The realization that wokeness has transformed itself into a form of pseudo-religion has become increasingly obvious to conservatives. The ceremonies and festivals that occur during the month of June make it hard to ignore as Pride celebrations are increasingly treated as a hedonistic sacrament. The fact that the United States government has heavily invested in these rituals creates an even more bewildering situation which trips the pattern recognition of those who are familiar with our mechanisms of constitutional restraint. As the Department of Defense, FBI, ATF, and Department of Education splash a rainbow across their logos and make passionate declarations of faith, many conservatives start to wonder what happened to the separation of church and state. Christians are regularly told that they must check their moral convictions at the door because they live in a secular society, but the government seems to enthusiastically declare not just its preference but its absolute dedication to the new progressive faith. The truth is that the separation of church and state did not remove the reality of conflicting moral visions. Instead, it created selection pressures that favored an ideology that could circumvent those formal restrictions.
While the modern understanding of the separation of church and state would have been unrecognizable to many of the American founders, it has been interpreted in a manner that essentially banned formal religions from being adopted by government organizations, taught in schools, and eventually from even participating in the public square. The anti-religious jihad, spearheaded by organizations like the ACLU, has been far from even-handed. Christianity, as the traditional religion of most Americans, faced the brunt of the effort to purge faith from civic life but, in the end, any official religion was effectively barred from public institutions. But humans are deeply religious creatures who will seek out a narrative framework to make sense of the world around them. Progressivism, or wokeness if you prefer, has no holy book or formal church, and because it is treated as a political ideology instead of an official religion, it was able to fill the narrative void that existed in public institutions without triggering the defense mechanism of separation of church and state.
Liberalism, and here I do not mean progressive leftist ideology but what most would call classical liberalism, offered a false promise. It led many in the West to believe that social organizations, especially government institutions, could be kept morally neutral by operating on a basic minimum morality that everyone could agree to. But as I have explained in a previous piece, cultural neutrality is impossible, and all institutions must operate inside of someone’s moral framework. With all its competition effectively banned by the separation of church and state, progressivism filled the natural void that was left once true religion had been stripped from public life. To borrow an illustration from the political theorist Curtis Yarvin, progressivism became a super-predator ideology, perfectly adapted to outcompete its religious rivals in a theoretically “secular” society. The ideology that would eventually become known as wokeness was given a legal monopoly to operate unopposed in institutions like universities and corporations that granted status, prestige, and wealth. Progressivism also became the only acceptable form of moral instruction in public schools and government agencies.
For all our modern pretense about progress and reason, the inescapable fact is that humans are deeply religious and always will be. People will always need answers to questions of meaning, identity, and purpose and will interact with those narratives in a spiritual fashion even if the new faith leaves behind the official trappings of the holy book and the church building. This is why the current attempt to return to a neutral civilization by classical liberals, and even many conservatives, is doomed. That experiment has already failed. The God-shaped hole in man must be filled, and the only question is by what. Every nation, organization, and community will be ordered toward some vison of good, and that vision of good will have a religious narrative at its core. Lying about or ignoring this truth does not solve the problem of conflicting moral visions — it only allows someone else to smuggle their moral vision in the back door.
There was, I will begrudgingly admit, a good piece written in the New Yorker about how a classically liberal and anti-woke organization seeking to replace the ACLU completely blew up and essentially became a bastion of woke ideology itself. It’s become quite obvious that all attempts by classical liberals to effectively combat wokeness have utterly failed (i.e. IDW, Heterodox Academy, University of Austin, etc.) simply because they don’t understand that there is no neutral ground or institution. When LGBT groups demand that corporations cannot be neutral, they frankly are correct.
Nice analysis,thank you