Shapiro Claims TikToker Admits Discriminating Against White Job Applicants in Finance
"I work in finance as a manager, and I just want to let you know that any chance I have to hire a qualified Black candidate I'm going to give them the job every time. If they're qualified, if they're impressive, and I have a white and a black person, I'm hiring the black person every single time."
About this episode
In this episode of his show, Ben Shapiro dissected a series of TikTok videos promoting what he characterized as extremist identity politics and anti-white sentiment. The segment opened with sponsorship reads before transitioning to video reactions. Shapiro began by critiquing a TikToker who used intersectionality theory to argue that people with privileged identities—white, straight, cisgender men—are inherently more likely to be immoral, calling the logic nonsensical and noting it contradicts observed patterns of who is celebrated versus condemned in American media. He then featured multiple videos expressing hostility toward white people, including one creator who claimed white people lack personalities outside of racism and another who stated white people are inherently more prejudiced than minorities. A particularly controversial clip showed a finance manager admitting he always chooses qualified Black candidates over equally qualified white candidates, which Shapiro labeled discriminatory. A pastor's garage sermon blaming white pride and refusal to listen to people of color for Trump's support was dismissed as false. Throughout, Shapiro challenged the intellectual coherence of these positions, highlighting contradictions between anti-racism rhetoric and blanket condemnations of racial groups. The episode concluded with Shapiro asserting that conservatives are statistically happier because their worldview emphasizes community, virtue, responsibility, and meaningful human interaction, contrasting this with what he portrayed as the hollow identity politics on display.
Key takeaways
- A finance manager admitted on TikTok he prioritizes hiring Black candidates over white candidates when both are equally qualified.
- A TikToker invoked intersectionality to claim white straight men are inherently more likely to be immoral due to privileged identities.
- Shapiro challenged claims that white people are inherently more prejudiced, citing polling data showing racism exists across racial groups.
- A pastor blamed white America's pride and refusal to listen to people of color for Trump's support and predicted consequences.
- Multiple TikTokers expressed blanket hostility toward white people, with one claiming they have no personalities outside racism.
- Shapiro argued conservatives are statistically happier due to community ties, virtue ethics, and responsibility rather than identity politics.
- The episode critiqued what Shapiro sees as intellectual incoherence in progressive TikTok content around race and identity.