Just when it seemed nothing could make professional antiwhite racist Robin DiAngelo any less appealing:
In an “accountability” statement on her website, which makes repeated reference to her Ph.D., DiAngelo, 67, tells “fellow white people” that they should “always cite and give credit to the work of BIPOC people who have informed your thinking.”
And yet:
According to a complaint filed last week with the University of Washington, where DiAngelo received her Ph.D. in multicultural education, she plagiarized several scholars—including two minorities—in her doctoral thesis.
Let’s see if she at least takes this opportunity to credit DEI BIPOCs like Harvard’s Claudine Gay, Sherri Ann Charleston, and Shirley Greene and Columbia’s Alade McKen for being the true pioneers of plagiarism.
DiAngelo allegedly stole material from Asian-Americans Thomas Nakayama and Stacey Lee. Shame on her for not being more inclusive. She should have found something worth stealing from identity groups that are not so white-adjacent.
Once an obscure professor at Westfield State University, DiAngelo emerged in 2020 as the high priestess of progressive racialism. Her most famous book, White Fragility, published in 2018, flew off the shelves following George Floyd’s death, beating out How to Be An Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi—a black man—on USA Today’s best-seller list.
The queen of the race grifters might counter plagiarism revelations by proclaiming that her own behavior proves her point about all white people being contemptible scoundrels.
On a tip from Franco.