Biden identifies as proud black woman in botched effort to reassure voters of his competence



The Democratic Party is in panic mode over the near-universal acknowledgment of President Joe Biden's decrepitude. Internal Democratic polling recently indicated that Biden is set for a humiliating defeat in November following his June debate performance. House and Senate candidates fear he may drag them down as well.

Biden was afforded an opportunity in an interview that aired Thursday on the black Philadelphia radio station 96.1FM to reassure his allies of his competence. It did not go well.

In his rambling interview with host Andrew Lawful-Sanders, Biden doubled down twice on the false suggestion that former President Donald Trump threatened a violent "bloodbath" should he lose the election and suggested further that his opponent "questioned the humanity of George Floyd." Biden emphasized the frequency with which he has appointed black judges and argued that his "bad debate" should not erase what he believes he has accomplished so far in his presidency.

What caught critics' attention, however, was not Biden's revisionism, his record of race-based hiring, or his desire to look past the debate, but rather his passing identification as a black woman.

"By the way, I'm proud to be, as I said, the first vice president, first black woman to serve with a black president. Proud to be involved of the first black woman on the Supreme Court," said Biden. "There's so much that we can do because, together, there's nothing — look. This is the United States of America."

Biden, who has previously adopted the life of another politician, appears to have conflated himself with his multiracial running mate, Vice President Kamala Harris.

The New York Times indicated that Biden campaign spokesman Ammar Moussa was quick to lash out at the media for taking note of Biden's latest gaffe.

'It's just my brain.'

"It was clear what President Biden meant when he was talking about his historic record, including a record number of appointments to the federal bench," said Moussa in reference to Biden's claim of being a black woman. "This is not news, and the media has passed the point of absurdity here."

In the same radio interview, Biden also struggled to make the point that American youth need people of their same race or creed in positions of power to look up to, just as he, as a much younger man, found a role model in John F. Kennedy.

"I'm the first president that got elected statewide in the state of Delaware when I was a kid," said Biden.

The president's subsequent comments indicated he may have been referring to Kennedy's election as the country's first Catholic president, although he provided no such correction or clarification.

Biden's disastrous interview aired the day after he met with around two dozen Democratic governors at the White House. According to the Times, when Gov. Josh Green of Hawaii, a doctor, asked the president about his well-being, Biden responded that his health was fine, "It's just my brain."

In addition to to reportedly joking about his mental faculties, Biden made clear he is staying in the race but needed to work less and to get more sleep.

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Transracial hustler Rachel Dolezal fired from teaching job after reportedly posting explicit content to her risqué OnlyFans page



Rachel Dolezal – the former head of an NAACP chapter who resigned after being accused of pretending to be black for personal gain – has been fired from a teaching job after reports of her posting "explicit content" to a risqué OnlyFans page.

Dolezal – who legally changed her name to Nkechi Amare Diallo in 2017 – allegedly runs an OnlyFans account. Subscribers must pay $9.99 a month to access the OnlyFans page, where she reportedly shares "creative content and gives fans a more intimate look" into her life.

KVOA reported on Diallo's OnlyFans page and noted that the content on the site was "explicit."

The OnlyFans account in question states that it features "super steamy" photos, an "explicit collection" of images, "nude" pics, and sex act videos.

OnlyFans – a subscription social media platform – primarily features pornographic content.

A verified Instagram account, appearing to belong to Diallo, mentions an OnlyFans account.

The Howard University alum – who now lives in Arizona – was employed as an instructor with the Catalina Foothills School District.

After news of Diallo having an OnlyFans account, the Catalina Foothills School District terminated the transracial civil rights activist.

"We only learned of Ms. Nkechi Diallo's Only Fans social media posts yesterday afternoon. Her posts are contrary to our district's ‘Use of Social Media by District Employees’ policy and our staff ethics policy. She is no longer employed by the Catalina Foothills School District," KVOA was told on Wednesday by Julie Farbarik – the school district's director of alumni and community relations.

In a letter to parents, the school district said, "We are committed to maintaining a learning environment where our presence on social media is consistent with our professional obligations."

As Blaze News previously reported, Diallo was being paid $19 per hour as an "after-school instructor" at the Sunrise Drive Elementary School in Tucson.

Dolezal garnered notoriety in 2015 after her parents – who are white – said that their daughter is not black, which she portrayed herself as.

After the backlash featuring accusations of cultural appropriation and attempting to profit by identifying as another race, Dolezal resigned as president of the NAACP chapter in Spokane, Washington. The transracial scandal also caused her to be dismissed from her position as an instructor of African studies at Eastern Washington University.

Dolezal, 46, said she began identifying as a black person in 2006.

While discussing her race, Dolezal told The Guardian in 2017:

I do think a more complex label would be helpful, but we don’t really have that vocabulary. I feel like the idea of being trans-black would be much more accurate than ‘I’m white’. Because you know, I’m not white. There is a black side and a white side on all kinds of issues, whether it’s political, social, cultural. There’s a perspective, there’s a mentality, there’s a culture. To say that I’m black is to say, this is how I see the world, this is the philosophy, the history, this is what I love and what I honor. Calling myself black feels more accurate than saying I’m white.

In a 2021 interview, Dolezal said she was having issues finding a job because of the scandal.

“I started with applying for all of the things I was qualified for and after interviews and getting turned down, I even applied to jobs that didn’t even require degrees, being a maid at a hotel, working at a casino,” Dolezal said on the “Tamron Hall” show. "I wasn’t able to get any of those jobs either."

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Catalina Foothills instructor, Rachel Dolezal, loses job over OnlyFans account www.youtube.com

White Impersonators Of Minorities Are Not Racist, They’re Grifters

Some white people are pretending to be ‘persons of color’ because it is professionally and monetarily beneficial to do so.

'Transracial' spends $250K to look Korean, touts penis reduction​ plan. Asks 'Why do people get so offended?’



"Transracial influencer" Oli London, who was born white, male, and British, has already spent an estimated $250,000 on surgeries to "become Korean" and now has plans to undergo penis reduction surgery "to be 100 percent Korean."

"I don't want people to get offended by this, but in Korea, [the average] penis is like 3.5 inches, and I get trolled all the time. People say, 'Oh, you can't be Korean. You're not 100 percent Korean,' and I just want to be 100 percent Korean," London told Newsweek in January. "I would even have a penis reduction so I'm, like, the Korean average. That's how far I'm willing to go. I can have it done in Thailand, and it will cost between $6,000 and $8,000."

London, who says he identifies as Korean as well as non-binary and prefers the pronouns they/them or he/him, says he's gotten intense backlash from people on social media who accuse him of "cultural appropriation."

“Why do people get so offended?" he asked in an interview with GB News. "I’m just following my dreams.”

On a recent episode of "Louder with Crowder," Steven Crowder played a clip from one of London's unbelievably terrible music videos and suggested there might be a fair bit more offensiveness going on here than "cultural appropriation." Watch the clip to hear more from Steven. Can't watch? Download the podcast here.


Disturbed Weirdo Spends $250,000 to Become Korean | Louder With Crowderyoutu.be

Want more from Steven Crowder?

To enjoy more of Steven’s uncensored late-night comedy that’s actually funny, join Mug Club — the only place for all of Crowder uncensored and on demand.

Meet the British Man Who Spent $200K To Become Korean

Oli London amassed thousands of followers with his flamboyant reviews of songs by Korean pop boy band BTS, but the thrill of TikTok fame soon wore off. He struggled to find ways to sate his obsession with K-pop culture. On June 26, the white British influencer announced to the world that he now identifies as Korean.

The post Meet the British Man Who Spent $200K To Become Korean appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

Leftist Logic: You Can Have Surgery To Change Your Sex But Not Your Race

Transracial K-Pop fan Oli London "came out" as Korean this weekend — and now, the left hates him for redefining identity politics.

White University of Wisconsin-Madison grad student resigns from teaching position after lying about being black



CV Vitolo-Haddad, a white University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate student, has resigned from a teaching assistant position after being caught pretending to be a black person, according to reports.

Following allegations, Vitolo-Haddad admitted she is not black or Latino. She is in fact, a white Italian American. After the revelation of racial misrepresentation, Vitolo-Haddad stepped down from her teaching assistant position. She also resigned as co-president of UW-Madison's chapter Teaching Assistants' Association.

A Medium post from an anonymous person made allegations that Vitolo-Haddad pretended to be a person of color. The motivation for the post came from the recent news about Jessica A. Krug, a white history professor at George Washington University specializing in African studies who "canceled" herself earlier this month after admitting that she lied about being black. The school is now offering counseling to students impacted by Krug's racial dishonesty.

"When the Jessica A. Krug story came out yesterday I was shocked, but not by the extent of her deception. What caught my attention, instead, were the parallels between her story and that of someone I know," the Medium post said. "I have long suspected CV Vitolo, a PhD student at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, of engaging in the same kind of race-shifting and copious lying that now has people enraged with Krug (and which distracts from the important work and struggles of actual Black thinkers, both in and outside of the academy)."

"I first met CV around four years ago, when they joined the Department of Communication Arts at UW Madison where I, as an affiliate of the university, had many friends," the anonymous claim reads. "They were quick to call themselves a 'person of color,' intimating that perhaps we even shared some heritage."

The Medium entry shared social media posts from Vitolo-Haddad, claiming that she "heavily implied that they were Latinx" and was a victim of racism.

"Though their claim to a POC identity was vague, the one consistency was their insistence that they were a constant target of acts of racism and that they came from some kind of nonwhite background," the post said.

"According to the post, Vitolo-Haddad's last name, Haddad, was 'appropriated' from a previous marriage, and Vitolo-Haddad grew up in a wealthy Italian family in Florida," the Badger Herald reported.

There is also an 11-page document "compiled and researched by a collective of Madison academics and activists who have had a variety of personal experience with CV." The document detailed Vitolo-Haddad's actions while at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, including her alleged "racial misrepresentation."

Vitolo-Haddad wrote an apology in a Medium post on Sept. 6, the New York Post reported.

"I am so deeply sorry for the ways you are hurting right now because of me," Vitolo-Haddad wrote in the post. "You have expressed confusion, shock, betrayal, anger, and mistrust. All of those things are a consequence of how I have navigated our relationships and the spaces we share."

"I have let guesses about my ancestry become answers I wanted but couldn't prove," Vitolo-Haddad wrote. "I have let people make assumptions when I should have corrected them."

"The first step towards that, however, is to resign my position as co-president of the Teaching Assistants' Association (TAA)," Vitolo-Haddad continued. "Second, I have resigned from my teaching position at UW-Madison."

"Education is build on a foundation of trust and accountability, and until I repair that I should not be teaching," said Vitolo-Haddad, who worked at UW-Madison's School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Vitolo-Haddad penned a second apology on Medium on Sept. 8 where she claimed that her "parents have conflicting stories" about their ancestry.

"First, I am deeply sorry and regretful to the people I deceived by inserting myself into Black organizing spaces I didn't belong in," the post stated. "That deception was parasitic and harmful."

"What I know is that I am Southern Italian/Sicilian," Vitolo-Haddad stated. "In trying to make sense of my experiences with race, I grossly misstepped. I went along with however people saw me. I over-identified with unreliable and unproven family history and latched onto anything I remembered growing up."

"When asked if I identify as Black, my answer should have always been 'No,'" Vitolo-Haddad said. "I should have never entered Black organizing spaces. They are not my place. Once realizing this, it wasn't sufficient to just leave; I should have explained that directly to the people who invited me and clarified my identity."

"I want to apologize for ever taking lies about Cuban roots at face value, and for subsequently attaching myself to people's perceptions of me as though it would provide answers where there are none," Vitolo-Haddad added. "Additionally, I want to apologize for how my failure to own up to these harmful decisions publicly made every conversation on social media about the varied ways I've been racialized a source of confusion and deception."

"What I know now is that perception is not reality. Race is not flat, it is a social construct rife with contradictions," Vitolo-Haddad wrote. "Fighting racism never required dissociating myself from whiteness. In fact, it derailed the cause by centering my experience."

The TAA condemned Vitolo-Haddad in a statement. "We condemn CV Vitolo-Haddad's appropriation of Black and Brown identities in no uncertain terms … we recognize that our union is the product of a labor movement infused with white supremacy and anti-Blackness," the TAA said.

The TAA accused Vitolo-Haddad of "manipulating and gaslighting Black and Brown community members who tried holding them accountable." The TAA apologized for "unknowingly rewarded the toxic opportunism of performing Blackness."

In light of recent allegations, CV Vitolo-Haddad has officially stepped down from their position as TAA co-presiden… https://t.co/FzvnKWLysq
— TAA (@TAA)1599484950.0

UW-Madison spokeswoman Meredith McGlone confirmed that Vitolo-Haddad no longer works at the university.

"UW-Madison expects that people represent themselves authentically and accurately in all aspects of their academic work," McGlone told the The Daily Cardinal.

California State University, Fresno, recently offered a tenure-track job to Vitolo-Haddad for the fall 2021 semester, but is reconsidering after the recent allegations of racial fraud.

"The Office of the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs is aware of the concerns regarding CV Vitolo-Haddad that have been appearing online," the school said in a statement released on Sept. 14. "Please know that this matter is currently under review. The University will always uphold its core values of discovery, diversity and distinction. We are taking this matter seriously and acknowledge the pain and confusion this situation has caused members of our campus and external community."

Vitolo-Haddad wrote extensively about white nationalism in articles and on her now-deleted Twitter account. She also wrote articles titled, "Dear White People: Loving A Black Person Isn't Activism" and "Who Gets To Punch Nazis, And When, According To The American Public." Vitolo-Haddad's YouTube channel, Doctoral Defense, features videos titled, "Examining Race" and "What the Right Gets Wrong About Biology."

Episode 3: What the Right Gets Wrong About Biologywww.youtube.com