Unemployable. Photo: Kris Connor/WireImage When Joe Biden was America’s pointman for Ukraine policy, an allegedly corrupt Ukranian gas company started paying his son Hunter $50,000 a month to sit on its board. By Hunter’s own account – and that of another Burisma board member – Hunter would never have been offered this lucrative gig had he not been the son of the U.S. vice president. There is no evidence that Hunter ever lobbied his father on Burisma’s behalf. And the elder Biden reportedly made life harder for his son’s employer by helping to oust a Ukranian prosecutor who’d taken a hands off approach to corruption. But this is much is beyond dispute: By taking the job at Burisma, Hunter exploited his father’s public power for private gain – in a manner that undermined U.S. interests, according to several Obama administration officials. The State Department’s George Kent testified last month that Hunter’s role at Burisma risked creating “the perception of a conflict of interest” that could undermine America’s standing when it pushed for anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine. Kent says he raised this concern with the vice president’s staff in 2015. Another Obama administration official, Amos Hochstein, says that he raised the…