. . ."Jean-Pierre was awful at her job because she was awful at her job. There was no other reason she received criticism. She was not uniquely held back by extenuating circumstances. She was a dishonest hack who lied repeatedly to the public, and for that, she will be remembered as the most inept person to ever lead a White House briefing."
"In perhaps the most shocking, least expected twist of the last decade, Karine Jean-Pierre, the first "black, queer, immigrant" to hold the role of White House press secretary, has figured out why she faced so much criticism on the job. You didn't guess it because it's a move that no one could have foreseen, but she's...playing the race card.
"Vanity Fair is out with a new profile of Jean-Pierre (written by Jean-Pierre herself) because I guess they think Americans are dying for more information on the worst press secretary in presidential history. In it, she claims she faced unique hardships because of her race, sexual orientation, and immigration history. She also claimed that "Society doesn’t allow women of color to be vulnerable at work."
"The disconnect from reality is hard to fathom. Jean-Pierre received more deference in her position than anyone who held it before her. The press handled her with kid gloves despite her lying to their faces multiple times, most importantly about Joe Biden's severe cognitive decline. Instead of ripping her apart, they lauded her as the "first black press secretary" and the "first openly queer press secretary," as if honestly delivering information about a presidential administration is affected by what race they are or who they sleep with.
"Anytime any reporter dared to step out of line and offer up a hard question, they were accused of disrespect driven by racism and sexism. Meanwhile, Jean-Pierre was so bad at her job that she would often simply read pre-scripted answers from a binder during press briefings, usually obfuscating from the issue at hand in the process. Does anyone think Sean Spicier could have gotten away with that during the first Trump administration? Or do you think the legacy media might have found that unacceptable and disrespectful?" . . .