Momala is here to save all the coconuts in the tree while she exists in the context of all in which she lives, and what came before her, as the meme-pilled discourse of X moves from ironic KHive posting to potentially actually wanting her to become president.
If that sentence made sense to you, I’m so sorry. If it didn’t, here’s what you missed: Vice President Kamala Harris’s meme power — once a satiric gag — might be an indication of her ascension to the presidency.
The entire length of this presidential administration can be analyzed through memes courtesy of the veep. It started with “We did it, Joe,” and continued with her singing The Wheels of the Bus. She said “What can be, unburdened by what has been” a million times and her laugh is astonishing. She reminded us that her mother would say “‘I don’t know what’s wrong with you young people. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree?’ You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you.”
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These memes have shaped the way the public — particularly the public that spends a lot of time online — views Harris’ role in the administration. But after President Joe Biden’s abysmal showing at the recent debate against Republican candidate and former President Donald Trump, the memes have taken a new turn. They’ve become more explicitly political, and people have begun taking her even more seriously. Perhaps the American public is more comfortable with a presidential candidate who seems like your silly aunt than one who looks, well, a bit too old for the role.
The Biden campaign is struggling to hold onto young voters, and the debate only made that desperation more clear. In a CNN poll from after the debate, VP Harris not only outperformed Biden, but she outperformed all the other Democratic choices. People are calling for Biden to step down from running for reelection, and the best option to replace him? She did not just fall out of a coconut tree.