While Vice President Joe Biden was in South Florida campaigning with Democrat gubernatorial candidate Charlie Crist and telling him how much of a F-ing big deal it was if he beat Rick Scott, his wife, “Second Lady” Jill Biden, was down in Miami with Crist’s running mate Annette Taddeo visiting supporters and making some phone calls.
Before Jill Biden addressed the 35 or so attendees of the event at Crist’s campaign office, a young woman identifying herself as Jadine or Nadine and being the “field organizer for the Charlie Crist for Governor campaign,” talked about her ‘white privilege’ shortly before introducing Mrs. Biden.Shark Tank investigative reporter, Special K, was in attendance and caught the audio.
Jadine, a St. Paul, Minnesota native, who said she grew up and went to high school in the inner city, started out by telling the Democrat faithful that she first got involved in the campaign “because one of her passions was education.”
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After describing the substandard learning conditions that her school offered students, Jadine spoke about the unfair privileges she was born with.
I was born into a working class family, I was born an American citizen, and I was born white.
It’s like playing a game of Black Jack, right?“What do I do with all of these winnings, with all of these privileges I have? It doesn’t sit easy to me to just coast through life an say, “Ok, I’m good, I have mine, but rather I can do something with that for all of us.
Um, I know because of the cards that I was dealt that I can knock down some doors, but once that door is knocked down, all of my people are coming with me.
I cannot have my generation thinking that we can navigate through some (inaudible) oppression, it is our time to dismantle these systems. It is our time to have “Change we can believe in,” and Charlie Crist is “Change we can believe in.”-Audio transcript
What Jadine or Nadine fails to understand is that being born white is not a privilege. Being born in the U.S. is a privilege.
Every U.S. citizen has the same opportunities in life, regardless of their skin color.Just ask my surgeon Dr. Moore in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, who just happens to be a black American. Or ask other prominent black Americans like Justice Clarence Thomas, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and Neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson, who all faced life’s challenges and made something of themselves.
Listen to the audio below.