I think I get her point.
Her music does deal heavily with her experience as a black woman from Chicago, so I can imagine there's a very clear disconnect as she performs this music about her life experiences to a bunch of predominantly white crowds. Part of it has to do with how indie music is pushed by primarily white institutions: Pitchfork, Stereogum, NYTimes, etc. are primary tastemakers, and most hip-hop sites tend to focus on trap or more mainstream artists. Aside from Bandcamp spotlights, Pitchfork and Stereogum are usually the first to tell me about a new NoName, Saba, Griselda, Your Old Droog, etc. album. In addition, one of the points folks seem to be overlooking is how she feels frustrated that listeners are not letting the music challenge their view of the world. They'll know every bar by heart, but have no idea what it means.
Ultimately, her frustrations on the way her music is being consumed are valid.
With that being said, I do find it disturbing how many folks here are calling her racist or willfully misrepresenting her comments or trying to find ways to shut down her critique.