Two decades later, the Media Research Center is still mad at Anita Hill.
Scott Whitlock devotes a March 19 MRC item to bashing a Hill appearance on ABC’s “The View,” grumbling that host Barbara Walters “allowed no tough questions of Hill, just queries about the “cost” of speaking out. ” Whitlock then huffed:
A tough journalist might have pointed out that Hill has since written a book, become a professor at Brandeis University and has starred in a documentary. The book deal came with a reported $1 million payday. If the cost of the hearings on her life is fair game, what about Hill’s enrichment?
Yes, Whitlock is suggesting that Hill came forward with her criticism of Clarence Thomas for “enrichment” purposes. Never mind that Hill has never changed her story over the years, nor has she been proven wrong.
Further, Hill’s book on the Thomas hearings wasn’t published until 1997 — six years after her testimony — which makes Whitlock’s portrayal of her as someone trying to cash in on fame even more ridiculous.
In 2011, Whitlock ludicrously cited a 20-year-old poll to suggest that Hill was a liar. The MRC’s Tim Graham has also baselessly portrayed Hill as a liar without providing any evidence to back it up.