London Party Race Headcount Clapback Tweet

This image is a screenshot of a Twitter (X) thread featuring two user posts. The top post is from verified user Charlie Cuff, who argues that anyone attending a party in London or another major multicultural city where all attendees are white should feel ashamed. Below it, user Jack McGill responds with a satirical clapback, stating that the person who starts a party by counting the number of people from each race present should be the one feeling ashamed. The meme's humor stems from the reversal of the original argument, highlighting the absurdity of prioritizing racial headcounts over natural social interaction in a casual setting.
@Jack McGill Twitter/X

If you're at a party and you begin the night by taking a headcount of how many of each race there are at said party, you should feel ashamed.

Dialogue

Charlie Cuff
If you're at a party in London, or any major multicultural city, and everyone there is white you should feel ashamed
Jack McGill
If you're at a party and you begin the night by taking a headcount of how many of each race there are at said party, you should feel ashamed.

Text content

A Twitter thread where one user shames homogeneous parties in multicultural cities, and another user claps back by shaming the act of counting races at parties.

Overview

This image is a screenshot of a Twitter (X) thread featuring two user posts. The top post is from verified user Charlie Cuff, who argues that anyone attending a party in London or another major multicultural city where all attendees are white should feel ashamed. Below it, user Jack McGill responds with a satirical clapback, stating that the person who starts a party by counting the number of people from each race present should be the one feeling ashamed. The meme's humor stems from the reversal of the original argument, highlighting the absurdity of prioritizing racial headcounts over natural social interaction in a casual setting.

Origin notes

The image is a direct screenshot of posts from the social media platform Twitter (now rebranded as X), identifiable by the platform's characteristic layout: user profile pictures, display names, handles, and the reply thread structure. This is a user-generated exchange between two individual users, shared as a meme to circulate the witty counterargument to the original statement about party diversity.

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