KJP snaps at reporter trying to ask question: ‘Not everybody wants to hear the sound of your voice, sir’

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre rudely snapped at a veteran reporter on Friday for daring to ask her a question.

The altercation occurred as Jean-Pierre was ranting and raving about the scandal in Springfield, Ohio, where several residents have claimed to have witnessed Haitian migrants eating pets.

Democrats and their corporate propaganda press allies have for their part automatically dismissed the allegations as “racist conspiracy theories” that aren’t based on a shred of truth.

During Friday’s White House press briefing, a member of the corporate propaganda press asked Jean-Pierre whether she, as the daughter of Haitian immigrants, takes the allegations personally.

“I take it personally when any community, any vulnerable community, is attacked — not just a community that I belong to, and proudly belong to, but any community, any vulnerable community that is attacked wrongfully so in a hateful way,” she replied.

Listen:

After speaking for a couple more minutes, the press secretary was questioned by veteran reporter James Rosen of Newsmax.

“Are there any invulnerable communities?” he asked.

While it’s not clear what he meant, Jean-Pierre assumed it to be a rude, crass joke of some type.

“It’s not funny,” she complained. “I know you want to make [a joke].”

But Rosen was adamant that he wasn’t joking.

“I’m just asking a question,” he stressed. “You’re talking about ‘vulnerable communities.’ You’re making a distinction.”

Yet Jean-Pierre doubled down on what she’d originally said by once again barking at Rosen that “it’s not funny.”

“I didn’t make a joke,” Rosen promptly replied. “I asked a question. Are there any invulnerable communities?”

This time the press secretary snapped.

“Not everybody wants to hear the sound of your voice, sir,” she said. “Give me a second, and I will tell you my answer. It’s not funny.”

FYI, she never answered the question.

The point Rosen may have been trying to make is that to many people, Jean-Pierre, and in fact the entire Biden-Harris administration, seem to only care about certain groups of people whom they’ve deemed to be “vulnerable.”

For example, they seem to care deeply about migrants, criminal aliens, transgender people, and Muslims, but zero about everyday, working-class Americans.

The biggest proof of this is how President Joe Biden responded after a Norfolk Southern Railway train carrying hazardous materials derailed in the predominantly white, working-class town of East Palestine, Ohio in 2023, causing massive devastation.

Following the incident, the president refused to declare the site a disaster area. Also, he waited a whole year before visiting the town to show solidarity. Meanwhile, his administration acted as if everything was hunky-dory in town.

All this prompted anger when he finally did visit.

“I want to say that if he’s not coming here to take action, then why come?” lifelong resident Jami Wallace told NewsNation at the time. “It’s been a year of tucking our kids into beds where we don’t know if our homes are safe because they haven’t been tested. They won’t test our soil.”

“We’re all sick. As a parent, as a wife, or daughter, this is unacceptable in the United States of America. It’s just hard to believe that anybody could ignore what’s going on in our community,” she added.

At the time of the president’s late visit, the Government Accountability Project submitted a letter to him raising similar concerns as locals.

“Residents continue to suffer from a range of severe health symptoms, including respiratory distress, skin lesions, neurological issues, new tumors, seizures, and cardiac issues, with many reporting symptoms consistent with dioxin exposure,” the letter reads.

The Government Accountability Project also slammed the Biden-Harris administration’s various agencies for their handling of the disaster.

“The EPA, CDC, and FEMA have been criticized for a series of dangerous decisions, including premature lifting of evacuations, inadequate testing, reliance on industry consultants, and failure to address the extent of contamination beyond East Palestine,” the letter continued.

Vivek Saxena

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