
Race faker rachel dolezal breaks silence after being fired from teaching job over her onlyfans account: ‘keep on living’
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Notorious race faker and former NAACP chapter president Rachel Dolezal broke her silence on social media after losing her teaching job due to her OnlyFans account. The 46-year-old shared a
smiling selfie on her Instagram Story Friday with the caption “Keep on Living.” “People have asked how they can support. Show some love with an order from my art website,” the second portion
of her Story said, and included a link to her site, racheldolezal.com, where she peddles her work and calls herself an “artist, activist and author.” Dolezal, 46, was canned by her Arizona
elementary school on Tuesday after the district learned about her account on the racy subscription service, where she is reportedly selling risque content for $9.99 a month. News4 Tucson
broke the news of her being let go from Sunrise Drive Elementary School in the Catalina Foothills School District, where she had worked as an afterschool instructor since August, allegedly
earning $19 an hour. EXPLORE MORE On Wednesday, Julie Farbarik, the district’s director of alumni and community relations, told the outlet that they had only discovered her OnlyFans account
on Tuesday afternoon and her posts were contrary to its “Use of Social Media by District Employees” policy. She was a part-time employee there, working with kindergarteners to fifth graders,
according to the Arizona Daily Star. Dolezel, who now goes by the name Nkechi Diallo, made headlines in 2015 when she was the president of the NAACP chapter in Spokane, Washington — and it
was discovered that her parents are white, although she presented herself as a black woman. In an interview on the “Tamron Hall Show” in 2021, Dolezal said it was difficult for her to find
employment after the scandal. “I’m still doing the work, I’m still pressing forward, but it has been really tough for sure,” she lamented on the show. “Not having a job for six years, having
to create my own job and find my own ways to provide for my children through braiding hair, through grant writing to bring funds into marginalized communities and black-owned businesses and
nonprofits, through painting, through doing pep talks on Cameo.com.”