This clownish Aunt Jemima knows nothing about her own people. She's always been a fake.
Candace Owens Stumped by Basic Black History Quiz
Many of the questions were playful references to Black cultural sayings and songs that Owens struggled with about half the time, but the biggest revelation was that she didnât know or couldnât recall basic political facts.
They asked her to name the first Black woman to serve as a Supreme Court justice. âIs it now? Just now?â she asked, still not offering even a guess. âItâs whatchamacallit. I canât believe Iâm blanking on her name. Can you give me a first letter?â
Realizing there was no hope, the hosts told Owens that the first Black female justice is Ketanji Brown Jackson, without expressing any discernible judgementâwhich must have been a feat.
âHer name is a little tricky,â Owens added.
Owens was also asked to finish a common Black church exchange phrase, âGod is good,â and responded with âGod is good. Amenââ another wrong answer. âNo, no, no, no,â Charlamagne said. The proper response was âAll the time,â they explained. Owens was stumped, and asked, âWhere's that from?â
As one Twitter commenter put it, âThey said âfinish the sentence: God is good __________â and she gave the wrong answer. I donât wanna hear her say another thing about Black culture as long as I live.â
Candace Owens Stumped by Basic Black History Quiz
Many of the questions were playful references to Black cultural sayings and songs that Owens struggled with about half the time, but the biggest revelation was that she didnât know or couldnât recall basic political facts.
They asked her to name the first Black woman to serve as a Supreme Court justice. âIs it now? Just now?â she asked, still not offering even a guess. âItâs whatchamacallit. I canât believe Iâm blanking on her name. Can you give me a first letter?â
Realizing there was no hope, the hosts told Owens that the first Black female justice is Ketanji Brown Jackson, without expressing any discernible judgementâwhich must have been a feat.
âHer name is a little tricky,â Owens added.
Owens was also asked to finish a common Black church exchange phrase, âGod is good,â and responded with âGod is good. Amenââ another wrong answer. âNo, no, no, no,â Charlamagne said. The proper response was âAll the time,â they explained. Owens was stumped, and asked, âWhere's that from?â
As one Twitter commenter put it, âThey said âfinish the sentence: God is good __________â and she gave the wrong answer. I donât wanna hear her say another thing about Black culture as long as I live.â