Angel Reese Refuses to Bite After Reporter Asks Pro-Kamala Question: ‘I Respect This Answer A Lot’

In a recent social media interaction, WNBA rookie Angel Reese of the​ Chicago Sky ‍received acclaim⁤ for her honest yet humble‍ response to a reporter’s question regarding Vice President Kamala ⁣Harris and her presidential campaign. During a pre-game interview, reporter Brandon “Scoop B” Robinson posed a leading question about Harris’s political​ ambitions, expecting​ a certain type of response. Instead, ‍Reese candidly‍ admitted ​her lack of knowledge on the topic but encouraged others to get out and vote, stressing the importance of civic engagement in the upcoming election. Her mature handling of the question ⁢drew ⁢praise from various figures, including former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines, who expressed admiration for Reese’s ‍honesty. This moment stands out amid Reese’s burgeoning career, where she has showcased both impressive basketball skills and a complex​ public persona, particularly in her rivalry with fellow rookie star Caitlin Clark. While Reese is​ often the focus of media narratives surrounding race and sports, her recent statement highlighted⁢ a commendable awareness of‌ her own limitations and a call ⁤to action for voters.


An honest admission of ignorance commands near-universal appreciation.

And if that does not convince us that God built a love of humility into our natures, then perhaps nothing will.

In a 35-second video posted to social media platform X on Wednesday, rookie sensation Angel Reese of the WNBA’s Chicago Sky adopted a neutral-yet-curious stance in response to a woke nitwit reporter’s leading question about Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris — a response that garnered substantial praise from X users.

According to Fox News, the exchange between Reese and Brandon “Scoop B” Robinson occurred before Sunday’s game between the Sky and the Phoenix Mercury.

Robinson began by framing his Harris-related question in the most awkward and nauseatingly woke manner imaginable.

“Vice president candidate Kamala Harris is a woman and she’s doing her thing,” Robinson said. “Her running for president — have you gotten a chance to watch her? What are your thoughts on her running for political office?”

Rather than parrot the woke WNBA’s party line as Robinson undoubtedly expected, Reese delivered a refreshingly mature answer.

“I haven’t been able to tap a lot into the political, um, election and everything going on. So I’m not that educated right now, but [I] just continue to learn and to just get feedback,” Reese replied.

“But everybody go out there and vote. I commend that. And I just tell a lot of people to go out there and do vote, because we need it for this election,” she added.

Former NCAA swimmer and current women’s sports advocate Riley Gaines applauded Reese’s reply.

“I respect this answer a lot. Kudos!” Gaines tweeted.

Others echoed Gaines’s sentiment.

“That’s awesome. Well done, @Reese10Angel,” Maryland Republican congressional nominee Kimberly Klacik wrote.

“Shockingly respectably excellent answer!” another user wrote.

“I honestly didn’t see that coming but respect,” another user wrote.

Perhaps the reason that the last user “didn’t see that coming” is that Reese appeared to respond favorably to former first lady Michelle Obama’s speech at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Tuesday.

“MICHELLE SAID WHAT SHE SAID,” Reese tweeted.

Likewise, the self-styled villain in women’s basketball has not exactly embraced humility early in her career.

Purely from a basketball standpoint, Reese has acquitted herself beautifully. She has averaged 13.6 points and 12.3 rebounds per game and earned All-Star honors — undeniably impressive achievements as a rookie.

On the other hand, her much-ballyhooed rivalry with rookie superstar Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever, which dates to their college playing days, has called forth its of ugliness from Reese and especially from race-baiting outside commentators eager to depict the rivalry between the black rookie superstar Reese and the white rookie superstar Clark as a racial melodrama in which the sanctimonious race-baiters — the world’s worst practical racists — imagine everyone but themselves taking sides based on skin color.

Amid all that nonsense, Reese has sometimes pitied herself and depicted herself as a victim.

In fairness, however, she never asked for her rivalry with Clark to assume political dimensions.

Thus, when she eschews the political, we may believe her.

Moreover, when we feel like applauding her humility, we have cause to remember that God made us that way.






" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."

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