His remarks yesterday at a ceremony marking the 75th anniversary of the Japanese attack generated a lengthy standing ovation from the crowd, with people whistling and hooting.
Thousands gathered for the event, held on a pier across the harbour from where the USS Arizona sank during the 1941 attack.
"You can bet that the men and women we honour today and those who died that fateful morning 75 years ago never took a knee and never failed to stand whenever they heard our national anthem being played," Harris said to nearly a minute of clapping, whistles and whoops.
In recent months, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and others have knelt through the national anthem to protest police brutality and the treatment of minorities, drawing criticism and acclaim alike. Athletes from many sports, from youth to professional levels, have followed Kaepernick's lead.
In February, Harris described China's militarisation of the South China Sea as being "as certain as a traffic jam" in Washington, DC At the time he told senators that to believe otherwise, "you have to believe in a flat Earth." US and Chinese diplomats generally cushion their barbs over who is to blame for militarising the region.
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