Sorry it's taken me a while to get back to this, and I'll be honest, I gave only gave it a quick listen when you first posted it and I may have forgotten some of the points they made, but I think I recall enough to comment.
Before I do though, can I just point out that you've just shared a video by two guys who repeat over and over that (though they disagree with his conclusions), recognize that Shapiro treats the data fairly and does not misrepresent it? I mean, you called the guy a retard and worse, and then you've shared a video by two fellas who actually note his fairness. Anyway....
I listened with an open mind, and I still think the argument Shapiro is making is the far stronger of the two. As I stated earlier in the thread, if you look at historical and current data, you must explain why the black community has in many respects actually regressed by some very important measures, such as home ownership, incarceration rates and single family homes. IF what they are saying is true and systemic racism is to blame for the plight of black communities, then tell me why the black community was actually doing better in the past in many important ways. Is it your argument that the U.S. has become MORE racist?
At the same time, explain why it is that racism is so disproportionately affecting a very specific group--black americans whose families have been here for generations. If you look at recent immigrant blacks, especially from Africa, they do far better economically than the aforementioned group. WHY??? Does racism not affect them? Comparisons to other groups are even more telling. Surely Indian and Asian immigrants also receive some level of racism right? Why do those groups actually outperform white americans?
Any serious analysis of the systemic racism argument has to consider a multitude of factors. That isn't to say racism doesn't exist. Of course it does. But the argument these two make (which is the predominant argument one hears everywhere) is that ALL disparities between whites and and black can be explained by systemic racism. I'm sorry, but that is simply not true. All of the data points to a far more probable truth. In the U.S., regardless of your colour, if you graduate
high school and get a full time job before you get married and have kids, you will probably be ok. In other words, racism is not the factor that's holding back the black population, personal life choices are. The sooner that's acknowledged and dealt with, the sooner things will start to improve.
I make an effort to listen to both sides. Most people I know who do the same, tend to stay quiet about these subjects because they agree with me...but are simply too scared to utter their opinion in mixed company.