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Concealed Republican > Blog > News > Woke epidemic: How far-left ideology became a cancer that poisoned America
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Woke epidemic: How far-left ideology became a cancer that poisoned America

Jim Taft
Last updated: February 2, 2025 5:03 am
By Jim Taft 14 Min Read
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Woke epidemic: How far-left ideology became a cancer that poisoned America
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Over the past few years, many of us have been totally mystified by positions that are growing in popularity that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.

The list is long, but three quick examples include: giving puberty blockers to children, the movement to defund the police, and the claim that not voicing your agreement with certain brand-new ideologies is the same as committing physical violence. I don’t want to talk about the arguments for or against these positions, because so many of these conversations serve to hide the real root of the problem.

‘We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.’

And that root is really simple to understand.

First, it’s important to note that the root of the problem is not individual radicals. In every age, there are tiny minorities that have radical opinions, and that will never change. That is not why these ideologies are growing in their popularity with a larger segment of society. There are many smaller causes that all contribute to this change, but I want to put forth the single cause that I feel is most responsible for why these movements grow, and this thesis will also help predict what other ideologies will grow and spread in the future.

Here’s my take in three words: premature institutional success.

Premature institutional success happens when a movement funded and led by a group of institutions is growing in momentum but achieves its original goals too quickly. What do the leaders of these institutions do? They have two choices.

  1. They can declare success and encourage the donors and supporters to move on to other worthy causes.
  2. They can find smaller agent causes to direct their ever-growing power toward in order to keep the movement going.

Which one do you think they choose?

Which would you choose if you dedicated your life to a movement?

A perfect example of this happened during the movement to legalize same-sex marriage. This issue resonated deeply not only with those personally impacted by it but with a much wider group of supporters. The result was that huge, well-funded organizations with talented activists emerged and prepared for a pitched multi-decade, state-by-state series of legal and legislative battles. And then it happened almost overnight. Right as the movement was hitting its peak financial and popular support, state after state legalized same-sex marriage. The Supreme Court issued a ruling, the Republican Party removed its opposition from its platform, and victory was achieved.

So what do these institutions and activists do at the peak of their power? In order to survive, they must find new issues to funnel their finances and energy toward, and they found that issue in this little-known area called “trans rights.”

This pattern is playing out over and over again. Because of social media, it’s becoming far less expensive and much easier for activist institutions and individuals to get their message out and sway public opinion, so they keep achieving this problem of premature success, which forces them to focus on smaller and smaller issues.

The need for LGBT+ institutions to find systemic examples of homophobic and transphobic incidents is far outstripping the supply. The need for anti-racist organizations to find examples of systemic racism is outstripping the supply. These organizations need to find more victims, and most importantly, they need to identify more and bigger oppressors.

If they can’t find them, then they’ll have to make them.

Activists activate. They don’t deactivate. And deactivation is often what is needed in the face of premature success.

The first time I remember this happening was when the manager at a Starbucks with outspoken leftist views decided to call the cops on two black men who wouldn’t buy a drink in order to stay at their table. The image of the police handcuffing two black men and escorting them out of a Starbucks was all that was needed for every anti-racist organization to declare this manager a racist.

I found this so confusing at the time because it seemed common sense to investigate whether this woman had a history of racism or whether it was just circumstantial that these men were black and whether she would have done the same if they were white.

But the supply of racism was at an all-time low at the time, and powerful organizations were on high alert to find examples of racism. They had been prematurely successful, and their very survival depended on increasing the supply.

Since then, I could list hundreds of more recent examples of this, which is why I’m searching for the root, and I believe this is perhaps the most important element to understand.

This same pattern plays out in every institution.

In the government, the Department of Education cannot get behind educational endeavors that make the department less significant. That’s why effective decentralized educational strategies will be ignored and sometimes even opposed. That’s how something called the Department of Education can actually oppose education. Institutional survival comes before the mission.

This is easy for me to relate to because I’ve seen this play out in Christian institutions that I’m familiar with. A founder of one of these organizations once told me the organization had achieved its original mission, but right as it crossed the finish line, the organization had more donors than ever lining up to support it, so leaders had to find another mission to keep going.

This is a perfectly understandable pattern, but its impact on a culture when you have activist organizations with millions of dollars and nothing meaningful to do is tearing us apart.

Let me end with one glimmer of hope.

There’s a Christian organization called Wycliffe Bible Translators that started in the 1940s, and I once heard that it was written into the organization’s original charter that once it had translated the Bible into every language in the world, leaders would would shut down the organization. I love this idea. I can’t find any evidence of this self-destruct clause online, but ever since hearing it, I wondered if there might be a way for a mission to have an organization rather than the other way around.

Churchill once said, “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us,” and I think the same can be said of activist institutions.

This essay was adapted from an article originally published at Jeremy Pryor’s Substack.



Read the full article here

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