"The essence of a strong Black woman is to be independent."
That does not mean independent as in not a D or R. She can be a D or R and still be a strong black independent woman.
I am sure this is a concept most here will be unable to grasp.
With all due respect, you do a great disservice with your stereotyping, both to those included in your generalization, and to those excluded by it. This is the exact behavior you call out other members here for perpetuating, albeit with a different spin of the same bottle. In fact, the saying you quoted from Caroline Bird, a white woman, has been panned for the unfair expectation it puts on Black women to be superhuman and the trouble that comes from failure to meet those expectations.
You also conveniently skipped my first question, and doubled down on her ethnicity. She is no more a Black woman than an Indian one. All in all, her race does not define her. She is a sum of her actions to date, and by relegating her to no more than the color of her skin and her parents' place of birth, you do the job of the KKK for them.