cost to the U.S. economy.
Harris shared the same sentiment while skewering America for its history of intolerance.
“More recently, as globalization has robbed the country of millions of jobs and displaces huge swaths of the middle class, immigrants have become convenient targets for blame,” she also wrote.
She claimed that in one Appalachian community, the rising “sense of despair” has contributed to rising opioid addiction.
She also gave a Trumpian nod to China and the porous border for the drug crisis.
Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. She wrote in her book, “We need to invest resources in law enforcement to cut off the supply of fentanyl from China.” (Getty Images)
“We need to invest resources in law enforcement to cut off the supply of fentanyl from China,” she said in the book.
For more Lifestyle articles, visit foxnews.com/lifestyle
Her own office reported to her that “70% of the U.S. supply of methamphetamines was coming through the San Diego port of entry on the southern border.” Harris added proudly, however, that she vehemently opposed the Trump administration’s effort to fund a $25 billion border wall.
“It was a total waste of taxpayer money,” she wrote — adding, “Experts agree that a wall will not secure our border.”
Read the full article from Here
San Francisco, CA
Supervisors urge California to expand S.F. speed-camera program
San Francisco supervisors authorized a resolution Tuesday urging California lawmakers to expand the city’s automated speed camera program, which currently has 33 cameras operating in the city under a state pilot.
The board’s 10-to-1 vote on Tuesday, with District 10 Supervisor Shamann Walton voting against it, will not add cameras immediately, but formally asks the state to explore changes to the program. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency has identified at least 80 additional high-need locations that could benefit from automated enforcement, according to a report filed with the Public Safety and Neighborhood Services Committee.
Richard Zieman, whose son Andrew, a paraeducator, was killed in November 2021 by a speeding driver outside Sherman Elementary School on Franklin Street, told Mission Local that city officials should do more. “They waited for a tragedy,” Zieman said. Parents and school leaders had repeatedly asked the city to slow traffic on Franklin Street, where drivers barreled downhill toward the Marina, said Zieman.
Supervisor Matt Dorsey, who introduced the resolution, has said the city’s first year of automated speed enforcement shows that the technology works. The SFMTA reported nearly an 80 percent reduction in drivers traveling at least 10 miles per hour over the speed limit at camera locations after the program launched in March 2025. San Francisco was the first city to implement the pilot authorized under Assembly Bill 645.
The pilot, however, is capped by state law at 33 camera locations. Tuesday’s resolution asks California lawmakers to consider allowing more, prioritizing corridors on San Francisco’s High Injury Network, including Franklin Street.
Walk San Francisco, a pedestrian advocacy group which spent roughly eight years advocating for the state legislation that created the pilot, called the resolution an important first step toward broader expansion.
“Thirty-three cameras is nowhere near the number of cameras we need for people to realize that San Francisco is a safe-speed city,” said executive director Jodie Medeiros. “This tool is working. People are lowering their speeds.”
District 6, represented by Dorsey, currently has seven of the city’s 33 cameras, most of them in SoMa. The district also records the highest number of crashes involving injuries or fatalities in San Francisco, making it a focal point in the debate over expanding automated enforcement.
The resolution advanced unanimously from the Board of Supervisors’ Public Safety and Neighborhood Services Committee last week, where Dorsey said the cameras have made streets “feel safer” and argued the early results show “why we should have even more of this life-saving technology.”
Zieman, whose son’s death prompted traffic-calming improvements and eventually a speed camera near Sherman Elementary, said the issue is urgent.
“There are probably other Franklin streets out there,” he said. “I just hope they don’t wait for someone else before they expand the program. It’s too late for Andrew.”
Denver, CO
Five Points affordable housing building honors Dr. Justina Ford | Rocky Mountain PBS
DENVER — Dr. Justina Ford’s name adorns plaques and statues across Denver, where she delivered more than 7,000 babies as the city’s first licensed Black woman physician. Now, an affordable housing building in Five Points, the neighborhood where she lived and worked for 50 years, bears her name.
The newly christened Justina at Five Points, formerly Brunetti Lofts, offers a rare commodity in Denver’s housing market: family-sized affordable housing units.The 23-unit building, built in 2005, has 19 three-bedroom units. Rents range from $840 to $1,893 per month. Residents must make between 30% and 60% of Denver’s area median income, and specific income requirements vary depending on the unit.
“I do believe that in the last, five, ten years, maybe a little longer, housing here in Colorado has just gone crazy. I mean, I have a little two-bedroom townhouse, and I can’t afford to move back in the neighborhood I grew up in because of the pricing. And it’s just crazy,” said Daphne Rice-Allen, chair of the board at the Black American West Museum and Heritage Center, which is housed in Ford’s historic home in Five Points.
Rice-Allen grew up in Clayton, which is northeast of Five Points. This cluster of neighborhoods in north Denver — Five Points, Cole, Whittier and Clayton — were among the areas deemed “hazardous” and “definitely declining” on the city’s 1938 “Residential Security Map,” which redlined neighborhoods with Black, Mexican and lower-income residents.
At that time, Five Points flourished as a cultural and entertainment hub, known as “the Harlem of the West” and serving as “the seat of Denver’s African American community.” Black social clubs, such as the Owl Club, emerged. And Ford, who arrived in Denver in 1902 and was not allowed to work in a hospital, continued to provide medical care out of her house and deliver babies at her patients’ homes.
“This was a family neighborhood, Rice-Allen said about Five Points during that period.
“There were a lot of families that lived in the area and lived in the neighborhood.”
But Five Points’ demographics have changed a lot since Ford died in 1952. About 30% of households in the neighborhood were families in 2020. By 2024, that percentage dropped to about 20%.
The neighborhood experienced a drastic shift in racial demographics as well. In 2000, about 27% of the residents were white, 26% Black and 43% Hispanic. The 2020 census told a different story: 64% white, 10% Black and 17% Hispanic.
What was once a Black cultural hub is now a majority-white neighborhood, which raises concerns about gentrification and displacement of long-time residents. Despite the large supply of affordable housing units in the area — 2,796 in 2024 — about half of renters in Five Points are cost-burdened, meaning they spent more than 30% of their income on housing.
Seattle, WA
Seattle weather: Hot and sunny day Wednesday, highs in the 80s
SEATTLE – Wednesday will be another warm day with highs in the mid to upper 80s for parts of western Washington. Eastern and central Washington will reach near 100F with high fire danger. The coast and north interior will be cooler, only in the 60s to 70s.
Wednesday will be another warm day with highs in the mid to upper 80s for parts of western Washington.
Fire Weather Watch
A Fire Weather Watch goes into effect Wednesday evening through Thursday evening for thunderstorms and gusty winds. Lightning strikes could create new fire starts and, with very dry conditions in place, any new fire could spread quickly.
A Fire Weather Watch goes into effect Wednesday evening through Thursday evening for thunderstorms and gusty winds.
What’s next:
An upper level low will move into the Pacific Northwest, bringing scattered showers and a chance of thunderstorms. The heaviest showers will be in the morning hours and will turn more scattered into the evening hours.
An upper level low will move into the Pacific Northwest, bringing scattered showers and chance of thunderstorms.
Looking Ahead:
High pressure will build again Friday and into the weekend, increasing temperatures and sunshine. We will start to see highs reach the upper 80s to low 90s by early next week.
High pressure will build again Friday and into the weekend, increasing temperatures and sunshine.
MORE NEWS FROM FOX 13 SEATTLE
6-year-old Bellingham, WA boy dies from injuries after beach driftwood accident
Grandmother thwarts Pike Place kidnapping, Seattle police make arrest
‘Transfer Fire’ near Lake Chelan, WA hospital prompts evacuation notices
Here’s where WA wildfires are currently burning
Seattle office vacancy crisis shifts tax burden onto homeowners
Thurston County, WA couple desperate to find dog after Rover sitter vanishes
Husband of pregnant wife killed in Seattle sues King County homeless authority
To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX Seattle Newsletter.
Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.
The Source: Information in this story came from the FOX 13 Seattle Weather Team and the National Weather Service.
-
Health24 minutes agoThe Epicenter of Drug Deaths in America Is Shifting West
-
Lifestyle42 minutes agoHomelessness is more common than you think. : It’s Been a Minute
-
Technology54 minutes agoLucid’s bankruptcy rumor is a bad sign for the EV future
-
World1 hour agoSlain American mother Jamey Carney remembered as ‘ray of sunshine’ at Ireland funeral
-
Politics1 hour agoCanadian woman accused of slapping Trump-supporting teen turned over to ICE
-
Health1 hour agoPopular diet trend could boost mental health among older adults, study finds
-
Sports1 hour agoConor McGregor makes 3-word promise for UFC career in video after another devastating injury
-
Technology1 hour agoInsurance breach exposes 7M driver’s licenses