Apparently Kamala’s book “Smart on Crime” wasn’t so smart. Lifting sections from Wikipedia? That’s “not very smart” as coined by Trump comes to mind. Following in Biden’s road of perdition that cost him the election previously when he too was discovered to have air lifted from others.
From a Tweet:
PLAGIARISM: This morning Senator JD Vance trolled Kamala Harris after reports surfaced she plagiarized her book Smart on Crime saying, “Hi, I’m JD Vance. I wrote my own book, unlike Kamala Harris, who copied hers from Wikipedia.”

The Gateway Pundit reported:
Kamala Harris’s lack of original thought extends to the printed word, as she has been caught blatantly stealing others’ work to write an important book.
As TGP readers know, Harris’s campaign was already crumbling thanks to several embarrassing interviews, awful campaign appearances, and Americans finally realizing her policies were no different than Biden’s. Now, Harris is embroiled in a massive plagiarism scandal.
And it appeared to work as she managed to squeak out a one-point win over Republican candidate Steve Cooley in 2010.
But famed Austrian “plagiarism hunter” Stefan Weber has discovered Harris’s book contains over a dozen “vicious plagiarism fragments.” As Rufo notes, Weber is a highly credible figure who has destroyed the careers of several German-speaking politicians.
Rufo shared several examples of Weber’s explosive expose on Monday and personally confirmed them. They were published on both his blog and his X account.
As reported by activist Chris Rufo, she and Joan O’C Hamilton published a book called Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor’s Plan to Make Us Safer during the campaign for California Attorney General back in 2010. Rufo notes the purpose of the book’s release was to establish her credibility on criminal justice matters.
Kamala Harris has become famous, in part, for her unique rhetorical style. She switches freely between various accents and peppers her speeches with catchphrases: pondering falling “out of a coconut tree,” discussing “the significance of the passage of time,” and moving the nation toward “what can be, unburdened by what has been.”
To her supporters, the vice president’s rhetorical flourishes represent the values of compassion and optimism. To her detractors, her reliance on platitudes and tautologies demonstrates her unfitness for the presidency.
But, as we have discovered in this exclusive report, another element appears to exist within Kamala Harris’s rhetorical universe: plagiarism.
(For examples he pointed out):
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