But the fact still remains, she has nothing to do with the current state of play in Gaza. That's all Trump. You can't blame her for Gaza-Israel policy because she has absolutely no say in what happens. And to be clear, Harris was the VP. She has no legal or executive impact on decision-making in the White House. The chief of staff has more power and say than the VP does. How much say a VP has is up to the President. In other words, blaming Harris for Gaza policy is admitting that you don't understand how the government works. So you're placing ire and blame at the wrong person.
Right, I don't believe anyone was assigned to her primary blame for the Biden Administration's Gaza policy. Which is why most of the anti-genocide protestors who were rightly blaming Biden were optimistic when Harris became the nominee. In August the vibes were pretty good! She (very lightly) signalled that a Harris Administration would be open to a different path than the Biden Administration, and she was given grace in return! And then she onboarded Establishment Democratic Strategists who told her to cut that out.
The blame and ire she received wasn't for the year-long policy of aiding and abetting a genocide that Joe Biden was chiefly responsible for, it was for her
campaign rhetoric and actions around the issue, which she
was chiefly responsible for. The critique was never that Kamala signed off on bombs, it's that she refused to say she would stop sending bombs if she became President, and said she would continue the existing policy of the Biden Administration.
It's not insane at all. Biden has been in politics at a high level since the early 70s. Harris on the other hand has only been on this level for 8 years. She's a novice compared to him if you're just looking at years. I haven't seen his response to these protestors. Frankly, I haven't seen Biden at all since he left office.
I'm talking about the protests he was receiving when he was the nominee.
Compare this to Kamala Harris' response to protests.
Not to mention the dogshyt response she gave to protestors at her book tour, a full year after the election with all the time and space to think deeply about what happened. Which can only lead me to the conclusion that you're right, she's a thin-skinned novice and it shows. But I also think there was a calculation made that factored in the uncritical stan culture of politics we're seeing from many in this very thread who have parasocial relationships with their fave politicians. There is a recent culture of lack of humility or servitude that has pervaded our political landscape and I guarantee people on Kamala's team were trying to channel. They were going to put "I'm speaking now!" on merch. They're leaning into the toxic, egotistical political elitist negging culture.
But it's also Kamala's job and responsibility to remind those protestors that they had the opportunity to vote for her and they didn't. Elections have consequences. And obviously those protestors are as slow to learn from their mistakes as Harris is.
I don't think there has been much evidence that Kamala Harris (who couldn't muster up a single mumbling word about the devastation the Palestinians were continuing to experience under Trump until he signed a fukking ceasefire) would have been markedly, meaningfully different on
this issue than Trump, so the people who are protesting on behalf of this issue don't have as much to learn from her loss as she does in my opinion. It's hard to do an "I told you so!" when you never made the case, especially when a peace treaty was just signed. She doesn't care about this issue, she just doesn't want to be held to account.