Jemele Hill claims she'd have a job she's 'unqualified for' and a higher salary if she were White

Wait 5 sec.

Former ESPN host Jemele Hill says she would have a better job and a higher salary if she were a white person in America.On Threads over the weekend, Hill answered the question: "Black people, if you woke up white tomorrow, what's the first thing you would do?"Hill replied: "I'm going to apply for a job with a great salary knowing I have no qualifications and will get the job."ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON'T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!Oh, really?At this point, you almost have to admire Hill's commitment to the bit. Even she can't seriously believe her career would be more successful if she were white.In fact, we can say with near certainty that Hill would not have landed most of the opportunities she's received since leaving ESPN if she were White, whether at The Atlantic, Spotify, or CNN+.Call it DEI, corporate cowardice, or simply racial favoritism. Hill continues to find opportunities because she is a black woman who proudly attacks white people, including once declaring white men the "worse [sic] thing in America for decades."Her career has followed a pattern since 2017. Her projects underperform, the opportunities disappear, and yet another executive decides she's worth another chance.While figures like Hill, Bomani Jones, and Elle Duncan have leveraged their race to advance their careers, media companies have aggressively cut ties with white employees since 2020. Just look at ESPN's recent rounds of layoffs. The cuts have fallen overwhelmingly on white talent.The notion that white Americans routinely walk into high-paying jobs for which they are unqualified is fiction. We understand that Hill does not value facts, but multiple studies have found that white applicants are often passed over in favor of less-qualified candidates from preferred demographic groups.JEMELE HILL SAYS SHE FEELS 'TERRIBLY SAD' FOR KARMELO ANTHONY BECAUSE HIS LAWYER WAS WHOutKick founder Clay Travis responded to Hill's claim in a series of posts on Sunday."Reading history is important. The black civil rights pioneers didn't see themselves as victims. Yet their grandchildren often now see themselves as victims. If you are my age, born in roughly 1980 or after, you aren't a victim of racism. In fact, all racism has been in your favor," he wrote."Democrats have spent generations convincing black people that they are victims and now many believe it. Even people like Jemele who have made, and continue to make, far more money than 90-plus percent of white people their same age."Indeed.SPLC SCANDAL UNDERSCORES HOW THE DEMAND FOR RACISM OUTSTRIPS THE SUPPLY | BOBBY BURACKNo matter how often Democrats and race idolaters insist that white supremacy remains America's defining force, repetition does not transform an assertion into reality.Few public figures better illustrate the principle that the demand for racism exceeds the supply than Jemele Hill.That's because people like Hill have a vested interest in keeping racial grievance at the center of the conversation. Without racial tensions, she would have no value to offer the white executives who feel obligated to prove they are not racist.In a truly merit-based industry, Hill would likely be unemployable. She was once a respected columnist. Since then, she has revealed herself to be reckless, bitter, and grossly uninformed.Just last week, she attempted to portray convicted murderer Karmelo Anthony as a victim of a racist justice system.What is truly disgraceful is leveraging your skin color to remain employed while insisting that white privilege is responsible for your own shortcomings.