Karine Jean-Pierre Lands Inspiring New Role After White House — A Career Move Full of Pride

# Pride and Propaganda: When Representation Replaces Truth

Karine Jean-Pierre, the former White House Press Secretary under President Biden, just landed her next high-visibility position. Predictably, it’s one calculated for optics: showcasing identity, not substance—another victory lap for the regnant religion of progressivism. Whatever her new platform becomes—be it media or political consultancy—it will no doubt continue broadcasting the same message: representation equals righteousness.

But let’s pause and ask the question no one wants to touch: What exactly are we “representing”?

## Identity Politics: The New American Sacrament

The Left’s obsession with identity—race, sexual preference, gender nonconformity—has metastasized into a new moral framework, one that replaces biblical categories of sin and virtue with superficial demographic checkboxes. In that framework, Jean-Pierre is canonized: a black, immigrant, openly lesbian mouthpiece for the progressive state. The fact that she routinely dissembled from the White House podium is irrelevant. Style has swallowed content.

If you check enough diversity boxes, you’re now considered more moral than someone who speaks the truth. Welcome to the postmodern inversion of morality.

But as a Christian, I’m accountable to truth, not trends. And truth is not found in inclusivity-of-personas but fidelity-to-God. The gospel isn’t about self-expression. It’s about self-denial, the kind that follows Christ to the cross, not the kind that gets you a glowing MSNBC contract for reciting state-approved slogans.

## The Lie Beneath the Lipstick

Jean-Pierre’s legacy isn’t one of transparency or courage, but of evasive talking points, dodging legitimate questions, and defending a regime that has enshrined abortion as sacred, abandoned children to gender confusion, and promoted lawlessness at the border. Under her tenure, truth was treated as adversarial.

And yet now, she’s being celebrated—not for virtue, but for visibility. That’s emblematic of a larger cultural psychosis where someone’s lifestyle or race excuses them from the consequences of their ideologies. If you kill babies in the womb, but do it while wearing a rainbow pin, you’re a hero. But if you quote Scripture to say abortion is murder, you’re a fanatic.

This is not progress. It’s delusion, with a grin.

## Representation for What Purpose?

The dangerous myth of representation is that it assumes the mere presence of diverse faces equals justice. But justice is never skin-deep. It is moral. It is theological. It demands righteousness, not just resonance.

So ask yourself: If someone who looks like you or thinks like you ascends to power and uses it to oppress truth, exploit the innocent, or champion evil—should that make you proud?

Not if you fear God.

Representation divorced from righteousness is just camouflage for corruption. Pharaohs come in every shade, and Jezebels now wear makeup from Sephora. The fact that they’re on magazine covers doesn’t make them righteous. It makes them marketed.

## Christians, Don’t Settle for Symbolism

As believers, we don’t clamor for symbolic victories. We contend for godliness in the inner life and justice in public policy. That means rejecting this proxy virtue system, where who you are matters more than what you do.

Paul didn’t care whether Peter was a Jew or a Gentile when he called out his hypocrisy (Galatians 2:11). The early church wasn’t obsessed with color or clout; it was obsessed with holiness and truth. If the church today mirrored that priority, we wouldn’t rush to applaud someone simply for achieving power—we’d examine how they use it.

The presidency, the press podium, and the public spotlight are not inherently noble. They are platforms. And if those platforms are used to defend the killing of unborn children, lie to the public, or promote sexual confusion, then they are not victories for human dignity. They are monuments to rebellion.

## Conclusion: Celebrating Sin Is Not Courageous

Karine Jean-Pierre’s ascent to whatever role she now holds isn’t noteworthy because of who she is—it’s troubling because of what she publicly defends. I don’t care what demographic box she checks. As long as she uses her voice to shield evil, she is not a moral exemplar. She is another high-functionary in a government that slaughters babies, confuses children, and proudly waves the flag of Babel.

And the Christian response is not applause, but allegiance—to Christ, to truth, and to the moral clarity of the Cross. These are days for discernment, not dopamine hits from diversity.

We don’t need more representation. We need repentance. And that won’t come from the White House, or whatever media gig comes next. It must begin in the Church.

And it must begin now.

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