1. Awaken to "the truth" 2. Claim Victimhood Status 3. Argue your insight is infallible because of your "positionality" within the power hierarchy 4. Demand/coerce your way to illegitimate power 5. Destroy anyone in your way 6. Utopia
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1. Every woke movement begins with an "epiphany" that reveals how society really works. This truth is framed as hidden from the masses, accessible only to those who are enlightened or brave enough to see it.
Cult gurus lead their initiates to this "epiphany" over many interactions. Sometimes this process can take months, but because of the nature of the internet and social media, sometimes a new initiate can be turned in a few weeks, or even days.
The initiate is shocked to learn of this new community. "WOW - look at all of these people!"
The community uses trauma-bonding (a cycle of positive reinforcement and extreme criticism) to draw the initiate deep into the social and emotional realm where the magic happens.
The message is always clear: "I have information they have kept from you! You can trust me and you can't trust them. After all, they wanted to keep this hidden from you, but I won't because I care. Everyone else is a grifter, a con, or in on the scheming."
Initiates are introduced to the "forbidden" books, podcasts, and people that have been kept from them; introduced to the people who really understand how the world works and have an enlightened perception that pierces the veil.
Once initiated, the new member learns they are a victim. They learn society is structured by systemic, oppressive power that is keeping them down and out. There is an oppressor, and they are the oppressed.
They learn there is an unjust power hierarchy that they can now see. There is a group that is keeping them from realizing who they really are; a group keeping them trapped in an unfair, unjust, and oppressive game.
As a victim, they have an infallible insight into the really workings of the world. They can "see" the world as it really is because they live the lives of the oppressed.
They can see the things normies can't see. Their "positionality" grants them special access to "the truth."
The game now becomes one of recruiting more people into the cult and making demands.
Once armed with "truth" and victimhood, the group begins demanding concessions—power, influence, or "systemic" change. This is framed not as ambition, but as justice!
Resistance to their demands is framed as proof of systemic oppression.
Resistance is always framed as trying to maintain the status-quo, either as someone who is in on the con or as someone who just can't see "the truth" yet.
Anyone who opposes the movement, even mildly, is labeled a class traitor, oppressor, or collaborator. They must be silenced, canceled, or crushed to pave the way for real "progress."
Internal dissent is also eliminated. Woke movements often eat their own, purging insufficiently committed members to maintain ideological purity.
The endgame is always the promise of a utopia: a society remade in the image of the movement’s ideals. This vision justifies every extreme demand and every destructive act along the way.
This will look familiar for anyone who has paid any sort of attention to the Woke Left over the years.
But it's also instantly recognizable as the framework for the Woke Right.
They are two sides of the same coin because they both trace back to Idealism and all of its attendant gnostic and hermetic elements.
Both are antithetical to Individual Liberty because both are totalizing collectivist programs that think they are "the riddle of History solved."
Woke isn't dead. It's alive, well, and thriving on the Left, and it's a growing concern on the Right.
Neither iteration has anything to do with American Liberty, and we ignore this at our peril.
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This is 5th-Generation Political Warfare. I talk quite a bit about it because very few know what it is or how it works. We must understand it to deliver on the overwhelming mandate America just handed Trump.
Let's dive into an example of what it looks like on the "right." 🧵
A 5GW psyop usually begins with a seemingly grassroots online movement promoting things like "authentic conservatism."
It uses vague, non-threatening language that appeals to traditional values and everyday people frustrated with the way things are going.
But it's all a façade.
A fake account network is deployed. Bots and paid influencers amplify the message. Memes, tweets, and TikToks flood the timeline.
These posts highlight relatable frustrations (e.g., rising costs, cultural decay) and tie them to the movement.
Critical Race Theory has many central arguments. People have forgotten them, but they would be wise to refresh because 1.) CRT is still everywhere, especially education 2.) The framework is being adopted by fringe elements on the Right that will subvert MAGA.
A 🧵
1. Racism is normal, not aberrational
CRT argues racism is the norm because it's embedded in the very fabric of society. There is no such thing as a "not racist" person.
2. Interest Convergence
Racial progress often aligns with the interests of the powerful. Change happens when it benefits those in power, not solely because of moral or ethical concerns.
Some argue America was created for an ethnic group. This claim doesn’t align with the Founders’ principles or historical evidence. Let’s examine why. 🧵
America’s founding documents focus on universal principles, not ethnic identity. The Declaration of Independence states, "all men are created equal," with Rights endowed by their Creator—not by race or ethnicity.
The U.S. Constitution doesn’t privilege any ethnicity. It establishes a government to protect liberty and justice for all, emphasizing individual rights over group identity.
The fact that many have smuggled in collectivism through mystifying jurisprudence doesn't negate this.
Griggs v. Duke Power Co. (1971) is one of the most influential U.S. Supreme Court decisions in employment law. It introduced the concept of "disparate impact," and its implications reach far beyond the workplace. Here's why it was a mistake. 🧵
In Griggs, Duke Power required employees to pass IQ tests or have a high school diploma to qualify for certain jobs. The Court ruled these requirements were discriminatory because they disproportionately excluded black workers, even without discriminatory intent.
The Court held that practices neutral on their face could still violate the Civil Rights Act of 1964 if they resulted in disparate outcomes for protected groups, unless the employer could show the practice was "job-related and consistent with business necessity."
How did we end up with these massive, unreadable omnibus bills in Congress?
Let’s break it down. 🧵
Omnibus bills are huge legislative packages that combine unrelated provisions into one bill. They often span thousands of pages. Most members of Congress can't/don’t read them before voting.
Insane.
Congress wasn’t always this dysfunctional. For most of its history, it followed a system called "regular order." Each area of government was funded by a separate appropriations bill.
I’ve seen various content claiming that “Woke Right” is a stupid name because “Woke” just means “awakened to and forwarding critiques of social power."
Woke is much more than that. I can't tell if they still don't know that, or they're aware...
Let's define "Woke" again.
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“Critical Constructivism” is the technical term for Woke. “Critical” for the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt school and offshoots (there’s a million “critical theories” now, Critical Race Theory and Queer Theory being the ones people are most familiar with).
To quote Woke educator Joe Kincheloe, "Critical constructivism is grounded on the Frankfurt School's formulation of critical theory."