--as long as you can accept, that she has become your definition of that word.
I would never describe her using that word. In the past when I've read you criticize the "woke" movement, I've winced wondering, "Why?"
I only now understand. So it's always context, right? And semantics?
"..it began appearing in the 1940s and was first used by African Americans to “literally mean becoming woken up or sensitive to issues of justice”, says linguist and lexicographer Tony Thorne."
So if one is simply becoming sensitve to "issues of justice" -- it's easy to see how broad a definition it now takes on. It simply means different things to different people.
And let's also be honest - each side has weaponized it for different uses. So it depends not only who is using it - but for what purpose.
....reading on ;-)