Woke as Machiavellian Power: Moral Facade for Globalist Control, By Paul Walker
The Aporia Magazine piece by The Westering Sun, published on July 18, 2025, offers a piercing lens on woke ideology, framing it not as a moral crusade but as a Machiavellian tool of power politics. Drawing on James Burnham's political realism and Vilfredo Pareto's theories of residues and derivations, it argues that woke ideology, evolving from multiculturalism and mass immigration, serves to justify the dominance of a managerial elite while suppressing the traditional populations of the West. Far from being about justice or equality, woke is a strategic derivation, masking the raw pursuit of control by a transnational bureaucratic class aligned with globalist interests. I support that view, exploring how woke ideology functions as a mechanism to reshape the world for globalist power, with moral concerns as a secondary veneer. For conservatives in Australia, this underscores the urgency of resisting a doctrine that threatens sovereignty and cultural cohesion in favour of a homogenised, elite-controlled global order.
James Burnham's The Machiavellians posits that political ideologies are rarely about their stated principles; they are tools to obscure who holds power and for whose benefit. Woke ideology, with its rhetoric of anti-racism, diversity, and inclusion, fits this model perfectly. As The Westering Sun argues, woke is a "derivation" in Pareto's terms, a moral narrative cloaking the deeper "residues" of power, control, and self-preservation by a managerial elite. This elite, spanning civil service, corporate boards, tech giants, academia, and media, uses woke to legitimise its authority while fragmenting societies to prevent resistance.
The moral claims of woke, such as dismantling systemic racism or championing marginalised identities, are secondary to its instrumental purpose: consolidating globalist power. Woke inverts traditional values to entrench a new ruling class, favouring control over justice. This aligns with Burnham's view that ideologies serve specific groups at others' expense. In this case, the beneficiaries are a transnational managerial class and their client groups, unassimilated immigrants, minorities, and liminal identities, who gain symbolic and material rewards, while the traditional Western majority is marginalised.
Woke's globalist agenda is evident in its push for borderless identities and supranational governance. The World Economic Forum's "Great Reset," often cited on X by users like @RealJamesWoods, promotes similar themes: diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) as universal standards, eroding national sovereignty. For Australia, this threatens the cultural and historical identity that conservatives cherish, replacing it with a homogenised global framework where loyalty shifts from nation to elite-controlled institutions.
The Westering Sun identifies the managerial regime as the architect of woke, operating in a patron-client relationship with liminal groups. This coalition, bureaucrats, tech moguls, and academics as patrons, with immigrants and minorities as clients, uses woke to entrench power. Multiculturalism, woke's predecessor, sanctified demographic change in the West, driven by post-1990s immigration surges. In Australia, the ABS reports that 29.8% of the population in 2024 was born overseas, with non-Western immigration rising sharply since 2000. This shift, never democratically mandated, was justified as moral progress, aligning with Pareto's idea of derivations masking elite interests.
The managerial elite benefits by dissolving organic social bonds, family, faith, nation, that could challenge their authority. Woke ideology, with its DEI mandates and censorship of dissent, creates a fragmented society dependent on elite mediation. In Australia, this manifests in policies like the Albanese government's push for multicultural frameworks, which we critique as valuing globalist ideals over national cohesion. DEI bureaucracies in universities and corporations are tools to control, not liberate, echoing the article's view that woke expands managerial power through institutional capture.
Client groups, meanwhile, gain symbolic status and material benefits, think affirmative action or government grants, while serving as wedges to weaken majority cohesion. The Westering Sun highlights how woke casts these groups as "sacred victims," discouraging assimilation to maintain their role as regime dependents. In Australia, this dynamic is visible in debates over Indigenous Voice policies or refugee resettlement, where nationalist critics argue that elite-driven diversity undermines social unity.
Woke's ultimate aim, from a Machiavellian perspective, is to reshape the world for globalist control. By delegitimising national identity and traditional values, it paves the way for supranational governance, where power resides with unelected elites in organisations like the UN or multinational corporations. The Aporia piece notes that the managerial class governs through "surveillance, regulation, and linguistic control," not democratic consent. In Australia, this is evident in the push for digital ID systems and misinformation laws, which The Spectator Australia warns could mirror China's social credit model, aligning with globalist control mechanisms.
For conservatives this is a direct assault on sovereignty. Australia's reliance on U.S. alliances like AUKUS, as discussed in other blog posts today, is already strained by figures like Epstein or U.S. decline forecasts. Woke ideology exacerbates this by promoting a borderless worldview that weakens Australia's ability to assert independence. X posts by @SkyNewsAust highlight fears that "globalist agendas like woke DEI are softening Australia for Chinese influence," tying into Llewellyn-Smith's critique of Albanese's "China grovelling." If woke is a tool for globalist elites, it risks turning Australia into a pawn in a world where national loyalty is replaced by allegiance to a managerial regime.
The 2016 inflection point, Brexit and Trump's election, marked a backlash against this globalist tide, as The Westering Sun notes. Woke emerged as a "reactionary" consolidation, not a moral awakening, to crush native resistance. In Australia, similar populist sentiments fuel support for parties like One Nation, which rail against woke policies as anti-Australian. The managerial elite's response, censoring dissent shows woke's authoritarian edge, designed to suppress rather than persuade.
Woke's moral rhetoric, anti-racism, equity, inclusion, is a facade, as Burnham's realism suggests. The Westering Sun argues that woke inverts values (tradition as oppression, normativity as violence) to demoralise the majority and entrench elite power. Moral concerns are deployed selectively: women's rights were championed until trans identities became a more potent wedge, as seen in Australia's Gender Recognition Bill debates, where The Age reported backlash from feminist groups sidelined by woke orthodoxy. X users like @WomenAreReal lament this as "erasing biological reality for elite control," supporting the view that woke prioritises power over principle.
This aligns with Pareto's derivations: moral language masks the residue of control. The managerial class profits from sprawling DEI bureaucracies, which The Australian Financial Review estimates cost Australian businesses $10 billion annually in compliance. These structures create jobs for loyalists while policing dissent, as seen in corporate cancellations of employees for "problematic" social media posts. For nationalists, this is a betrayal of Australia's egalitarian ethos, replacing fair go with elite-driven clientelism.
For Australia's conservative nationalists, woke's globalist agenda threatens national identity and security. The Aporia piece's framework explains why:
Cultural Erosion: Woke's attack on "white" or "Christian" identity, as seen in campaigns against Australia Day, undermines the historical majority's cohesion. The Daily Telegraph reports growing public frustration with such moves, fuelling nationalist backlash.
Sovereignty Loss: By aligning with globalist institutions, woke policies weaken Australia's ability to resist foreign influence, whether from China or a declining U.S. The Epstein scandal, with its $1.1 billion mystery, shows how globalist elites operate unchecked, potentially compromising allies like Australia.
Social Fragmentation: Woke's clientelism fosters division, as seen in urban-rural tensions or debates over Indigenous policies. Nationalists argue for assimilation and shared values to counter this, citing the U.S. as a cautionary tale of polarisation.
If woke is a tool for globalist power, Australia risks becoming a managed outpost, not a sovereign nation. The managerial class's control, as X user @AussiePatriot88 notes, "turns our universities and media into globalist propaganda machines," aligning with China's or the UN's interests over Australia's.
To resist woke's Machiavellian power grab,nationalists propose:
1.Revive Attachment-Based Language: Reclaim loyalty, kinship, and tradition, as The Westering Sun suggests, to counter woke's inversions. Celebrate Australia's heritage, Anzac, mateship, the bush, to rebuild cultural immunity.
2.Build Counter-Institutions: Create parallel schools through home schooling, media, and civic networks, as seen in grassroots efforts like the Australian Christian College or Quadrant. These can resist woke indoctrination and foster national pride.
3.Demand Transparency: Push for accountability in globalist networks, from Epstein's finances to DEI spending. Nationalists should echo Wyden's call for investigation, ensuring Australia's allies are trustworthy.
4.Strengthen Sovereignty: Prioritise defence and economic self-reliance, as discussed in blog posts today, to reduce dependence on a woke-infected West or authoritarian China.
Woke ideology, as Aporia Magazine argues, is a Machiavellian derivation, not a moral crusade. It serves a globalist managerial elite, using multiculturalism's legacy to fragment societies and entrench control. Moral concerns, equity, anti-racism, are secondary, masking the residue of power. In Australia, this threatens sovereignty, cultural cohesion, and security, especially in a multipolar world where U.S. decline and Chinese ambition loom. Conservative nationalists must reject woke's moral frame, rebuild attachment-based identity, and assert Australia's independence. Only by resisting globalist power can Australia preserve its freedom and heritage, avoiding the fate of a managed client state in a woke-driven New World order.
https://www.aporiamagazine.com/p/woke-as-managerial-ideology
"Written by The Westering Sun.
Despite many attempts to explain the "rise of woke", there remains little agreement about what it actually is. This may be because we have yet to find the right framework.
In The Machiavellians, James Burnham argued that politics is not a competition between abstract principles. Instead, most political discourse seeks to obscure the question of who rules, and on whose behalf. Even political language about peace, justice or equality routinely masks the struggle for power.
Burnham championed the Machiavellian tradition, which is based on political realism. Crucially, Machiavellian thinkers argue that ideologies do not guide the use of power so much as they justify status and control in moral language. For while politicians typically claim to serve society at large, in practice they tend to serve particular groups at the expense of others. From this perspective, the Reformation was not just a spiritual awakening: it was a rationalization of the bourgeoisie's ascendance over the universal church. Enlightenment liberalism, meanwhile, broadly served to justify the ascent of the commercial class against the aristocracy.
One of Burnham's key influences was Vilfredo Pareto, a polymath who conceived social behaviour as shaped by two forces: residues and derivations. Residues reflect the deep, unspoken impulses that drive behaviour—such as the instinct to preserve our physical security, property or territory. Derivations, meanwhile, are the surface rationalizations that mask instinctive drives beneath appeals to morality, fairness, or other general standards. Pareto observed that every ruling class advances their interests through a complex network of derivations that present their actions as serving the public good, while in practice fortifying their own position.
When we consider ideologies like multiculturalism, anti-racism and, most recently, woke, we ought to ask: cui bono? What interests are these ideologies rationalizing, and what social forces do they represent?
Demographic change and the rise of multiculturalismIn recent decades, Western societies have undergone unprecedented demographic transformation. Since the 1990s, virtually every Western nation has experienced a rapid and likely permanent increase in both the unassimilated immigrant and mixed-race populations. This was a largely unanticipated consequence of two factors: a sharp acceleration in non-white immigration combined with the reversal of taboos against racial intermarriage.
Though largely unforeseen—and never legitimized by democratic mandate—demographic transformation was swiftly rationalized and sanctified through the ideology of multiculturalism. This was presented as a natural extension of the liberal-rational belief that social life should be governed by neutral principles, procedural justice and abstract equality. In truth, multiculturalism represented the culmination of a worldview that had long pathologized in-group preference and delegitimized ancestral identity. By suppressing traditional language rooted in attachment, loyalty and exclusion, liberal rationalism had already disarmed the West's native populations in the face of a doctrine that presented demographic upheaval as a form of moral progress.
In the 1990s, multiculturalism became entrenched as the dominant ideological framework across the West. Samuel Huntington described how a "concentrated and sustained onslaught" by intellectuals and publicists led to multiculturalism being formally adopted by the Clinton administration, which made "the encouragement of diversity one of its major goals." Meanwhile in Britain, Tony Blair's Labour government oversaw a dramatic expansion of immigration, inaugurating an era of demographic transformation. Other Western nations soon followed.
Advocates of multiculturalism presented it as neutral, benevolent and inclusive. Yet from a Machiavellian or realist perspective, it was anything but neutral. In instrumental terms, it sanctified unassimilated minorities, immigrants, and mixed-race individuals by implicitly identifying them as the future of Western nations. The empowerment of these groups—socially, politically and institutionally—was justified at the expense of native majorities.
While formerly marginal groups benefited materially and otherwise from multiculturalism, they were not its architects. Nor did they possess the political or institutional leverage to establish it as a new paradigm for Western civilization. The task of authoring, enforcing and entrenching multiculturalism as state dogma fell to another group entirely: the managerial regime.
The managerial regime is the bureaucratic, credentialed and increasingly transnational class that governs Western societies. Its members typically occupy permanent, unelected positions in the civil service, corporate management, finance, technology, academia, the media, and key parts of the military, mainstream church and trade union bureaucracy. Despite their power and responsibility, they feel little loyalty to Western nations, cultures or peoples. Rather than cultivating traditional symbolic legitimacy, they govern through surveillance, regulation and linguistic control. Their authority comes less from the explicit consent of the governed than from the strategic manipulation of media narratives, control of information systems, and bureaucratic and legal mechanisms designed to suppress dissent.
A new ruling coalitionMulticulturalism served the concrete interests of two distinct but aligned forces, operating within a patron-client relationship:
The growing demographic bloc of unassimilated immigrants, minorities, and liminal individuals of mixed descent, seeking recognition, protection, and access to institutions within societies they did not build (the client).
The managerial elite, whose power depends on dissolving organic social attachments and managing fragmented populations incapable of coordinated resistance (the patron).
Multiculturalism therefore served a dual purpose: it functioned as a vehicle of upward mobility and symbolic recognition for client groups, and as a mechanism of control for the managerial regime. It provided ideological justification for demographic transformation, elevating liminal identities while delegitimizing the ancestral identities of the West's majority populations. It weakened the cohesion and group solidarity of these native majorities, and reinforced the anathematisation of strong, affective expressions of majority identity—whether framed in ethnic, national or religious terms. As a result, Western countries could no longer be coded in public discourse as either white or Christian.
In place of organic sources of belonging such as family, faith and nation, multiculturalism fostered clientelism. Where Western countries once encouraged assimilation, this was now discouraged. Instead, minorities and liminal groups were increasingly framed as sacred victims who depended on the regime for recognition, advancement and protection. In effect, the regime generated social fragmentation while selling elite mediation as the indispensable solution, thereby securing the role of the managerial class as arbiter of the new demographic order.
Immigrants, minorities, and people of mixed descent assumed central symbolic roles within the new regime. Their very existence was cast as a living refutation of traditional or nationalist narratives. Under the mantra of "diversity", moral progress and the end of racism meant the erasure of majority identity.
In Machiavellian terms, multiculturalism served the interests of a new ruling coalition—liminal clients and their elite patrons—just as earlier ideologies had served specific groups in other eras. By empowering liminal identities as regime clients, multiculturalism offered moral justification and institutional pathways for minorities and their descendants, while simultaneously weakening the cohesion of native majorities. In doing so, it allowed the managerial class to consolidate its authority by presenting itself as the indispensable mediator of the very demographic and cultural tensions it promoted.
The displacement of the core populationThis new consensus effectively unified the interests of three distinct groups:
The managerial, bureaucratic-technocratic elite.
Client groups (immigrants, minorities, and liminal identities) who derived status and material benefits from elite patronage.
Ideological enablers, typically downwardly-mobile whites embedded in academia, media, and NGOs.
If these groups are abstracted from the social equation, what remains of Western societies largely amounts to the shrinking mass of the traditional population. This "core" or "host" population then emerges as the universal object of exploitation across the West. Predominantly native, often middle or working class, and still retaining residual loyalties to older forms of nationhood, faith and organic order, this group's economic productivity funds the regime and supports its clients. Its demographic inertia is invoked to justify mass migration, while its defensive political instincts are pathologized as reactionary or extremist. It bears the brunt of taxation, undergoes cultural and demographic displacement, and faces escalating surveillance and censorship.
This dynamic constitutes the sociological foundation of anarcho-tyranny—a condition in which the state adopts a tyrannical posture toward the core population while extending paternalistic indulgence towards its client groups. The disruptive presence and privileged status of these groups serves to demoralize the majority and erode its cohesion. This explains the seeming paradox whereby law-abiding citizens are closely monitored and ruthlessly punished for minor infractions, while regime clients (from homeless drug abusers to progressive rioters) are treated with kid gloves. The key distinction is not legal, but symbolic: between those who consent to management and those who embody a rival source of sovereignty.
This also explains why traditional left-right distinctions feel increasingly meaningless to many people. Conventional politics no longer reflect the fundamental axis of conflict when the system is structured around exploiting the core population for the benefit of a hostile managerial regime and its dependent clients.
The dynamic of exploitation generates tension between those who suffer and those who benefit. This is frequently perceived in racial terms, and often maps along racial lines. But the deeper cleavage is civilizational: between those loyal to the old metaphysical and cultural order of the West, and those employed in its deconstruction.
Historically—and to some extent even today—some individuals from minority, immigrant or mixed backgrounds have assimilated into the native majority through intermarriage, cultural adoption or shared ancestry. But such organic assimilation threatens managerial interests, because it reinforces cohesion within the traditional population, and undermines the regime's strategy of using liminal groups as wedges to fragment solidarity.
For the managerial regime, multiculturalism offered a way to sabotage assimilation. This helps explain the vehemence with which its acolytes denounce members of liminal groups who identify with the native majority, branding them as traitors, "Uncle Toms", "white supremacists" and so on. Such language serves a counter-entropic function for ethnic partisans, who seek to prevent defection and protect group boundaries. But it also reveals the bigotry of managerial despotism, aimed at those who want to belong rather than serve.
The reactionary turn of the regimeMulticulturalism remained the dominant ideology of Western societies until the mid-2010s. Around 2016, however, something changed, and a more militant successor emerged: the phenomenon now known as "woke".
The origins of woke are commonly traced to critical theories developed within academia. It is sometimes portrayed as a moral awakening—or, depending on perspective, as either an extension or betrayal of liberal values. Instead, it should be understood as a defensive ideological consolidation. The ruling coalition (liminal identity groups and their managerial patrons) embraced woke as a strategic response to growing native resistance. Woke marked a definitive ideological hardening, which transformed multiculturalism into a rigid and explicitly authoritarian moral framework, designed not merely to advance but to defend a fragile new class structure.
In retrospect, 2016 was an inflection point in Western history. Years of growing frustration over mass immigration, cultural dispossession, and the erosion of national identity culminated in two seismic events: the Brexit vote in the UK, and the election of Donald Trump in the US. These embodied the first major mass resistance from native Western populations against globalism, demographic transformation, and cultural subordination.
These events triggered existential anxiety for the managerial regime and its clients. It became clear that the core population still possessed substantial numbers and latent political power; that democratic processes might enable their resurgence; and that the ideological high ground needed immediate fortification. Managerial elites therefore pivoted to woke ideology as a reactionary move, launching a moral crusade designed to embed their ideological regime as a permanent revolution. Their aim was pre-emptive suppression of native resurgence—crushing dissent from the only quarter capable of challenging their ascendancy.
Where multiculturalism was ostensibly concerned with integration, tolerance and minority legitimation, woke was about consolidation and control. It functioned as the ideological shock troop of the managerial regime, constituting a form of psychological warfare directed specifically against the core population. Its purpose was to prevent the reemergence of coherent national identity rooted in traditional Western symbolism and organic order.
Woke ideology was broadly embraced by elites drawn from regime client groups. Having gained institutional power and moral primacy in public life—and sensing that this new status might be vulnerable—they switched from demanding recognition to asserting dominance, often through aggressive institutional and rhetorical tactics. For them, woke was never about idealism or justice. It was a class reflex prompted by confidence in recent gains and the fear of reversal.
Woke should be understood by its instrumental function as a tool of power. It operates through ideological inversion: minorities become majorities (first symbolically, then institutionally), victimhood becomes moral authority, tradition becomes oppression, and normativity becomes violence. These inversions are designed to delegitimize the core population's attachment to its own traditions and identity. Opposition is never engaged through debate, but branded as hatred, coded as fascism or "white supremacy", and banished from public discourse. The goal is not persuasion, but the systematic dehumanization and suppression of resistance.
The managerial class profits doubly: first through symbolic control, and second through institutional expansion. DEI regimes, HR departments and ESG compliance structures create sprawling bureaucracies that entrench ideological orthodoxy and reward loyalists. These apparatuses supply moral training and ideological indoctrination across media, technology, law and academia, reinforcing the regime's grip on public life while creating endless opportunities for patronage.
This makes "woke" the ideological superstructure of a new pan-Western ruling coalition. It justifies elite authority by morally discrediting the majority population while foreclosing the return of coherent national narratives or traditional identity. It is regime logic born from the convergence of demographic transformation, technological control and symbolic inversion.
The capture of millennial radicalismBeneath the managerial class and its growing client bloc of liminal groups, lies a third, critical component: the young, downwardly-mobile population of educated whites. This group—which might otherwise have been receptive to populism or class revolt—was instead co-opted as a quasi-religious auxiliary to the regime, tasked with moral enforcement and ideological policing.
The 2008 financial crisis was a key catalyst. This blighted the prospects of an entire generation—the Millennials—and triggered widespread frustration about living standards and anxiety about the future. These sentiments found early expression in the Occupy Wall Street movement and later in surging support for anti-capitalist figures such as Bernie Sanders in the US and Jeremy Corbyn in the UK.
Crucially, these movements were not initially about identity politics. They were authentic expressions of economic despair and anti-oligarchic revolt, and for a moment, they threatened to reorient Western politics around material inequality rather than identity. In Britain, entire friendship groups of previously apolitical, white Millennial graduates were mobilized to join the Labour Party specifically to support Jeremy Corbyn's candidacy.
This briefly hinted at the potential for a class-based realignment of Western politics. Whatever its wider consequences may have been, this undoubtedly posed a threat to the incumbent managerial regime. This was intolerable to media and political elites, who moved swiftly to neutralize the danger by weaponizing identity politics. Media campaigns rapidly amplified sectional grievances around race and gender, aiming to fracture emerging class solidarity before it could take form.
This strategy proved highly effective. Many young, disaffected whites found status not through rebellion against the elite, but through allegiance to it—on the condition they renounce ancestral identity and perform symbolic "allyship". Radical economic demands were absorbed, diluted and transformed through rituals of equity such as diversity audits, privilege workshops and moral posturing.
In effect, woke transmuted an entire generation of potential rebels into ideological enforcers for managerial interests. Instead of challenging oligarchy, they became its moral auxiliaries, policing cultural norms, enforcing compliance, and participating in public performances of self-redemption.
This neutralized the radical potential of credentialed but increasingly desperate white Millennials—precisely those who might otherwise have spearheaded populist resistance. Woke offered them belonging within an elite-coded moral universe and easy access to social status through virtue signalling, activism and ritual denunciation of working-class whites (now stigmatized as racist, backward, and dangerous). Psychologically rewarding, socially prestigious, and intellectually undemanding, woke was the perfect counterfeit for genuine rebellion.
Attachment-based language and civilizational defenceThe success of multiculturalism—and its later, more militant incarnation as woke—reveals something deeper about the conditions that allow ideological capture. These ideologies did not triumph solely because of elite maneuvering or demographic change. They succeeded because Western societies had already lost their fundamental linguistic and emotional defenses.
To understand why woke took root so aggressively, we must examine the collapse of attachment-based language: a mode of speech and thought centered around loyalty, kinship, memory and obligation. This form of language functions as a sociological immune system, providing instinctive resistance to symbolic inversion and social fragmentation. When it is suppressed or dismantled, societies become acutely vulnerable to ideological capture.
Over many years, Western liberal rationalism systematically repressed and displaced this protective linguistic structure. Far from being neutral, liberalism functioned as a slow-acting solvent, gradually dissolving the bonds of memory, kinship and obligation that made Western liberty meaningful and sustainable. In time, liberalism became a weapon of managerial power, and its suppression of attachment-based language became nothing short of a civilizational extinction mechanism. While purporting to uphold abstract logic and universal moral imperatives, liberal rationalism ended up delivering new affective commitments in the form of replacement ideologies like multiculturalism and woke.
If traditional attachment-based language had retained a robust presence in the West, the core claims of woke ideology (white privilege, the patriarchy, fifty genders etc.) would have been instinctively rejected. Not through rational argument, but through ridicule, disgust or quiet contempt. In fact, this is precisely what blunted a previous wave of political correctness in the early 1990s. This was not halted by intellectual debate, but stalled because traditional language and moral intuitions still carried immunological weight.
Some commentators interpret the earlier refusal to engage with politically-correct nonsense as a sign of weakness or complacency. In truth, the capacity to deflect ideological attacks without engaging them was a sign of strength.
Some might object that managerial elites do promote affective attachment—at least among certain client groups, particularly ethnic minorities. And at the individual level, some woke activists are sincerely invested in these identities. But at the regime level, attachment is cynically deployed, not authentically embraced. Identities are treated as strategic instruments: battering rams that fracture the cohesion of the West's historical majorities, who remain the only long-term obstacle to managerial control.
The regime does not identify with its mascots. It does not share their fate. Its obligations towards these groups are temporary, instrumental and conditional. The attachment it displays is purely performative, lasting only so long as it serves managerial interests. Client groups can be discarded or redefined at will, whenever strategic priorities shift.
Consider women. For decades, promoting female autonomy served as a means to weaken traditional male authority, family structures and cultural norms. Yet when trans identities emerged as a more potent ideological wedge, women's interests were abruptly sidelined. Their identity—previously useful—became inconvenient, so their attachment to it was destabilized. The managerial regime simply redefined what it meant to be a woman, dissolving the concept as a coherent social and symbolic form. In doing so, it delegitimized women's attachment to their previous organic identity—just as it had done with the West's traditional ethnic and national identities.
Simulacra and strategic emotionThe native majorities of the West differ fundamentally from the regime's client groups because they pose a latent threat to managerial control. This is not due to what they might demand, but what they might remember. Their identity is rooted in historical continuity, shared memory and implicit solidarity—qualities inherently resistant to bureaucratic mediation. For this reason, managerial elites try to suppress their traditional attachments and replace them with ersatz identities that offer no challenge to their authority.
The regime's true loyalty is never to a consistent moral vision, but always to the maintenance and expansion of managerial authority. This accounts for the manic, performative and ritualistic quality of elite discourse, often reminiscent of propaganda cycles in late-stage Communist regimes. The constant linguistic shifts, rapid promotion and abandonment of various causes, and selective deployment of outrage are not meant to establish consistent moral order, but to destabilize it. These campaigns do not reflect sincere conviction. Rather, affect itself has become a tool of control—weaponized against internal enemies and artificially manufactured to manipulate mass sentiment, all in service of regime consolidation.
This also explains why the regime's emotional investments feel uncanny. They are not organic. They are not real. They are simulacra: performances choreographed for instrumental ends.
Yet the brittle, punitive tone of managerial propaganda betrays an underlying anxiety. The opposition has not been totally extinguished—because the destruction of the traditional form of Western civilization is not yet irreversible.
The regime operating systemWoke is the militant form of multiculturalism, post-2016. Viewed through a Machiavellian lens, its purpose is straightforward. It is the regime's emergency ideology, used to legitimize a newly ascendant elite, suppress native resurgence, and consolidate managerial control over a fragmented and disoriented society.
This framework explains not only why woke emerged—and when—but why it took such an authoritarian and brittle form.
It also clarifies the task ahead. Woke is not a phase. It is the operating system of a new hegemonic coalition—one that intends to rule in perpetuity. It cannot be defeated through argument, because it is not grounded in intellectual conviction. It is a mechanism of power: a strategy of class insulation, demographic consolidation and institutional control.
The first step in resisting woke is rejecting its moral frame. This means speaking with a different voice and invoking a symbolic language rooted in tradition, continuity, and ancestral loyalty. But in the end, only power can check power. We will need counter-elites and parallel institutions—schools, platforms, churches, media, and civic networks—guided by a language older, deeper and more resistant to ideological inversion."
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