Our Conversation with KAMALA HARRIS

39m
Yesterday, President Biden announced that, for the good of the nation, he would not remain in the race for the Presidency, and instead he offered his full support and endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris to be the Democratic nominee for President.
The Vice President shared her gratitude and expressed that it is her intention to earn and win the Democratic nomination.
As we look ahead with new energy and excitement toward the grave magnitude and historic hope of the next 107 days, we are looking back to a conversation we had with Kamala Harris last year on what would have been the 50th Anniversary of Roe v Wade.

To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Listen and follow along

Transcript

It's the beginning of a new school year, and also classroom sniffles and sneezes that go along with it.

From home to school and back, stock up with Kleenex Ultra Soft Tissues.

Start the school year off the right way by preparing for the messes that come with it.

You don't want to be caught without a tissue on hand to help.

Kleenex ultra-soft tissues are soft and absorbent to stand up against runny noses, to keep you and your family clean and comforted as the school year starts.

This to school season, make sure to get the classroom essential that teachers and students can rely on.

For whatever happens next, grab Kleenex.

I think that I know more than anyone on this entire planet that having the right therapist to talk to can make a life-changing difference.

That's why I think Alma is so cool.

Alma connects you with real therapists to understand your unique experience.

You can use their directory to search for someone who specializes in the areas that matter most to you, whether that's anxiety, relationships, or anything else.

And what stands out to me about ALMA is that 97% of people seeing a therapist through Alma say their therapist made them feel seen and heard.

You know, I love that.

That level of connection isn't something you can get from scrolling through online advice or following social media.

It's about finding someone who truly understands your journey and is dedicated to helping you make progress.

Better with people, better with Alma.

Visit helloalma.com slash hardthings to get started and schedule a free consultation today.

That's hello ALMA.com slash hardthings.

Hey, y'all.

Wow, what a couple of days, huh?

Yesterday,

President Biden announced that for the good of the nation, he would not remain in the race for the presidency.

And instead, he offered his full support and endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris to be the Democratic nominee for president.

He said in his announcement that choosing her as VP was his first and best decision.

A wave of Democratic leadership followed in endorsing Kamala Harris as the nominee.

And she expressed her gratitude and expressed that it is her intention to earn and win the Democratic nomination.

Although we do not yet know the precise path through which Kamala Harris will fight for, earn, and win the Democratic nomination, one thing is clear.

We stand unequivocally in enthusiastic, grateful support of Kamala Harris for president.

As we look ahead, with new energy and excitement toward the grave magnitude and historic hope of the next 107 days.

We are also looking back to a conversation we had with Kamala Harris last year on what would have been the 50th anniversary of Roe v.

Wade.

Kamala Harris has fought tirelessly to defend a woman's right to not have the government make decisions about her body.

And we must now fight for her as the woman who should lead this nation.

As she encourages all of us in this episode, shoulders back, chin up.

All right, y'all.

Shoulders back, chin up.

Get in.

We have an election to win.

The fact that you're doing this with us is just...

Are you kidding?

Seriously, you know, there's so much about this issue that

has to be about all of us reminding

people they're not alone.

Yes.

The way you have constructed this show,

this thing you've done, it's very accessible.

So in the privacy and the quiet of their own moment, whatever that might be, while they're taking a walk or they're jogging or they're working or they're driving.

And I think that's really critically important because there's so much stuff out there, disinformation, misinformation,

judgment

that is

causing people.

And then after years of a pandemic, causing people to feel very alone.

Yes.

And, you know, when you feel alone, when people feel alone,

it makes them feel small.

It's very disempowering.

And when we can remind them they're not alone and they're part of a community that cares about them, it's empowering.

Yeah.

It's a hug, but it's more than a hug.

Like we want to lift you up.

Come on,

get up out of that chair, shoulders back, chin up.

Yeah.

Well, we are dumbfounded with excitement and gratitude today because we have the absolute honor to be in conversation with a woman who can, has,

and will continue to do very hard things.

Vice President Kamala Harris.

Vice President Harris is the highest ranking elected woman in U.S.

history, the first South Asian American senator, and the first woman or Black American to be the California Attorney General.

Yet, among all her titles, she most cherishes the honor of being the daughter of Shamala Gopalan Harris, who taught her to never back down from a righteous fight.

And thank God for that, because she is leading what we believe to be the movement of our generation, the movement for reproductive justice.

And she is inviting all of us to join her.

Thank you.

Thank you for being with us, Vice President Harris.

It is my joy and honor.

Thank you.

And thank you for your voice for all of you.

This is a moment for

all of us to understand our power

as an extension of our rights

and to join together in sisterhood and fellowship among all people, regardless of gender, to speak up.

So thank you.

It's great to be with you guys.

You do it all the time.

You speak up all the time.

Thank you.

This weekend would have been the 50th anniversary of Roe,

which held that our constitutional right to privacy included abortion.

And this protection allowed us to control our own bodies.

plan our own families and make the futures of our choosing

in Dobbs, the court eviscerated that liberty with a stroke of a pen.

When the three of us heard that,

we were stunned, grieved, terrified.

And we called each other first.

How did you feel when you heard the news?

And who did you call first?

So I was on my way that day to Illinois to be

Congressmember Lauren Underwood to continue the work that we have been doing together and before that I'd been doing on maternal mortality.

So I was on my way to do the work of highlighting one of the great

long-standing issues in our country, which is that women are unnecessarily dying in connection with childbirth, with particular impact on black women who are three times more likely to die, Native women, twice as likely to die, rural women, one and a half times more likely to die.

And the decision came down.

And I called my husband immediately

because he's about the only person I could call with the furor

that I had in a most unrestrained way

with language that did honor to that fur.

Yeah, the correct language for the moment.

Well pronounced.

Yes.

And I just, you know, I've seen a lot.

I, I, I,

in many ways, there is very little that surprises me, but I was shocked.

We knew from the leaked opinion that it was likely to happen.

But

when something actually does happen, that is so outrageous.

And, and you know and and the contrast for me that day when I heard about it was

here I am going to to work on an issue that has been long ignored and the hypocrisy

of these people

who

portend and put themselves out as caring about the sanctity of life

but have been

wholly absent in those numbers when it comes to the fact that women are dying every day in America in connection with childbirth.

So there were many layers to how I was feeling at that moment.

And,

you know, but it's also one of those moments that we just resolve, okay, got it.

We're going to have to fight.

So right after Roe was overturned.

You hit the road to meet with everyday citizens and activists and state lawmakers in red, blue, and swing states to witness and understand the real personal impact of the reversal of Roe.

How are people already being hurt by this?

In profound ways.

Let's start with just

if we can pull back the subject at hand.

So

among the many

roots, if you will,

that are part of this issue in terms of what's behind it, it is

the judgment

that has existed probably since the beginning of time about women's sexuality.

I love that we're going here.

Yes.

Right?

Yes, let's do it.

And then the associated

judgment that is designed to make her feel bad

and/or or embarrassed and or in some way subversive or an outcast

and the net effect of that on this issue and many other associated but on the issue of of abortion or an unwanted pregnancy is to make her feel as though she did something wrong

and so

I say this as maybe a long way of saying

God only knows the stories we don't know.

Because

those people are not telling their stories because they feel so,

and then what is the word?

It might be embarrassed.

They might feel that they will be judged.

They might feel they've done something wrong and they will therefore silently suffer.

And the stories have been the story of, for example, the tragedy of the 10-year-old girl who was molested

and had to leave the state of Ohio to seek help in another state.

The doctor in that state who I have talked with is now, has been facing threats to her life and is now facing a threat that she may lose her medical license.

And let me tell you something.

for a large part of my career as a prosecutor, specialized in violence against women and children.

The idea that there would be laws being passed,

like in Florida, where I'm about to go,

that would make no exception for rape or incest

is immoral.

Because again, let's break it down.

What has happened to that individual is that their body has been violated.

They have been denied the ability to have power over their own body to decide whether they want to engage in this act.

It is one of the most horrendous crimes because of the outrageous nature of the act,

which is a violation of someone's body.

And then,

so-called leaders, sanctimonious,

are suggesting that, and after that has happened, you who has endured and survived that act will not have a choice over over what happens to your body if you choose or need to have an abortion.

Compounding the very violation that is about bodily autonomy and the right all people should have to live in a way that allows them to make certain fundamental decisions about their life.

So, there are so many layers to this issue in terms of what makes these proponents of Dobbs and these laws that are being passed just wrong.

Because here's the bottom line.

The government should not be telling people what to do about their own bodies.

And one does not have to abandon their faith or deeply held beliefs to agree the government should not be telling her what to do.

Let her make that decision with her priest or pastor or rabbi.

Let her make that decision if she chooses with her loved ones.

But the government

does not have a right to be making that decision for her.

That is such an important piece of this to show that

reproductive justice is actually

religious liberty.

Yeah.

Because there,

as you said, the Jewish teachings,

the overturning of Roe violates thousands of years of teachings.

One of the cases that went up with Roe

was actually the opposite, where the army was trying to tell a woman that she had to get an abortion to keep her job.

So it's the flip side of the same coin.

It has nothing to do with the actual procedure.

It's the choice.

of what your body will and will not do.

Exactly.

And the point that that you are making that I think we all have to make repeatedly to all of our friends is

this movement about allowing people to make this decision and choose for themselves is not a movement to convert people

in terms of their religious beliefs.

This is not what that is.

It is simply to say, You do

what you believe in, what your faith dictates,

and leave the others to do what their faith and their beliefs dictate.

That's right.

And in that way, it is such a fundamental point, which is about one of the foundational concepts and principles upon which our country was founded.

Freedom and liberty.

I say take back the flag on this issue.

This is about freedom and liberty.

Yes.

Yes.

Right.

That's right.

I mean, what we have learned from black and brown intersectional activists from the beginning is that reproductive justice doesn't have to do with a particular law or a particular legislation.

When we back up, as Monica Ray Simpson of Sister Song says, this is about full-scale liberation.

It is about the ability to walk through the world and do what we must do and be safe in doing it.

And I think if we all can understand that it is.

It is about the full-scale liberation that is the use and enjoyment of your life as you see it.

Right.

Everyone can get behind that.

There's a phrase for that,

which is self-determination.

Yes, I've heard that.

Right.

How about that?

Right?

How about that?

Self-determination.

If we think about it again, going back to...

Just the point about who are we as a country?

What do we stand for?

What do we believe in?

What was our reason for being?

It was about self-determination and freedom and liberty.

It was about working against the idea that the government would be big brother and make decisions, fundamental decisions for you about your life and those things that are, in particular, the most private aspects of life.

One other way of thinking of it is that individuals should have the right to make decisions about the matters of heart and home.

So that's about who you marry.

It's about what you choose to do within the privacy of your home.

That is not about hurting anyone else,

but the choices that you rightly should have the ability to make, the freedom to make.

And our homes are our bodies.

Yes, our homes are our bodies.

What does the future hold for business?

Ask nine experts and you'll get 10 answers.

Bull market, bear market.

Rates will rise or fall.

Inflation, up or down.

Can someone please invent a crystal ball?

Until then, over 40,000 businesses have future-proofed their business with NetSuite, the number one AI cloud ERP, bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, HR into one fluid platform.

With one unified business management suite, there's one source of truth, giving you the visibility and control you need to make quick decisions.

With real-time insights and forecasting, you're peering into the future with actionable data.

When you're closing the books in days, not weeks, you're spending less time looking backwards and more time on what's next.

Whether your company is earning millions or even hundreds of millions, NetSuite helps you respond to immediate challenges and seize your biggest opportunities.

I highly recommend it.

Speaking of opportunity, download the CFO's guide to AI and machine learning at netsuite.com slash hardthings.

The guide is free to you at netsuite.com slash hardthings.

Netsuite.com slash hard things.

How would you like to feel calmer, think clearer, and sleep better, all in just two minutes?

Meet TrueVega Plus, a handheld device that uses gentle vagus nerve stimulation to help calm your body's stress response.

In just two minutes a session, Truevega helps shift you out of fight or flight and into a more relaxed, balanced state.

By naturally supporting your body's nervous system, you can quiet mental chatter, ease anxious feelings, and promote deeper, more restful sleep.

So you wake up feeling refreshed and clear-headed.

There are no pills, no side effects, just safe, clinically backed technology developed from decades of neuromodulation research.

Ready to try it out?

Visit truevega.com and use code WCDHT25 at checkout to receive $25 off your purchase.

Take action today and upgrade to feeling better every day with TrueVega.

Visit truevega.com and use my code WCDHT25 to receive $25 off your purchase.

Feel calmer and sleep better with Truvega.

We were talking about how this is the first time in history that the Supreme Court has reversed itself to take back a constitutional right from the American people.

And we know this is not the end of that, but the beginning.

So what will extremist Republicans do next to restrict our reproductive liberties?

And will it include contraception and IVF?

So Clarence Thomas

said the quiet part out loud.

In the decision, in the Supreme Court Dobbs decision, Clarence Thomas said the quiet part out loud, which

this calls into question the right to contraception and the right to marry the person you love.

And so we should all take that very seriously.

Thankfully, Congress did on the second piece,

and we passed then a bill that Congress passed, which the president quickly and joyfully signed into law, protecting the fundamental right to marry the person you love.

But the right to access contraception, I mean, literally, we should be understanding and all people of any gender should be understanding.

Let's be clear about this.

It is about the decision that you should be able to make about whether or not you get pregnant or whether or not you want to get somebody else pregnant.

And in that way, again,

all genders should be concerned about this.

Speaking about being concerned about things.

So my sister just mentioned what Monica Ray Simpson said about reproductive justice.

Bayard Rustin, a queer key strategist in the 1960s civil rights movement, said, We are all one.

And if we don't know it, we will learn the hard way.

Yes.

We know you've talked about the intersection between voter suppression and abortion restrictions.

If we care about abortion rights and we don't want to keep learning the hard way,

who else must we care about?

And what other issues do we need to make our own?

So

I love Venn diagrams.

We have heard.

So

one day I might write a book.

I love Venn diagrams.

So

the three circles, right?

And

how they overlap.

And so on this issue, and that's about intersectionality.

It's about also the beauty of understanding that the vast majority of us have so much more in common than what separates us.

And when we can see it, whoa, the opportunity for coalition building and building community and reminding us we're not in this alone.

We're all in this together.

Not to mention what I think should be the edict to all of us, which is to say no one should ever be made to fight alone.

Right?

We must stand up for each other.

That's right.

And the rights that each is entitled to.

So on the Venn diagram,

I asked my team, let's look at where the attacks are coming from.

And when we look at where the attacks are coming from, what we find is that from the same place that you see an attack on a woman's right to make decisions about her body, you will see attacks on voting rights,

attacks on LGBTQ rights.

If you want to put a fourth circle on there, it's an interesting exercise to then figure out who's engaged in book bans.

Right?

And what that should tell us is, again, that there is a very significant overlap in each one of these fights.

And these fights, one might ask, what are they about?

They're about freedom.

They're about liberty.

They are also about dignity.

They're about dignity.

And the dignity to which each person is entitled

as part of their existence

should not have to be earned

as part of one's existence.

One must be and should be entitled to dignity.

Because the dignity is not, no one is out there saying this is an easy decision, willy-nilly.

What they are saying is that it's precisely because this is such a difficult decision

that it is yours to make in consultation with whomever you trust.

And that is why

I believe it's about dignity because it's about trustworthiness on this spectrum of who can make this decision.

That's an excellent point.

You can be trusted with this decision.

And when you cannot be,

we have to pull back all those rights

because you as a human are not as trustworthy as this other set of humans who presumably are.

Because, as you have pointed out, it's real hard to think of a law that limits a man's control over any part of his body.

I once asked that question.

Yes, I do remember that.

That was a good moment for all of us.

Yes.

I've only been replaying it almost every day since.

Yeah.

It's, I, it's absolutely, you're spot on right.

I, it just, it's about

also looking at, again,

there's historical precedence for this, sadly.

But without going through all the history on this, which is depriving, for example, women of the ability to vote, to own property, all kinds of things, right?

Let's put all of that aside.

It is also in the context, this issue of the fact that the trajectory of our nation, the direction of our nation,

has hopefully always been about making progress.

Progress as defined by many things, including the expansion of rights,

not the restriction of rights.

That's good.

So what we have just experienced is a restriction of rights that had been recognized by the highest court in our land.

And in that regard, I will say that as

Vice President of the United States, I meet with heads of state, foreign leaders, on a fairly regular basis.

I've now met with over 100, in person or by phone, presidents, prime ministers, chancellors, kings.

When we as the United States of America walk into those rooms, to have those conversations,

we generally have been able to walk in chin up, shoulders back, talking about the importance of democracy,

human rights, rule of law.

And in that way, we have presented ourselves as a role model of all of those things.

Well, the thing about being a role model, we all know this, people watch what you do.

to see if it matches what you say.

People around the world are watching as the highest court of our land just took a constitutional right.

And my greatest fear is that autocrats and dictators around the world, where their people are fighting for rights and freedoms, let's talk about women who are fighting all around the world for their rights and their autonomy, that those autocratic dictators can look at them and say, well, you want to hold out your friend, the United States?

Well, look what they just did.

You sit down.

And in that way, we then appreciate that this issue, the way it has gone down,

will impact not only the people of America, but arguably people around the world.

Which brings us back to our fight.

Yes.

Because

fighting to stand up and speak out about it, to

remind the people who are impacted that they are not alone, to focus on what is happening in these various states and in the United States Congress will also be something that people around the world will watch.

And those folks who are aligned with this fight will feel a sense of confidence that this is not over and we must continue to fight.

Hey, everyone.

I've got to tell you about Viori if you haven't heard of them.

You're missing out.

And we love this stuff.

I've been living in this stuff for years.

I recently got the performance jogger from their dream knit collection.

And let me just say, it's hands down the softest, comfiest jogger I've ever worn.

I use them for everything.

Viori is an investment in your happiness.

I promise you.

For our listeners, they are offering 20% off your first purchase.

Get yourself some of the most comfortable and versatile clothing on the planet at viori.com slash hardthings.

That's vuori.com slash hardthings.

Exclusions apply.

Visit the website for full terms and conditions.

Not only will you receive 20% off your first purchase, but enjoy free shipping on any U.S.

orders over $75 and free returns.

Go to viori.com slash hardthings and discover the versatility of Viori clothing.

Exclusions apply.

Visit the website for full terms terms and conditions.

What are some concrete ways every person listening to this can plug into the reproductive justice movement?

One of the ways is to use your social media power.

There's so much misinformation and disinformation out there.

And again, so many people feeling alone, right?

But they're on social media.

And to the extent that we can each use the platform we have to say, here's the correct information.

Here's the incorrect information when we hear it.

Like just to do it.

Keep doing it.

Even if you've done it before, keep doing it to reinforce the point.

Reinforce the point that there is help out there and let people know where there is help based on what you know to be help in your community or your state.

or in another state.

There is what we can do that is about supporting the organizations that are supporting the people who need help.

For people who live in states that have

practically outright banned abortion, you know, 16 states have laws now, 13 of them, the ban starts at fertilization, which is essentially an outright ban.

So helping people figure out how they can get to

and tap into services that can help them if they're working two jobs and they've already got kids.

The majority of women who seek abortions have children.

Childcare is expensive.

You got to travel.

That's a bus ticket, a train ticket, a plane ticket.

That's expensive.

You know, people are barely being able to pay rent.

And so supporting the organizations that are helping folks who need to travel.

supporting the organizations that are providing legal assistance,

it is outrageous that not only do many of these states not make an exception for rape or incest, the number of states that are criminalizing health care providers,

providing for prison time

for a nurse or a doctor is crazy.

Yes.

Yes.

If we were talking about this a few years ago, we'd say this is just bananas.

That's never going to happen.

It has happened.

So supporting the organizations that are supporting folks who might need legal services.

And then there's elections because, hey, elections matter.

Yeah.

Who your local prosecutor is matters, especially if you are in a state that has criminalized health care providers.

Who your governor is matters for sure.

Who your attorney general is matters.

And then who your local representatives are, that matters because they're going to be, in particular, if they work in your state house as a legislator, they're going to be the ones either pushing for greater protections or pushing back against restrictions.

That's why at the beginning, I traveled to all the states, not all the states, I haven't yet traveled to all the states, but a lot of states, blue and red states, to convene state legislators to remind them that we need them and they're now going to be on the front lines because this has moved out of then the federal piece into the states.

So be active in statewide organizations.

Get involved and, you know, let's all be joyful warriors on this too.

right my sister was dying to ask you about being a joyful warrior so the most joyful warrior your mother yeah was a pioneering scientist and you picked up a lot of your leadership principles from her yes and in her lab you learned that innovation

is what can be unburdened by what has been.

Indeed.

And this moment is terrifying.

Yeah.

And it's grueling.

And talk about elections matter.

We're

years in and we're tired.

So it's terrifying, but it also can be seen as a moment of a gift.

Right.

Because what got us here is not going to take us from here.

We are doing something new or we are just standing by and letting them take whatever else they're going to take next.

So what do you see as the gift of this?

And what do you see as the innovation going forward for what this movement can feel like and what can be?

So I think moments like this

remind us

that when we decide, oh, I ain't having this.

Okay, got it.

I'm getting out there.

I'm going to go and talk to some friends.

I'm going to do my social media.

as necessary.

I'm going to

join an organization.

And the effect of that activism

is always a really wonderful thing, I think, for an individual, which is to see the incredible power and strength that we each have to lift up each other.

It's an incredible strength.

You know, one can say you can, you know, how strong am I?

Look at my muscles, right?

And flex your arm.

But I think the true expression and measure of strength is not based on who you beat down.

It's based on who you lift up.

That's right.

And

for a lot of people, they may have thought, I think we all did, some things were long settled, so I don't have to worry about that.

That's good.

Those folks 50 years ago who got Roe

decided they did their thing and I have benefited and we're all good.

And then the Dobbs decision came down and everyone realized, ah, got it.

Can't take anything for granted.

Got to be active and hold on to our gains because otherwise they may atrophy, deteriorate, or be taken.

And

so the strength of the moment is to remind us we have to be vigilant.

And that's okay

because it's just about acknowledging the fact and the truth of the matter, which is

anything that is precious and important requires requires our vigilance

in protecting it.

Because the duality of these things is that usually the thing that gives us great strength can also be very fragile.

Meaning, if we don't protect it,

it could go away.

Before we end, I have to ask one thing.

So

when we get all of our Joyful Warriors podcasters together

and we do all of the things you've suggested and we get a democratically controlled Congress and we get a Democrat into the presidency.

Do you have confidence that Democrats will go to the mat to write bodily autonomy into law once and for all?

I absolutely do believe that that will happen.

And I think that,

again,

well, we can look at just the most recent track record on marriage.

Yes.

Because we've been pushing for it for a long time, but we thought, okay, we're good.

You know, I performed some of the first same-sex marriages in the country.

We thought we were good.

You know, the courts are making, and now we realize, okay, the courts may have made certain decisions, but we can't assume that will be forever.

So Democrats and some Republicans came together and said, okay, let's pass this bill that codifies, puts into law the right to marry the person you love.

Similarly, I think that

everyone has been shocked into being fully awake that we need to

do something in Congress.

But sadly, we still don't have all the numbers we need.

And that's why elections, in terms of who your Congress member is and who your senator is, really matters.

Because the one thing that can end all of this in terms of these bad laws is if we, at the federal level,

say that it is a right that cannot be taken away.

That's right.

Which is why you are our MVP.

Go team.

We are just so unbelievably honored for this time with you.

We are relentlessly in your corner.

Thank you.

Thank you for this time.

Thank you, Pod Squad.

Further directions to come.

We can do hard things.

Thank you, Pod Squad.

Thank you, guys.

This is really great.

If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us if you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things.

First, can you please follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things?

Following the pod helps you because you'll never miss an episode and it helps us because you'll never miss an episode.

To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things show page on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey, or wherever you listen to podcasts, and then just tap the plus sign in the upper right-hand corner or click on follow.

This is the most important thing for the pod.

While you're there, if you'd be willing to give us a five-star rating and review and share an episode you loved with a friend, we would be so grateful.

We appreciate you very much.

We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle, Abby Wambach, and Amanda Doyle in partnership with Odyssey.

Our executive producer is Jenna Wise Berman, and the show is produced by Lauren Lograsso, Allison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.