Kamala Harris campaign’s lead graphic designer has troubling leanings toward political violence

As leftists lauding the Harris for President campaign feigned enthusiasm for the undemocratic coronation, the team’s lead graphic designer’s own cheers for political violence resurfaced.

“[B]urn all that sh*t down”

Like the flip of a switch, stalwart supporters of President Joe Biden who denied any concerns about his ability to perform his duties had accepted the new narrative that Vice President Kamala Harris was the remedy for their Trump Derangement Syndrome. Despite having a private social media account, one campaign staff member’s posting history raised the question, “Should we have expected anything different?”

As examinations of lead graphic designer Ana Cherée Rice’s past remarks included a report from the New York Post, Journalist and The Post Millennial senior editor Andy Ngô shared screen shots of the account that ranged from commentary during the “mostly peaceful” city-burning riots of 2020 to fall 2023.

Among the commentary from the Brooklyn-based designer included repeated calls to “burn all that sh*t down” as she sounded off about the violent BLM protests that had taken over cities like Kenosha, Wisconsin and Atlanta, Georgia after the death of George Floyd while in police custody.

“From @KamalaHarris helping fundraise for violent riot suspects in Minnesota to her current @KamalaHQ lead designer urging arson attacks and her new communications director (Brian Fallon) calling for defunding the police, there is a thread that connects them all,” wrote Ngô.

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Additional posts highlighted featured Rice asserting in Aug. 2020, “i need a gun…because i’m not playing with y’all,” as well as her stating in late 2023, “i never have–and will never have–a problem with looting.”

According to the report from the Post, the fan of looting, arson and myriad acts of violence in the name of social justice had previously done graphic design work for Apple, Chase and Lululemon among other corporations.

She also earned her activist bona fides when, according to the newspaper, she was detained by the NYPD at a Big Apple riot on May 29, 2020, just days after Floyd’s death.

While the Harris campaign attempted to have it both ways with their new presumptive candidate, maintaining a social justice bent while touting the vice president’s record as the attorney general of California, the End Wokeness account readily reminded where the then California senator had stood in relation to the chaos taking over cities across the country.

During a June 2020 interview with Stephen Colbert, she opined of the protests, “They’re not gonna stop, they’re not gonna stop…This is a movement. I’m telling you, they’re not gonna stop and everyone beware because they’re not gonna stop…they’re not gonna stop before Election Day in November and they’re not gonna stop after Election Day. And that should be — everyone should take note of that on both levels…They’re not gonna let up and they should not and we should not.”

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The apparent mutual favor for any means necessary approach to “social justice” came as little surprise to users on social media, some of which were more taken aback by Rice being referred to as a “graphic designer.”

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Kevin Haggerty

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