It’s a fact that Sunny Hostin, co-host of ABC’s The View, is a staunch racist. She has repeatedly used her platform on the show to attack white people, particularly white gun owners and white women. And during Tuesday’s episode, she took swipes at white women again; this time accusing them of only voting Republican because they’re subservient to their husbands and to “protect the patriarchy.”
Ahead of the midterm elections last November, a mentally unhinged Hostin equated white women to cockroaches if they voted Republican. And she exhibited that same anti-white woman hatred when she proclaimed: “White women, in particular, want to protect the patriarchy here, because it's to their benefit.”
Of course, this came after she noted “white women owned slaves as well.” The juxtaposition of those lines was no coincidence.
Hostin then bizarrely whined that white women voted Republican because they wanted their families to do well and because their husbands forced them to:
They want to make sure that their husbands do well. They want to make sure that their sons do well. They want to make sure that their children do well. And they want to make sure that they do well. Most of the women in some of these studies are married white women and they do fall in line with what their husbands are doing, what their husbands are voting.
She would later defend her heinous comments by claiming “there are studies that support these theories.” But she never cited any, which was ironic since she and the show have repeatedly bragged about her always having “receipts.”
Self-described conservative Alyssa Farah Griffin pushed back and asked Hostin how she explained continued support for alleged abuser Democrats like former President Bill Clinton and former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. Hostin defended that hypocrisy by arguing that they supported the right policies (A.K.A liberal policies), while GOP women were traitors to their gender:
They think that those -- that the policies of let’s say a Clinton – [are] in line with their policies. I think with white female Republicans, you have a Republican Party that is taking away your health right to decide for yourself. You have all of these things that are against women.
Co-host Sara Haines injected some sense into the conversation as she decried Hostin for treating white women like a monolith:
I don't presume to know what keeps people up at night. I don’t think groups are monolithic. I don't think every woman, every black person, very Hispanic - name any group, vote the same. I think we are a complicated nation, with a lot of differences, which makes this country really magical. And I wouldn’t project what keeps me up at night on anyone else.
Earlier in the show, Haines shot down Hostin’s cries of racism when it came to criticism and the low approval rating of Vice President Kamala Harris (D). While Hostin blamed racism, Haines surprisingly queued up a montage of Harris chewing on her “word salad[s],” including her infamous “passage of time” gaffe.
SHOCK: Sara Haines shows a montage of Kamala stumbling over her words, including the infamous "passage of time" "word salad."
— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) May 30, 2023
Hostin claims Kamala speaks like that because that's what they're taught in law school, to "speak in threes." pic.twitter.com/x3Qt9GDDrF
Sunny Hostin’s racism against white women was made possible because of lucrative sponsorships from Consumer Cellular and Swiffer. Their contact information is linked so you can tell them about the hate they’re funding.
The transcript is below, click "expand" to read:
ABC’s The View
May 30, 2023
11:17:54 a.m. Eastern(…)
SUNNY HOSTIN: I have a similar theory. It's born out when you look at the studies and when you read books like -- a book that came out a long time ago about she owned property as well, meaning white women owned slaves as well.
I think that women, white women in particular, want to protect the patriarchy here, because it's to their benefit. They want to make sure that their husbands do well. They want to make sure that their sons do well. They want to make sure that their children do well. And they want to make sure that they do well. Most of the women in some of these studies are married white women and they do fall in line with what their husbands are doing, what their husbands are voting.
ALYSSA FARAH GRIFFIN: What about continued Cuomo support among female voters, or Bill Clinton support?
[One person in the audience claps]
HOSTIN: I think part of that— Oh, thank you, that’s nice.
FARAH GRIFFIN: I have a fan for once!
HOSTIN: I think part of that is to Joy's position. They think that those -- that the policies of let’s say a Clinton – is in line with their policies. I think with white female Republicans, you have a Republican Party that is taking away your health right to decide for yourself. You have all of these things that are against women.
FARAH GRIFFIN: There's an actual quote in the article, one of the people interviewed, who says, "I think Trump is an idiot, I hate him as a person, but I'm concerned about the economy, I can barely afford to live. I went to college. I have a job."
SARA HAINES: Jes--
JOY BEHAR: Did they interview us?
FARAH GRIFFIN: My family is, these are people, were if your 401(k) went down by 25 percent when Biden came into office, money sometimes comes first with people.
[Crosstalk]
SARA HAINES: There are 240 million eligible voters in this country. And I think we heard at this table people who admitted to only voting for wanting a pro-life Supreme Court justice. That's all they went to the booths with. You could do anything, and all they cared about was that thing. I don't presume to know what keeps people up at night. I don’t think groups are monolithic. I don't think every woman, every black person, very Hispanic - name any group, vote the same. I think we are a complicated nation, with a lot of differences, which makes this country really magical. And I wouldn’t project what keeps me up at night on anyone else.
HOSTIN: But there are studies that support these theories.
[Applause, starts after Haines finishes]
[Crosstalk]
WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Here's, the thing, I'm stopping everyone. We have to go. We'll be right back.