Jason Whitlock DESTROYS Joy Reid and Jemele Hill for Caitlin Clark HATE



MSNBC’s Joy Reid and fellow race-baiter Jemele Hill — whom Jason Whitlock calls "two delusional black queens" — made some recent comments about WNBA rookie sensation Caitlin Clark.

Of course, these comments were as bigoted as they consistently claim others to be.

“Somebody very smart said to me recently that the challenge with women’s basketball is that most of the great players are black, but most of the stars are white,” Reid said to Hill. “And like you said, if there were charter flights, Britney Griner would not have ended up in the gulag, right?”

Whitlock is not a fan.

Not only does he note that Reid ridiculously blamed Griner’s arrest on the WNBA not having charter flights, but that both Reid and Hill are “trying desperately to look like white women.”

“Why do I bring this up? Because when I talk about bigotry over business, the bigotry and the hostility stems from [the fact that] these women hate themselves and hate that they’re not white women,” Whitlock says. “Why else would you put on some cheap wig, some horse's hair, over the top of your head to look like a white woman?”

"They're so full of jealousy and rage towards white women. Anybody that would hop on TV day after day with these ridiculous wigs on is telling you everything you need to know about their mentality as it relates to white women," he adds.

Reid then brought up the “marketability” of Caitlin Clark.

“This is a league that is largely, as you said, black women. It’s also largely LGBTQ. She’s a white, heterosexual woman. And so, if you’re trying to get white dads to go spend their money and buy season tickets, she seems like a marketing opportunity. How much of it is that?” Reid asks Hill.

“I don’t know why people find that to be controversial,” Hill answers, noting that while Clark is talented, “it helps that she’s white, straight, and from Iowa.”

“So, when you say that Caitlin Clark’s whiteness and the fact that she’s straight plays a role, underlining a role, in her popularity, that’s not a diss to Caitlin Clark. It’s just simply America,” she adds.

Again, Whitlock finds it interesting that while discussing Clark’s marketability due to the color of her skin, both Hill and Reid have altered their appearance to seem more white. Both of them have significantly lightened their hair to appear blonde.

“Here’s two black women, dressed as white women to be more marketable on TV. This is just facts,” Whitlock comments.


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LSU women's basketball head coach is the biggest villain in the league. And we're totally cheering her on



Jason Whitlock may be an outspoken Caitlin Clark fan, but for the Hawkeye's face-off against LSU, he's is rooting for the Tigers.

But it has nothing to do with LSU's superstar Angel Reese, aka the “Bayou Barbie.”

“LSU coach Kim Mulkey is the real star of women’s college hoops,” Whitlock says, but in the league, she is considered "the real villain" because she's a "force who threatens the left wing’s narrative on all of sports.”

While Whitlock believes Clark is “the most interesting and electrifying athlete in all of sports,” he also believes that “Mulkey is the most dangerous person in sports.”

“She’s the disruptor. The left-wing establishment wants to destroy Kim Mulkey. She’s the real ‘Bayou Barbie.’ The left hates her because she’s the antithesis of their chosen savior, South Carolina coach Dawn Staley,” he says.

While the ladies LSU team prepared for their Sweet 16 matchup against UCLA, the Washington Post published an 8,000 word takedown of Mulkey.

According to Whitlock, the piece framed Mulkey as “paranoid, vindictive, isolating, mean-spirited, and unloving.”

Mulkey and her lawyers pre-emptively threatened a lawsuit over the article, which likely forced reporters to tone down the attack.

The real reason the article was written, according to Whitlock, is because “Mulkey had the audacity to refuse to worship the LGBTQ alphabet mafia.”

“She advised Brittney Griner and other homosexual players to keep their private lives private” and “wasn’t a fan of tattoos” or “constantly changing hair colors.”

“Mulkey, without saying it, clearly believes there’s only two genders,” Whitlock says.

While that may make her an enemy in the realm of women's basketball, she's a hero in Whitlock's eyes.


Want more from Jason Whitlock?

To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.