BOOM: Gill Torches Woke Nonprofit Queen in Hearing

You know a narrative is rotting from the inside when someone refuses to answer the question: “Are you a covert white supremacist?” Yes, that actually happened. No, it wasn’t a satire skit—it was a real congressional hearing. And Rep. Brandon Gill (R-TX) didn’t have to lift a finger to trap Diane Yentel. She walked right into it with her own organization’s woke handbook duct-taped to her back.

Yentel—President and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition (and apparent Twitter warrior on all things “white fragility”)—was invited to testify about nonprofit funding. Instead, she got smoked in real time for refusing to say whether she believed Donald Trump was a racist. But it gets better… way better.

“Are You a Racist?” — Simple Question, Nuclear Fallout

It started like most lefty testimonies: with talking points wrapped in moral superiority. But Rep. Gill decided to inject a little common sense into the circus by asking Yentel point-blank if she thought Trump was a racist. She tried to duck, weave, and pivot back to “the vital work of nonprofits,” but Gill wasn’t having it.

So he asked if she herself was a racist. Her answer: “No.”

You’d think that would be the end of it, right?

The Woke Boomerang Smacks Her in the Face

Gill then introduced a lovely little detail: one of Yentel’s affiliate nonprofits publicly defines “denial of racism” as covert white supremacy. You read that correctly. According to her own ideological tribe, saying you’re not a racist… makes you a covert white supremacist.

So Gill, bless him, just asked the logical follow-up:
“Are you a covert white supremacist?”

The woman short-circuited.

Instead of simply saying “no,” she floundered. Repeatedly. Painfully. For multiple minutes. Like someone who realized too late that her identity politics PowerPoint didn’t come with a reverse gear.

Gill gave her at least five chances to deny it. She declined every single one. You can’t make this up.

BOOM: Gill Doesn’t Even Need a Mic Drop

At this point, Gill could’ve walked out of the chamber like a WWE star after a chair slam. But no, he kept going—politely but ruthlessly. He read her own tweets back to her, highlighted her race-obsessed rhetoric, and calmly watched as she melted down on C-SPAN like a candle left on a Texas dashboard.

It’s not that Gill exposed anything new. It’s that he made the Left play by their own absurd rulebook—and watch it burst into flames on live TV.

But Wait, There’s Grooming?

Just when you think the disaster couldn’t go any deeper, Gill pivoted to another bombshell: Yentel’s affiliate organizations were reportedly promoting LGBTQ+ meetups for 9-year-olds and offering gender transition items like bras, binders, and fake nipples to children.

Yes, nipples. For children.

This was all in the name of “gender expression.” Because apparently, nothing says “nonprofit integrity” like mailing prosthetics to minors. It was so grotesque that Gill said he wouldn’t even repeat the full list because it was that disturbing.

Yentel’s defense? “I’m here to talk about nonprofit work.”

Ah yes, the nonprofit work of indoctrination, confusion, and permanent body modification—funded by you, the taxpayer.

The Nonprofit Gravy Train is Crashing

Here’s the truth: this wasn’t just about Diane Yentel. This was a gut check on a much bigger issue.
The nonprofit industrial complex is crawling with activist networks hiding behind IRS codes and glossy mission statements. These groups rake in tax dollars and charitable donations to push fringe ideology under the guise of “community empowerment.”

Gill’s grilling blew the lid off this game. And Yentel’s refusal to disown her own dogma proves one thing: the Left’s ideological web is so tangled that even its loudest champions can’t escape it.

Final Thoughts

This hearing was a masterclass in conservative accountability. Brandon Gill didn’t shout, didn’t grandstand, and didn’t fall into any traps. He asked reasonable, clear questions—and exposed just how insane the woke rulebook has become.

When you need to twist yourself into knots to avoid saying “I’m not a white supremacist,” maybe your ideology isn’t built on solid ground.

Then again, maybe it was never about ground—it was about control.

And folks like Diane Yentel just proved it.

WE’D LOVE TO HEAR YOUR THOUGHTS! PLEASE COMMENT BELOW.
JIMMY

Find more articles like this at steadfastandloyal.com.

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