Bob Unruh raged in an Oct. 18 WorldNetDaily article:
Those around Kamala Harris have been warned: Not to stand too close.
This comes after the Democrat [sic] nominee for president, hand-picked after the party’s elite threw Joe Biden under the bus and chose her as a substitute this year, mocked a rally attendee who shouted “Jesus is Lord.”
[…]Jim Hoft at The Gateway Pundit headlined a report on the comment, and reaction, “EVIL: Kamala Harris and her supporters mock Christian attendeeā¦”
Harris was promoting America’s industry of killing unborn children at the time, saying, “We remember Donald Trump hand-selected three members of the United States Supreme Court with the intention that they would undo the protections of Roe v. Wade and they did as he intended.’
Actually, the Supreme Court ruled that the Roe decision was faulty from its outset and not based on the Constitution, so it was overturned, and the result returned regulation of the abortion industry to states.
The report said the Christian “bravely stood up and proclaimed, ‘Jesus is Lord.'”
Only to be mocked by Harris: “I think you’re at the wrong rally.” She added. “Try the smaller one down the street.”
While WND tweeted out a video of a purported “first hand witness” to back up the claim, Unruh didn’t tell the full story. As one fact-checker found, the protester who allegedly shouted “Jesus is lord” also yelled that “abortion is a sacrament to Satan” — hardly a friendly Christian without malicious intent.
But who needs facts when you have a bogus partisan narrative to peddle? Unruh did just that a couple days later:
It’s now JD Vance, the Republican vice presidential nominee for 2024, who has responded to a crowd shout that “Jesus is King.”
The issue came to be part of the 2024 presidential campaign just days ago when, during a Kamala Harris rally, someone in the crowd shouted ‘Jesus is Lord.”
She promptly instructed they were at the wrong rally, and they were subsequently ejected.
[…]Vance was commenting on the times that Harris is discounted or disregarded, even belittled, faith.
Someone in the crowd shouted, “Jesus is King,” and he responded, “That’s right. Jesus is King.”
Unruh spent an Oct. 22 article touting how this dishonest narrative was becoming a right-wing talking point:
Now a report cites recent anti-Christian comments from Harris as offering the potential for long term, and negative, effects for the Democratic Party.
CatholicVote charged, “Kamala Harris exposes her vile hatred toward Christians once again by ridiculing a rallygoer for invoking the name of God.”
And U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., warned, “Two-thirds of America is Christian. One fourth of America is Catholic. Kamala has made it clear that she DOES NOT want YOUR vote.”
WND reported on Harris’ comments, and then JD Vance’s response.
[…]Now a report at Just the News explains Harris “had already sent a bad vibe” to Catholics with her rejection of an invitation to the Al Smith Dinner, a fundraiser held by the Catholic Cardinal in New York.
Donald Trump showed up and cracked jokes for half an hour.
Unruh embellished things even more in an Oct. 23 article, falsely insisting that Harris made a “total rejection of Christianity” at the rally and calling upon WND’s favorite right-wing messianic rabbi and onetime meal ticket to further the bogus narrative:
Kamala Harris already has taken widespread criticism, except from Democrats of course, for her total rejection of Christianity at a recent rally.
Two college students, apparently offended by her agenda to wantonly kill the unborn through her abortion campaign, shouted out “Jesus is Lord” and “Christ is King.”
She reacted instantly, telling them they were at the wrong rally.
“She’s saying ‘Jesus is Lord’ does not belong here,” Messianic rabbi Jonathan Cahn, author of the bestselling “The Harbinger” and nearly a dozen others, explained in a new video, a video that collected nearly 90,000 views in just the first four hours online.
He explained Harris’ statement could be considered to cover herself, her rally, the party, and party’s platform.
“What is she doing? Mocking them for simply saying ‘Jesus is Lord’ and “Christ King.'”
Before now, in America’s history, such comments would be considered heresy and blasphemy.
One of the targeted students, he pointed out, explained that Harris sarcastically waved at him and gave him an “evil smirk.”
He explained Harris’ words were “words that the anti-Christ will say in one form or another,” the anti-Christ being the essence of evil prophesied in the Bible to come onto the earth during its last days.
That’s right — a throwaway quip now suddenly means Harris is the Antichrist. You might remember that WND repeatedly smeared Barack Obama as the Antichrist, so it appears that hateful cycle is about to begin again.