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Kamala Harris’ ‘Intruder’ Crack: Joke or Serious Comment on Self-Defense?

Vice President Kamala Harris, who told Oprah Winfrey that if anyone breaks into her home "they're getting shot," speaks about gun violence Sept. 26 in the East Room of the White House. (Saul Loeb/AFP/ Getty Images)

In an interview last month with talk-show host Oprah Winfrey, Vice President Kamala Harris once again played up her status as a gun owner, emphatically declaring: “If somebody breaks into my house, they’re getting shot!”

Let’s put aside the reality that her well-armed and taxpayer-funded security detail almost certainly would confront any would-be intruder long before he or she successfully broke into Harris’ home. For the millions of Americans who own firearms for self-defense, Harris’ quip about her quick draw was perhaps the most relatable sentence she’s ever uttered.

It took her almost no time to walk it back.

Literally.

Harris immediately laughed and remarked that she “should not have” made the comment and her “staff could deal with that later.”

It was as though by declaring her willingness to use her right to keep and bear arms in lawful self-defense, Harris had committed an embarrassing gaffe that would need a subsequent PR spin to clean up.

Right on cue, one of Harris’ top advisers chimed in to insist that the vice president’s remark about shooting an intruder was merely “a joke.”

The problem is that exercising one’s right to armed self-defense against threats to life, liberty, and property isn’t a joke. It’s the whole point of the right to keep and bear arms.

Almost every major study has found that Americans use their firearms in self-defense between 500,000 and 3 million times annually, according to the most recent report on the subject by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2021, the most comprehensive study ever conducted on the issue concluded that roughly 1.6 million defensive gun uses occur in the United States every year.

For this reason, The Daily Signal publishes a monthly article highlighting some of the previous month’s many news stories on defensive gun use that you may have missed—or that might not have made it to the national spotlight in the first place. (Read accounts from past months and years here.)

The examples below represent only a small portion of the news stories on defensive gun use during crimes that we found in September. You may explore more by using The Heritage Foundation’s interactive Defensive Gun Use Database

For the ordinary and law-abiding Americans described above, the exercise of their Second Amendment rights in defense of themselves and others certainly wasn’t a joke or an embarrassing gaffe.

They understood what Harris apparently is too afraid to admit: The right to keep and bear arms isn’t premised on sport shooting or hunting, but on the unalienable right of self-defense.

The Heritage Foundation is named here for identification purposes only. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not reflect any institutional position of Heritage or its Board of Trustees.

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