A new video claims to show “real white privilege” but it just repeats old left-wing talking points. The clip attacks Ben Shapiro, a conservative speaker, for defending equal treatment under the law. Shapiro’s crime? Saying no one’s success comes from skin color alone. He argues merit matters, not racial quotas or identity politics.
Leftists love labeling free speech as “problematic.” This video fits their playbook: silence opposing views by linking them to “privilege.” Shapiro’s actual message? judge people by character, not color. But critics twist this into “supporting white supremacy”—a lie even Google’s own training programs rejected.
Shapiro’s biggest sin? Pointing out affirmative action policies hurt white and Asian students. He says fairness means treating everyone equally, not punishing some groups to boost others. The left calls this “racist” because it contradicts their identity politics.
The video’s real agenda isn’t fighting racism—it’s pushing radical ideas. They want you to believe seeing more white faces in success means the system’s rigged. But Shapiro’s right: Americans in all colors achieve greatness through hard work.
Google once put Shapiro at the base of a “white supremacy pyramid” in a training slide. Shapiro slammed this as a smear against conservatives. “I’ve condemned white supremacists in speech after speech,” he said. The video’s makers probably agree with Google’s false narrative.
Shapiro’s not alone. Millions reject the “white privilege” myth. They know a nation where Asians overcome poverty or Hispanics build businesses through grit doesn’t need racial quotas. The left fears this message because it proves their victimhood narrative false.
The video’s real problem? It’s part of a bigger war on free speech. Labeling debates about merit as “white privilege” lets leftists shut down discussions. Shapiro’s crime is daring to say “no” to their divisive ideology.
Conservatives must stand strong. America isn’t a land of permanent victims but of opportunity. When videos like this attack thinkers like Shapiro, they attack the very idea that anyone can succeed. Keep pushing for fairness—without race-based handouts. Fight for the America where your work, not your skin, defines you.