Katherine Maher, the radical leftist CEO of National Public Radio (NPR), was just publicly dismantled in a fiery exchange on Capitol Hill, as freshman Congressman Brandon Gill (R-TX) tore apart her disturbing record of extremist rhetoric, anti-American ideology, and hypocritical posturing — all while Maher sits atop a taxpayer-funded propaganda machine that masquerades as journalism.
The House Oversight Subcommittee on Delivering Government Efficiency (DOGE), chaired by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), held a hearing today to examine the grotesque misuse of public dollars by NPR and PBS — two taxpayer-funded institutions that have morphed into mouthpieces for leftist ideology and elite liberal narratives.
What unfolded was nothing short of a reckoning.
Enter Brandon Gill, a freshman firebrand who refused to let Maher squirm away from her own words.
In a masterful takedown, Gill exposed Maher’s radical past, dragging her own tweets into the spotlight and leaving her scrambling to explain away years of unhinged, anti-American rhetoric.
The exchange was nothing short of a conservative patriot’s dream—a young, sharp congressman dismantling the elitist hypocrisy of a taxpayer-funded liberal mouthpiece.
Brandon Gill:
Do you believe that America is addicted to white supremacy?Katherine Maher:
I believe that I tweeted that. As I’ve said earlier, I believe much of my thinking has evolved over the last half decade.Brandon Gill:
It has evolved. Why did you tweet that?Katherine Maher:
I don’t recall the exact context, sir, so I wouldn’t be able to say.Brandon Gill:
Okay. Do you believe that America believes in black plunder and white democracy?Katherine Maher:
I don’t believe that, sir.Brandon Gill:
You tweeted that in reference to a book you were reading at the time—apparently The Case for Reparations.Katherine Maher:
I don’t think I’ve ever read that book, sir.Brandon Gill:
You tweeted about it. You said you took a day off to fully read The Case for Reparations. You put that on Twitter in January of 2020.Katherine Maher:
Apologies, I don’t recall that I did. I have no doubt that your tweet there is correct, but I don’t recall that.Brandon Gill:
Do you believe that white people inherently feel superior to other races?Katherine Maher:
I do not.Brandon Gill:
You don’t? You tweeted something to that effect. You said, “I grew up feeling superior. How white of me.” Why did you tweet that?Katherine Maher:
I think I was probably reflecting on what it was to grow up in an environment where I had lots of advantages.Brandon Gill:
It sounds like you’re saying that white people feel superior.Katherine Maher:
I don’t believe that anybody feels that way, sir. I was just reflecting on my own experiences.Brandon Gill:
Do you think that white people should pay reparations?Katherine Maher:
I have never said that, sir.Brandon Gill:
Yes, you did. You said it in January of 2020. You tweeted, “Yes, the North. Yes, all of us. Yes, America. Yes, our original collective sin and unpaid debt. Yes, reparations. Yes, on this day.”Katherine Maher:
I don’t believe that was a reference to fiscal reparations, sir.Brandon Gill:
What kind of reparations was it a reference to?Katherine Maher:
I think it was just a reference to the idea that we all owe much to the people who came before us.Brandon Gill:
That’s a bizarre way to frame what you tweeted. Okay, how much reparations have you personally paid?Katherine Maher:
Sir, I don’t believe that I’ve ever paid reparations.Brandon Gill:
Okay. Just for everybody else.Katherine Maher:
I’m not asking anyone to pay reparations.Brandon Gill:
It seems to be what you’re suggesting. Do you believe that looting is morally wrong?Katherine Maher:
I believe that looting is illegal, and I refer to it as counterproductive. I think it should be prosecuted.Brandon Gill:
Do you believe it’s morally wrong, though?Katherine Maher:
Of course.Brandon Gill:
Of course. Then why did you refer to it as counterproductive? It’s a very different way to describe it.Katherine Maher:
It is both morally wrong and counterproductive, as well as being illegal.Brandon Gill:
You tweeted, “It’s hard to be mad about protests,” in reference to the BLM protests, “not prioritizing the private property of a system of oppression.” You didn’t condemn the looting. You said that it was counterproductive. NPR also promoted a book called In Defense of Looting. Do you think that that’s an appropriate use of taxpayer dollars?Katherine Maher:
I’m unfamiliar with that book, sir, and I don’t believe that was at my time.Brandon Gill:
You tweeted that you read that book.Katherine Maher:
I don’t believe that I did read.
WATCH:
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