Articles
A
Beginner’s Guide to the Woke Right
July 3,
2025 Grokkus
Babeuf and James Lindsay
https://newdiscourses.com/2025/07/a-beginners-guide-to-the-woke-right/
Table of
Contents
Introduction:
What’s Going On, and Why It Matters
Chapter
1: What Is Woke?
Chapter
2: What Is the Woke Right?
Chapter
3: Why Is the Woke Right “Woke”?
Chapter
4: How Did We Get Here?
Chapter
5: Why the Woke Right Is a Problem
Chapter
6: Recognizing the Woke Right in Action
Chapter
7: What Can We Do About It?
Conclusion:
A Stronger Conservatism
Introduction:
What’s Going On, and Why It Matters
If you’re
reading this, you probably care deeply about conserving what makes our
societies great—freedom, tradition, family, faith, and the rule of law. You’ve
likely watched with frustration as the progressive Left pushes ideas and uses
tactics that erode those foundations: cancel culture, identity politics, and
moral grandstanding that shuts down debate. You’ve likely cheered when
conservatives fight back, whether it’s calling out “Woke” nonsense or rallying
for common sense.
But have
you noticed something unsettling creeping into our own ranks? A new kind of
right-wing activism that fights fire with fire—but risks burning down what
we’re trying to protect? That’s what this pamphlet is about: the rise of the
Woke Right.
The term
“Woke Right” might sound like an oxymoron, like trying to get oil and water to
mix. “Woke” is a left-wing thing, right? It conjures images of blue-haired
activists lecturing us about pronouns or tearing down statues. So how could it
possibly describe the right-wing—people who seem like us, who value liberty,
reason, and heritage? Well, in some sense, it doesn’t, but “in some sense” is
doing a fair amount of work here.
Here’s
the uncomfortable truth: some right-wingers (and sometimes conservatives) are
starting to mirror the Left’s tactics and view of the world, even while
defending our principles—or something close to them. They’re using moral
shaming, purity tests, and social media pile-ons to enforce loyalty, often
targeting “fellow conservatives” who don’t toe the line. They initiate purity
spirals about being “right-wing” enough and punish conservatives who don’t go
along enthusiastically.
Most of
these bad actors are not selling out to the Left, though. Instead, they’re
adopting their playbook to fight for what looks like (but isn’t really) our
side. That’s the thing. What they’re fighting for looks like fighting for our
side but isn’t fighting for our side at all, and it’s dividing us when we need
unity most.
Let us
give you an example. Recently, a conservative watchmaker—Wasson Watch Co.,
which is solidly conservative in every way imaginable—got torn apart online by
the online populist “New Right.” Their crime? After months of enduring rampant
antisemitism in their replies on many posts on X (formerly Twitter), they spoke
up and said “no more.” They said there’s a real problem with this behavior and
messaging, and it doesn’t represent conservatism or MAGA. Their X exploded.
While they got much support from conservatives, the online “New
Right”—including many people who were not in any way named in the Wasson
post—piled on, cried foul, and did a struggle session against the Wasson Watch
Co., just for failing a loyalty test to extremists and radicals who genuinely
don’t represent conservative views. Sound familiar? It’s a kind of struggle
session. It’s also the kind of outrage we used to mock the Left for. Yet here
“we” are, doing it to our own.
The story
here isn’t about Wasson Watch Co. or even online antisemitism. It’s the
behavior of the “New Right” against this sin of insufficient loyalty and
deviation from “New Right” interests. This is the Right picking up the Woke
tools of the Left. This is the Woke Right.
Drawing
Lines
This
pamphlet isn’t about pointing fingers or saying conservatives are “bad.” Far
from it. Conservatives are rightly sick of seeing our values sidelined by
cultural chaos. There’s reason for concerns, though. It’s a sad fact that in
our zeal to fight back and protect our countries and ways of life, some of us
are losing sight of what makes conservatism strong: reason over emotion,
principle over tribalism, holding ourselves to higher standards of conduct, a
continuity of our civic traditions including of decency, and a commitment to
truth even when it’s uncomfortable.
This new
“Woke Right” isn’t the majority of the Right, or even strictly conservative,
but it’s loud, it’s growing, and it’s pulling us into a trap where we become
what we oppose and set the Left up for ultimate victory. It’s fringe, but it’s
not so fringe anymore that it can be ignored. Online and increasingly offline
in strongly conservative spaces, it’s also rapidly growing, especially with
young men. It’s a problem we conservatives can’t keep ignoring.
The thing
is, the Woke Right isn’t really conservative at all. Many of its proponents
openly reject conservatism as weak and as a loser. “It’s just progressivism
doing the speed limit,” they think. It’s just a slower form of “liberalism,” by
which they still mean Leftism. The Woke Right mostly rejects conservatism for
something else.
Many of
these radicals describe themselves instead as right-wing and are careful to
distinguish “right-wing” from “conservative.” Some describe themselves openly
as “radical right-wing revolutionaries.” Others explicitly say they’re
right-wing, not conservative, because they have adopted the Critical Theory
methods of the Left. Some call themselves “postmodern traditionalists.” A rare
few have openly called themselves “right-wing progressives,” believe it or not.
Like it
or not, this means these radical right-wingers do not share conservative
values. They have different values, even if they’re twisted forms of
conservative values. They might also speak to conservative values, but theirs
are radical and revolutionary, not truly based in tradition and truth. These
are radical activists who are more accurately understood as revolutionary
progressives in conservatives’ clothing.
Okay, So
What?
Why does
this matter? Because division is our enemy, and becoming ugly is how we lose.
More than that, right is right, and wrong is wrong. Woke is wrong, even when
it’s on the Right.
Speaking
practically, the Left thrives when we’re fighting each other instead of them,
and it will play off every ugly excess, eventually very successfully. Every
time we “cancel” a conservative for not being “pure” or “radical” enough, we
shrink our coalition and drive ourselves further into an extremism the Left
will use against us. Every time we demand loyalty over debate, we stifle the
ideas that could win elections and shape culture. And every time we mimic the
Left’s outrage culture, we risk alienating the moderates and independents we
need to build a lasting majority and turn ourselves away from what makes
conservatism—and America—noble and great. All of this will undermine MAGA and
damage Trump, and perhaps it’s intended to.
If we’re
not careful, the Woke Right will do more damage to conservatism and its causes
than the Left ever could—all while implementing key parts of its anti-liberty
agenda while getting MAGA to cheer it on. Worse, our reward will be putting the
Left back in power with a renewed moral mandate and huge electoral base who
feels stupid and betrayed for trusting conservatives, many against what they
thought was their better judgment.
Getting
Started
This
pamphlet is your basic guide to understanding the Woke Right—what it is, where
it came from, why it’s a problem, and how we can resist it without abandoning
our fight. We’ll walk you through the ideas. We’ll show you why it’s tempting
to join the outrage but why staying true to our principles is the stronger
path. And we’ll offer practical steps to keep conservatism united, effective,
and true to its roots.
You might
be skeptical. You might think, “We need to fight to win!” or “This label is
just another way to bash conservatives or keep us contained.” We hear you.
Beating the Left is vital, and we’re not here to lecture you about being
“nice.” But winning doesn’t mean mimicking the Left’s worst habits so that even
if we “win” we lose who we are. Winning means standing firm on our
values—liberty, reason, tradition—and building a movement that wins hearts,
minds, and, yes, power to serve because it’s better, not louder, meaner, or
more brutal.
By the
end of this pamphlet, we hope you’ll see the Woke Right for what it is: a
dangerously misguided detour that we can correct together.
So let’s
dive in. The future of conservatism and the country depends on us getting this
right.
Chapter
1: What Is Woke?
Say the
word “Woke,” and conservatives roll their eyes—or see red. It’s the battle cry
of blue-haired activists—what has been called “LGBTQ Race Communism”—the
hashtag of choice for every sanctimonious Leftist lecture on social media, and
the excuse for tearing down everything from statues to free speech.
But what
is Woke, really? It’s a term we love to mock, yet it’s slippery as an
eel—overused, misunderstood, vague, and weaponized to shut down anyone who
dares think for themselves. If we’re going to talk about the Woke Right, we
need to pin this beast down first. Spoiler: Woke isn’t just a leftist
quirk—it’s a cultural trap, and conservatives aren’t as immune as we think.
Another spoiler: Woke is deeper than you think, and it can infect anything,
including the Right.
The Woke
Left
Woke
Leftism is the Woke you’re familiar with, and it isn’t about empathy, caring
for the downtrodden, or fixing real injustices. That’s what its cheerleaders
and propagandists want you to believe, but we don’t fall for the bait anymore.
Woke is something else, and we know it.
At its
core, Woke is a comprehensive way of viewing the world that fuses moral
absolutism with a hunger for control. That is, it’s a way of seeing the world
(a worldview) and behaving in it (a program for activism to gain power for
itself in the name of victimized or alienated groups).
Under
“Woke,” it’s not enough to have an opinion—you must conform to a narrow script
of “justice” or be cast out as a heretic. Picture a secular inquisition, where
the priests wear pronouns instead of robes, and dissenters face social
excommunication and being fired instead of flames.
Woke
demands you see the world through “intersectional” group identities—race,
gender, whatever—rather than seeing individuals. It weaponizes guilt to silence
opposition, insisting that disagreement equals harm. It transgresses societal
norms in the name of fighting its enemies. And it swaps reason for emotional
narratives, where feelings trump facts every time.
Take a
real-world example. In America, universities now enforce speech codes that
punish “offensive” words, all in the name of protecting “marginalized”
students. A professor questions the policy? He’s not just wrong—he’s a bigot,
complicit in “violence.” He might get fired. The goal isn’t debate; it’s
submission.
The Woke
crowd on the Left frames this bullying as compassion for oppressed groups, but
it’s power dressed up as pity. If you don’t clap along, you’re the problem.
Sound familiar? It’s the kind of moral browbeating conservatives have spent
years fighting, whether it’s in boardrooms mandating DEI loyalty oaths and
behavioral codes or against social media mobs screaming “silence is violence”
and getting people banned for basic true statements.
Woke is
obviously intolerable, and conservatives understand we can no longer tolerate
it.
How We
Fight Woke Matters
Why does
this grate us so much? Because Woke spits in the face of everything
conservatives and all normal people hold dear. We value free speech, but Woke
demands censorship for the “greater good.” We champion merit and individual
responsibility, but Woke obsesses over group quotas and collective guilt. We
cherish tradition—family, faith, history, country—but Woke wants to rewrite and
trash it all, from toppling Churchill’s statue in London to canceling the
Founding Fathers as “slaveholders.” In both Britain and the U.S., as well as
across the English-speaking world, protesters have defaced monuments, claiming
they’re “decolonizing” history. Also, in country after country, famed for their
reasonable tolerance of difference, corporations fire employees for “wrong”
opinions, cloaking explicit exclusion and ideological purges as “inclusion.”
Woke isn’t progress—it’s a tantrum dressed up as a sermon, and it’s why
conservatives instinctively push back.
But
here’s the kicker: fighting Woke doesn’t make us bulletproof. There are better
and worse ways to go about it, like with anything. The same tactics we
despise—shaming, tribalism, moral grandstanding, smearing, cancellation, mob
abuse, struggle sessions—can creep into our own ranks when we’re not looking.
Not to sound conspiratorial, but they can also be planted into our ranks to
take us astray.
Basically,
we see the Left wielding guilt like a club, and it’s tempting to grab one
ourselves. We watch their mobs enforce loyalty, and part of us thinks, “Maybe
that’s how you win.” If everyone gets to act like a mob except us—if they’re
working as a team and we’re just individuals—how can we win? If they get to
play dirty and we don’t, how can we beat them? That’s where the Woke Right
comes in, starting from fear, despair, and righteous anger, they reach for the
club and are ready to swing. This is why we need to understand Woke not just as
the Left’s problem, but as a trap we could fall into too.
Explaining
Woke
Woke is a
whole phenomenon. It’s a way of seeing the world as split into two teams, not
just us versus them but Woke versus everybody. Karl Marx famously said these
teams could be described “in a word” as “oppressor versus oppressed.” The Woke
view of the world is that this conflict and the oppression that defines it is
the fundamental operating principle of society and, in fact, all of history.
So “Woke”
means thinking in terms of irreconcilable division and the conflict it
generates: oppressor oppressing oppressed and oppressed fighting back. It’s
more than just seeing real oppression where it exists in the world and taking
action against it; it means believing oppression fundamentally defines society
and the conflict literally makes us who we are.
Marx
specifically said what we regard as “Woke” today means bringing your sense of
alienation by feeling oppressed into yourself and defining yourself that way.
The goal is to see yourself as part of a collective whole—not as an individual
but as a member of an oppressed group. The Woke view is that the oppressed
group can always team up to attack and beat its oppressors if they’ll just wake
up to this collective, conflict-oriented view of the world.
Woke
Isn’t Limited to “the Left”
The
essential claim in this pamphlet is that “Woke” is therefore not limited to
what we usually think of as “the Left.” Particularly, “the Right” can pick it
up and see the world that way too, and it can wield its nasty weapons. That’s
Woke Right—the Right seeing itself as a wrongfully oppressed majority group who
has been pushed out of its rightful place in society by a corrupt power and as
justified in using identity politics, mob abuse, shame, purity spirals, cancel
culture purges, moral grandstanding, smearing, targeted abuse, and all the rest
to gain power—fighting fire with fire, so to speak.
The point
is that Woke is bad on its own, no matter who uses it. It’s like the One Ring
in Tolkien’s famous Lord of the Rings. It confers a great portion of the power
of the Dark Lord to whoever wears and claims it, but the corrupting influence
of that evil power always wins out. Taking the Ring to yourself always turns
what you do, and you, to evil—even powerful good characters like Galadriel and
Gandalf fear it for that reason and refuse its might. It also always ends up
betraying whoever claims it because it belongs fundamentally to evil, to
Sauron, to whom it will always return.
This
Isn’t About Left and Right
Naming
and identifying the “Woke Right” isn’t about giving the Left a pass—far from
it. It’s not about controlling conservatives—exactly the opposite. The Woke
Right, more than anyone else, wants to control conservatives, and they’re using
Woke tactics to do it. They’re attempting to define what “true conservatives”
have to believe even as they tell you themselves in some cases that they aren’t
conservatives at all. And if you step out of line with their ideas, they’ll
weaponize social and political forces to punish you—or get rid of you.
This
isn’t about Left versus Right or Right versus Left. This is about opposing Woke
evil, no matter how we meet it in the world.
Woke is a
cultural wrecking ball, and we’re right to oppose it—in all its forms. To fight
smart, we need to know exactly what we’re up against and how it can show up
looking like our friend. Woke is always about control, not compassion; it’s
made for conformity, not justice. It’s the opposite of the liberty, reason, and
tradition we’re trying to conserve.
As we
turn to the Woke Right, keep this in mind: the Woke Left’s playbook is powerful
and seductive, even for those of us who would deny its authors and specific
Leftist goals. Let’s see how some conservatives are picking up that playbook
and worldview in the name of the “True Right”—and why it’s a terrible mistake.
Chapter
2: What Is the Woke Right?
Last
chapter, we nailed down what “Woke” means: in practice, a toxic mix of moral
bullying, tribal loyalty, and emotional blackmail dressed up as justice. But
it’s more than that, too. It’s ultimately a way of seeing the world (worldview)
and a toxic formula for behaving in it (activism). It’s been the Left’s
favorite playbook for generations, and conservatives rightly despise it for
stomping on liberty, reason, and tradition.
Introducing
the Woke Right
So here’s
the gut punch: some on the Right are starting to play the same game: not with
pronouns or DEI quotas, but with a different brand of targeted shaming, purity
tests, and mob tactics for not being right-wing enough; or even racist, sexist,
or antisemitic enough. Meet the Woke Right—right-wingers who (sometimes) claim
to love God, country, and freedom (usually not too much freedom) but who want
to fight for them with the Left’s weapons and through the Woke’s tortured view
of the world.
They’re
not selling out to the Left’s progressives, though some may be plants; they’re
borrowing the Left’s worst habits, views, and tactics in the name of defending
our best values. That is, they’re not really defending our values. They’re
using our values to advance their own power.
This is
similar to something you’re familiar with on the Woke Left. The Woke Left runs
its tyranny in the name of defending positives like compassion, empathy,
fairness, and equality (though not really equally), or in the name of defending
and promoting “marginalized” people at the receiving end of “social
injustices.” It sounds noble, but we know it’s a lie. They’re using these
values and people as cover for their own radical agendas.
Well,
sadly, the Woke Right does the same thing, claiming it defends faith, family,
and country while imposing tyrannical purity codes around each. It claims to
care about its own identity groups, who are sometimes getting a short shrift in
Woke Left–controlled society: whites, men, straights, Christians—it has it’s
own “intersectionality”! It’s a lie too. The Woke Right is mainly interested in
its own power.
Of
course, on the chopping block in both cases, Left and Right, is freedom, even
while both claim to be fighting for a different, better kind of freedom. Also
getting axed are decency, fairness, truth, justice, and, frankly, the American
way. Social control and social engineering are not American values!
Woke
Right: A Closer Look
Let’s
unpack what this looks like, why it’s happening, and how it’s different from
the conservatism we know and trust.
The Woke
Right isn’t a secret society or a gang of traitors, at least not for the most
part. It’s a tendency—a fever some conservatives catch when the culture war
gets hot. They’re not necessarily abandoning many of their core principles;
they’re still pro-life, pro-family, pro-faith, but they’re not pro-liberty
anymore. Worse, instead of arguing with reason or building strong, voluntary
coalitions, they’re adopting the Woke tactics we just defined: moral
grandstanding, group identity, victimhood status, and social control through
shame and abuse. That’s the Woke Right—same ideas, wrong playbook. Or, same
positions, different goals. Or, put better in reference to the Woke Left—same
energy (Woke), opposite direction (reaction).
As a
result, while some of the key values are retained, others are lost—honesty,
integrity, truth over tribe, fairness, decency, and stability. As with the Woke
Left, these virtues are traded away in the name of desperation, expedience, and
power. Times are desperate, they argue, so the ends (power, “winning”) justify
the means (abuse, manipulation, and dishonesty). “Knowing what time it is”
means believing you have to throw your principles away to seize the means of
production and control of society.
Traits of
the Woke Right
Let’s
break it down with four key traits, straight from the Woke blueprint we saw
last chapter.
First,
moral grandstanding. The Woke Right doesn’t just disagree—they frame dissent as
betrayal, good versus evil. It’s not “I think your policy’s off”; it’s “You’re
a traitor to the cause!” Imagine a hypothetical Republican congressman voting
for a bipartisan infrastructure bill receiving a flood of angry replies like,
“He’s a globalist shill destroying America!” Never mind his 90% conservative
voting record or the bridges that got fixed. The Woke Right doesn’t want to
debate the bill’s merits—they swing the same moral hammer the Left uses to
brand people “racist” when someone isn’t toeing their entire line. It’s
Woke-style absolutism, just wearing a red (or black!) MAGA hat.
Second,
identity politics, right-wing style. Remember how Woke obsesses over group
labels like race or gender? The Woke Right does the same, but differently in
two ways. First, their tribes are “true patriots,” “real Christians,” or
“defenders of the West,” or just “straight, white Christian men.” Second, they
take up the exact same labels as the Woke Left but in the opposite directions,
like being openly racist or deliberately adopting a pro-white “racial
consciousness.” These aren’t just ideas—they’re badges you must wear or face
exile.
The
general policy is “No Enemies To The Right (NETTR),” while attacking everyone
who falls short of their “based” performance standard. This can only
radicalize, just like the Woke Left’s policy of “No Enemies To The Left”
radicalized them into a pit. It is a guaranteed purity spiral. The world gets
split not into us-versus-them but into Woke-versus-everybody, and identity
labels get coded as “good” (friend) and “bad” (enemy). This is the polarized,
divided world of Woke.
Third,
enforcing conformity through shame. The Woke Right doesn’t argue—they “cancel”
conservatives who stray. Think of a hypothetical conservative podcaster who
questions a total abortion ban’s electoral odds, still firmly pro-life. Within
hours, social media would light up: “She’s a fake conservative! Boycott her
show!” Hashtags might trend, sponsors would be pressured to bail, and her voice
would be sidelined—not for rejecting conservative values, but for not passing a
purity test. This isn’t the robust debate conservatives used to pride ourselves
on; it’s the Left’s mob tactics, repurposed to police our own.
Fourth,
occupying victimhood status. The Woke Right doesn’t see itself as a voice
contributing to the conversations of the day. It sees itself as a dispossessed
majority group whose voice has been silenced and sidelined, requiring them to
define new conversations entirely on their own terms. They may not openly claim
victimhood like the Left does, but the mentality is the same.
Conservatives
have not traditionally discussed politics as a mortal battle between “friends
and enemies” using Nazi political theorists until the last couple years when
the Woke Right popularized and pushed Carl Schmitt for that purpose. Racism is
not a conservative value, but the Woke Right promotes it as a virtue—not just
playing defense but “going on offense.” No one doubted that Hitler was the bad
guy of World War II until the Woke Right pushed it. All of these views are
validated in Woke logic by their “suppressed rightful majority” outsider
status—what the Woke Left calls “marginalized knowledges” and “other ways of
knowing.” Same Woke cult of transgression, just transgressing the other way.
The Woke
Right does this because it fundamentally perceives itself—meaning radical
right-wingers, not all of conservatism—as a victim group of the forces of
history. The Woke Right sees itself as the unjustly displaced heirs to our
societies who also understand that they now need to take back their inheritance
by force. This puts them on closer ground with transgender activists than with
conservatives who want to make their countries great again.
Even
conservatives have marginalized the Woke Right line, they argue, calling the
Woke Right position the “True Right” and saying it’s finally reemerging as the
“New Right.” It’s the same line we heard ten years ago with the rise of the
so-called “Alt Right,” an “alternative” Right that wasn’t just opposed to the
Left and liberalism but also to “status quo” conservatism as weak, corrupt, and
ineffectual. It’s also the same line we heard from the Woke Left, claiming they
were the true “liberals” who cared about all the right things.
This
isn’t what conservatism is supposed to be. Think of Ronald Reagan, who cut
deals with Democrats to slash taxes, not because he loved them, but because he
knew half a loaf was better than no bread at all. Or Margaret Thatcher, who
stood firm on free markets but didn’t demand every Tory chant her gospel. They
built coalitions, persuaded skeptics, and won by sticking to
principles—liberty, reason, tradition—not by shaming allies. The Woke Right, by
contrast, burns bridges faster than it builds them, trading pragmatism for a
feel-good purge. It also trashes Reagan and Thatcher as compromised “neocon”
sell-outs who betrayed the conservative cause because of their insufficient
right-wing purity—just like the Left does with its former leaders.
But We
Need to Fight!
You might
be thinking, “Hold on—the Left’s running wild! Don’t all of us need to fight
dirty to survive?!” We get it. The Woke Left’s censorship, identity politics,
and moral crusades are a cultural steamroller. The Woke Right’s passion comes
from a real fear of losing our way of life—family, faith, freedom. The fear,
despair, and desperation (the “blackpill”) are based on concerns that are real,
but that doesn’t mean they lead us to making good decisions.
Here’s
the trap: mimicking the Left’s tactics and adopting the Left’s worldview
(framing) doesn’t make us stronger; it makes us a mirror image of what we’re
trying to stop.
It’s
tempting to fight fire with fire, to swing as hard and as dirty as they do.
We’ve felt it ourselves. But we have to pause and ask: is this about ideas, or
just feeling righteous? The Woke Right’s tactics are seductive because they
promise quick wins, but they’re a shortcut to division, corruption,
destruction, and handing the whole game back to the Left.
But will
it work? Almost definitely—by which we mean it will almost definitely ruin us
and hand the whole game back to the Left.
The Woke
Right isn’t every conservative with a strong opinion. Strong opinions are good.
It’s also not every conservative who is a Christian. Far from it. The Woke
Right is when passion turns to dogma, when disagreement becomes treason. It’s a
drift we can correct, but first we need to see it clearly.
Next,
we’ll dig into why these Woke tactics are showing up on our side—and why
they’re a trap we don’t need to fall into.
Chapter
3: Why Is the Woke Right “Woke”?
If you’re
a conservative, the word “Woke” probably makes your skin crawl. We spent the
last two chapters tearing it apart: a worldview that bullies with moral
absolutes, that’s rooted in victimhood mentality, who obsesses over group
loyalty, and who enforces conformity through guilt. It’s the Left’s signature
moves, and we’re the ones fighting it—or so we thought.
Here’s
the uncomfortable truth: the Woke Right, those right-wing “victims” we met last
chapter who shame, tribalize, and “cancel” their own, is playing by the same
Woke playbook. Not with the same ideology—they’re still for God, country, and
tradition—but in a different, evil spirit, and with a radical ideology of their
own. They’re not conservatives; they’re radical right-wing revolutionaries by
their own admission.
They’re
not chanting Leftist slogans, but they’re wielding the same weapons and see the
world through the lenses the Left gave them. Let’s look in the mirror and see
how the Woke Right is Woke, why it’s tempting, and why we need to ditch this
trap before it catches us.
Woke
Right Wolves in Conservative Sheep’s Clothing
Nobody
likes hearing their side’s got flaws, especially when we’re locked in a culture
war with actual Woke ideologues. But denial’s a lousy strategy. The Woke Right
isn’t Woke in the blue-haired, pronoun-policing sense. They’re not pushing DEI
(but maybe reverse-DEI) or tearing down statues (yet). But their tactics?
Eerily similar. Their worldview? Almost the same. Remember the Woke traits we
defined: moral absolutism, group identity, victimhood, and social control. The
Woke Right checks every box, just with a right-wing twist. It’s like a wolf in
conservative sheep’s clothing—same teeth, different fur.
Before
addressing those traits, let’s remind ourselves what Woke is. It’s a way of
viewing the world and of behaving in it. The way of viewing the world is an
oppressor-oppressed dynamic where the oppressor and all who side with it are
completely evil and the oppressed and those who join forces with it are
completely good. This dynamic is believed to be the fundamental organizing
principle of society.
People
who understand and agree with the “Woke” perspective of the world have an
“awake” or “Woke” consciousness, and people who don’t have a “false
consciousness” that has to be awakened through Critical Theory. People who
aren’t “Woke” yet just might not understand, or they might be “willfully
ignorant” of the state of the world, maybe by benefiting from the existing
order or being paid shills for it. “Woke” is ultimately a conspiracy theory
against the “oppressed” victim group.
Woke is
also a way of behaving in the world that results from that core belief. That
means using radical activism to change the world to destroy the oppressor, its
sympathizers, and the system that produces the oppression itself. Woke will
always destroy anything that gets in its way. And its favorite targets? Those
closest to it who still don’t go along!
All the
Woke tactics we have come to hate stem from that Woke view and that Woke
disposition, which defines being “Woke.” That can be mob tactics, collectivism,
bullying, Machiavellianism, lying to gain power, cancel culture, shaming,
targeted abuse and harassment, hate mobs—whatever. Woke means doing anything to
get power, which the Woke Right calls “winning.”
Traits of
Woke
Now let’s
understand that anyone can adopt a Woke lens and Woke behavior and tactics for
their own ideological views, so long as they can convince themselves they’re
unfairly oppressed by mainstream society.
Conservatives
can decide that the demands of DEI, CRT, and Woke (Left) society oppress and
victimize them just like anyone can—and they have a point, just like the Woke
Left had a point, just one that gets exaggerated and twisted. They can also
adopt Woke bullying tactics either strategically or out of desperation. That’s
not answering evil with blessing, though, or standing in our values; it’s
answering evil with evil, which is wrong even when it feels justified.
Now let’s
look at the traits. Start with moral absolutism.
Woke
Leftists frame dissent as evil: disagree with their dogma, and you’re a “bigot”
or “oppressor.” The Woke Right does the same, swapping “bigot” for “traitor” or
“RINO.” Just like the Woke Left uses tons of bad names (racist, sexist,
homophobe, transphobe, capitalist, conspiracy theorist, grifter, etc.), the
Woke Right has tons too (sellout, cuck, Jew, Goy, faggot, regime shill, neocon,
liberal, globalist, controlled opposition, grifter, etc.). These names aren’t
meant to describe; they’re made to brand someone an enemy and target them for
abuse.
That’s
Woke-style black-and-white thinking, where nuance is treason. The Left calls it
“harm”; the Woke Right calls it “disloyalty” or “selling out.” Clinical
psychologists call it “psychopathic splitting” (splitting the world into all
good versus all evil). Same game, different jersey.
The Woke
Right also takes a crass “reverse Wokism” policy to many of the Woke Left’s
excesses.
For
example, the Woke Left calls everyone racist over nothing. The Woke Right
answers by deciding to be a little racist, then a little more, then eventually
a lot because “racism doesn’t mean anything anymore.” Except it does.
When the
Woke Left pushes these boundaries, it’s easily identified as a form of
transgression. Society agrees not to be racist, and the Woke Left transgresses
that boundary by making it impossible not to be racist and exempting their own
favored groups from the label “racism.” When the Woke Right replies by leaning
in and actually being racist within their own favored groups, they don’t resist
the Left so much as they also transgress mainstream society’s boundaries. Same
energy, opposite direction.
Next,
look at group identity, which is ultimately politically defined and rooted in a
sense of systemic victimhood.
Woke
ideology hinges on tribes—race, gender, whatever—demanding loyalty to the
“right” victim groups, which are defined politically. Remember Nikole
Hannah-Jones from the NY Times Magazine’s “1619 Project” tweeting that there’s
a difference between being “politically Black” and “racially black”? The Woke
Right mirrors this with its own tribes: “true patriots,” “real Christians,” or
“defenders of the West.”
The
American Christian Nationalist movement mirrors this exactly with what it calls
the “New Christian Right,” which we can see as being “politically Christian”
rather than religiously Christian—or just followers of Christ. It’s the same
collectivism we mock when the left demands “allyship” from “privileged” groups,
only now it’s draped in conservative flags. The Woke Right isn’t about
individuals or ideas—it’s about proving you’re one of the chosen Elect.
Both Woke
groups also behave the same way. Imagine someone objecting to the Woke Left’s
1619 Project. Well, you had better be black, or you can’t have an opinion. And
if you are black and still disagree, you are a “race traitor” who isn’t being
“politically Black.” The same thing happens on the Woke Right. Object to
Christian Nationalism or its sometimes theocratic visions? You had better be a
Christian or you must just “hate” Christians. And if you are Christian and
still object, you’re “attacking brothers” who is betraying some Christian code.
This isn’t honest debate. It’s manipulation.
This is
the same Woke trick a perverted drag queen uses when he gets called out for
dancing sexually in front of children, claiming the rightful public objection
to his deranged behavior is “anti-LGBTQ hate” and “attacking LGBTQ people.” The
pervert hides behind gays and lesbians who want nothing to do with that
behavior—and denounce it alongside the rest of us—by claiming the hate for his
behavior is actually “hate” for a whole much broader preferred group.
Finally,
although we just touched on it, let’s look closely at social control.
Woke
Leftists “cancel” dissenters to enforce their dogma, using shame and mobs to
silence. The Woke Right does the same, just with bot-enhanced social media
pile-ons, cancellations, and boycotts instead of campus protests.
Consider
what would happen if a conservative author (or watch company) criticized a
radical populist figure’s divisive rhetoric, while strongly supporting
conservative policies. Social media would light up immediately: “He’s
establishment trash!” “Boycott his books (or watches)!” “He’s not
conservative!” “He’s controlled opposition!”
It’s not
hard to imagine his speaking events being cancelled, his work pulled from
conservative channels and outlets—not for abandoning solid conservative values,
but for stepping out of line. That’s woke social control, repackaged as
“holding the line.” The Left cancels “problematic” voices; the Woke Right
cancels “fake” conservatives. Same hammer, different nail.
The
abusive tactics would be similar too for all Wokes, Left and Right. Abusers use
a tactic called DARVO (which stands for Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and
Offender) when they’re exposed. Woke Leftists turn everything around into some
contorted way you’re “harming marginalized groups.” That’s standard Woke Left
DARVO.
Woke
Right DARVO very frequently takes the form of getting called out for divisive,
radical, hard-lining stances that cross important lines and turning around and
saying their critics are the cause of the division. “He’s dividing MAGA!” is
the cry, but all he’s doing in reality is saying that the radical direction
being proposed is a bad one to take. With the Woke Right, like with all Wokes,
it’s 120% of their way or the highway.
What Is
the Woke Right, Really?
The fact
is, Woke Right is a radical right-wing splinter movement operating within
conservatism. Their objective is to take as much of the conservative movement
with them into right-wing radicalism as they can, no matter how much it breaks
or how much opportunity it brings to the Left. That’s divisive by definition,
but it’s almost invisible until it gets pointed out. To cover their tails, they
blame the division on the people who spot what’s going on and say something.
That means they give conservatives two bad choices: go with us into radicalism
without complaining or be blamed for dividing the movement.
Why the
Woke Right Succeeds
Why do
conservatives fall for this? Because Woke tactics are seductive to anyone once
they’re dressed up in the right moral language. If they talk boldly and sound
like conservatives, they can seduce people. When we hear our moral language
being spoken, we tend to listen—and agree. Tribalism easily takes precedent
over truth for almost everyone.
The Right
is particularly afraid and demoralized lately, too. That makes it worse. The
left’s been winning by swinging hard—censoring, shaming, rallying their
base—and it feels like we’re losing ground. It’s easy to get desperate. The
Woke Right takes advantage of that situation, sometimes very manipulatively. It
sees the Woke playbook and thinks, “If it works for them, why not us?” It’s
tempting to fight fire with fire, especially when you’re angry or terrified.
The outrage is cathartic, but it will usually cost us. Woke tactics promise
power, activity, and decisiveness, but they’re a shortcut to nowhere, trading
long-term wins for short-term applause.
Here’s
the rub: adopting Woke tactics doesn’t just mimic the Left—it risks turning us
into them. The term “Woke Right” is confusing because it seems like an
oxymoron. That’s not because they’re not “Woke,” though. It’s because that
behavior doesn’t seem to match the Right, which people confuse with
conservatism.
Every
time we shame an ally, we erode the free speech we claim to defend. Every time
we demand tribal loyalty, we ditch the individual liberty we’re fighting for.
Every time we participate in these abuses, we contribute to them.
The Woke
Right thinks it’s slaying dragons, but it’s raising one, fracturing our
movement in the process. We don’t need Woke weapons to win. Conservatism’s
strength is in our principles—reason, freedom, tradition, liberty—not in
becoming a right-wing version of the Woke mob.
What
Should We Do?
So what’s
the way out? We start by seeing the trap for what it is and standing up to it,
while we invite as many of our friends to come back to sanity and conservatism
as we can.
The Woke
Right isn’t the Left, but it’s closer than we’d like to admit. If the Woke Left
is a kind of neo-Marxism, the Woke Right is a kind of neo-Fascism in reply.
We’ll lose our freedoms either way.
The Woke
Right isn’t popular. It’s a splinter that should be kept as small as possible
and allowed to break away without taking conservatism with it. So, we can—and
must—fight the culture war without their playbook, using arguments that
persuade, values that are true, and coalitions that endure.
Next,
we’ll explore how we got here—why conservatives are falling for this—and how to
chart a better path.
Chapter
4: How Did We Get Here?
If the
Woke Right is a new twist in right-wing and conservative activism—using
progressive tactics like shaming or tribalism to defend twisted versions of
conservative-sounding values—how did we end up here? Nobody wakes up one day
and decides, “Let’s mimic the Left!” At least not until they’re as desperate
for power as the Left.
The rise
of the Woke Right didn’t happen in a vacuum. It’s a reaction to real pressures
and real fears: a culture that feels like it’s slipping away, a Left that’s
gone off the deep end and that seemingly cannot be stopped, politicians and
corporate leaders enacting global plans with no accountability, and a world
where outrage travels faster than reason. To understand why some on the Right
are fighting fire with fire, we need to look at the forces pushing us there.
This isn’t about blaming anyone—it’s about seeing the bigger picture so we can
chart a better path.
The
Cultural Context
Let’s
start with the cultural context. Over the past decade, the progressive (and
Marxist) Woke Left has pushed harder than ever to reshape society. In America,
we’ve seen schools teaching kids about gender ideology before they can spell.
In Britain and America both, statues of historical figures have been toppled in
the name of “decolonization” and “antiracism.” History is being erased and
rewritten. Policy is almost all Woke.
The
impacts are real, awful, and in some cases proving dangerous and
deadly—consider the military helicopter that recently crashed into a passenger
jet over the Potomac River as it came in to land in Washington, D.C., at the
Reagan International Airport, for one tragic example. Across many Western
countries cancel culture has silenced voices, from comedians to professors, for
stepping out of line. Some have even committed suicide. And let’s not forget
the corporate embrace of “Woke” policies—think DEI quotas or brands preaching
about social justice, even in the military and air traffic control, not to
mention medicine.
For
conservatives, this feels like an all-out assault on the institutions we depend
upon, the countries we love and defend, and the values we cherish: free speech,
tradition, merit, and common sense. In some sense, it is. It’s also dangerous.
It also feels unstoppable as we’ve sought to fight back but the Left just keeps
going.
This
overreach has sparked a backlash, and rightly so. Conservatives have watched
their institutions—schools, churches, public commissions, academia, the
judiciary, even the military—get infiltrated and bend to progressive demands,
and we’re fed up. The Woke Right emerges from this frustration, saying, “If the
left plays dirty, we need to match them.” It’s why you see conservatives on
social media rallying along with right-wing radicals to “own the libs” and to
destroy “cuckservatives” with the same moral fervor the Left uses to shame
“bigots.” The logic is simple: when the other side’s screaming loud, you grab a
megaphone too. But here’s the catch—when we adopt their tactics, we risk losing
what sets us apart.
The
Effect of Social Media
Social
media is the gasoline on this fire. Platforms like X amplify outrage, reward
hot takes, have algorithms that are easily gamed, are filled with foreign and
domestic propaganda and political warfare, and turn debates into tribal wars. A
single post calling out a “RINO” or “traitor” can rack up thousands of likes in
hours, many of which are actually fake, making the poster feel like a hero. On
the other hand, posts defending good values can get viciously attacked and
“ratioed” just as easily and, often, just as fakely. This isn’t reasoned
debate; it’s digital manipulation and lynch mobs, fueled by the same dynamics
that power left-wing cancel culture.
Social
media isn’t just a digital public square where everyone’s voice can be heard.
It’s also a propaganda battlefield where fifth-generation warfare tactics and
psychological operations increasingly define the online experience. It’s also
an unbelievably opportune space for creating false appearances, reflexive
campaigns, and fake news. The trouble is that too much fake news and
manipulation can also make a Fake MAGA. That’s the Woke Right.
The
Psychological Drivers
Then
there’s the psychological side. Normal humans crave certainty, especially in
chaotic times. For conservatives, the world feels chaotic indeed: globalization
eroding national identity, secularism challenging faith, and elites (even
conservative ones) seeming out of touch. The Woke Right offers a kind of
simplified but dark moral clarity: “We’re the true defenders of the West, and
anyone who disagrees is the enemy.”
It’s
comforting to divide the world into heroes and villains, especially when you
feel under siege. That’s why you see conservatives rallying around terms like
“Christian Nationalism” or “America First” with an almost religious zeal. It’s
not just about policy—it’s about belonging to the “right” tribe. But again, “us
versus them” easily gets twisted into “the Woke against everybody,” which
becomes “our way or the highway.”
This
tribalism is supercharged by a loss of trust. Conservatives no longer believe
in the media, academia, or even some of their own leaders. In the U.S. think of
how many Republicans rightly view “the establishment” with suspicion, blaming
it for weak responses to Marxist policy and reckless progressive gains. In the
UK, Brexit exposed a similar divide, with many Tories feeling betrayed by party
elites who seemed too cozy with globalism. When you don’t trust the system, you
turn to populism—and populism loves simple narratives and demagogues. The Woke
Right thrives here, offering black-and-white answers: “If you’re not with us,
you’re against us.” It’s “us against the world.”
As for
the Woke Right themselves, they are often driven by dark impulses. As we
discussed earlier, underneath the drive to radicalism is often despair,
desperation, fear, and anger. Lashing out in frustration or seeking catharsis
over the injustices we’re seeing and suffering is real. Some are just playing a
transgressive game—like leaning into racism or antisemitism for laughs or to
“own the libs”—that gets out of hand. Others, more dangerous, present dark
psychological traits like the “Dark Tetrad” traits of psychopathy (narcissism,
Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and sadism) or even personality disorders. Woke
systems are easily gamed by these unsavory characters who can substitute
obedience and malice for competence to rise through the ranks.
What Led
Us Here?
Key
moments have fueled this shift. In America, Donald Trump’s rise was a turning
point, but that energy is being co-opted to drive right-wing extremism. His
unapologetic style inspired conservatives to fight harder, but it also
normalized a take-no-prisoners approach. Disagree with the leader? You’re a
RINO, unworthy of the movement. In Britain, Brexit was a similar catalyst,
galvanizing conservatives to defend “the will of the people” against any
dissent, even from within. These moments were right, and they gave
conservatives a taste of victory. But they also emboldened a mindset where
loyalty trumps debate, and where tactics matter less than winning. In these
situations, values and principles are the first casualties.
They were
also unpopular—despite eventually winning. This initial unpopularity among the
mainstream for both movements opened a door to a raft of first adopters, who
got on board ahead of everyone else. In America, this was mostly the Alt Right
getting behind Trump early on, though his coalition rapidly grew to a huge
proportion of everyday patriotic Americans who are not extremists.
Nevertheless, these radicals not only found an early political home in these
movements; they also came to identify with them. To the Alt Right, MAGA has
always been their movement, and they see it as a grave injustice that less
radical Americans have come to define the brand, marginalizing them.
This fact
has set up an uneasy coalition for over eight years, one in which the radicals
increasingly had to behave themselves, particularly after the incidents at
Charlottesville in 2017. Many slowly started to organize behind the scenes and
lay their plans. Then, as Trump started to ascend again in the lead-up to the
2024 presidential election, they awoke and took action. Their goal was to seize
back the movement and party they lost, and by that point, they had woven
themselves deeply into its fabric.
Woke
Right vs. Conservatism
The Woke
Right has always been at odds with conservatism, though. It was conservatives
who failed them in the first place, they think. It was conservatives who
displaced them from their own movement, even though it couldn’t have won
without mass conservative support. It is conservatives more than anyone—more
even than the Left—who marginalizes the Woke Right. So it is conservatives who
are the Woke Right’s main enemy. Again, not the Left. Conservatives.
As a
result, the Woke Right attacks principled conservatism directly. They eagerly
accuse “muh principles” as being the cause of “losing with dignity.”
Principles, real values, and dignity all get washed away in the pursuit of
power and “winning” at any cost. We have to ask ourselves: if that’s the case,
even if we win, who have we become by winning that way? The answer is we’ve
become Woke, and rather than defeating Woke, we become the authors of Woke’s
ultimate victory.
But
Shouldn’t We Want to Win?
You might
be thinking, “What’s wrong with winning?! What’s wrong with fighting hard? The
Left’s winning because they’re ruthless!” We hear you. The Left’s aggression
has pushed us to the wall, and nobody wants to bring a knife to a gunfight.
The Woke
Right’s zeal partly comes from a real desire to protect our way of life—family,
faith, country, though according to their own frantic vision. To that end, it
has adopted authoritarianism and attacks individual liberty. It’s also being
pushed and channeled by bad actors who have more specific agendas.
At the
end of the day, when we borrow the Left’s playbook, we risk becoming a mirror
image of the evil that we hate. The Woke Right has already done this, and that
is what it has become. Shaming our allies doesn’t strengthen us; it fractures
us. Demanding purity doesn’t win elections; it alienates voters. And chasing
moral certainty at all costs doesn’t preserve truth—it buries it under dogma.
Furthermore,
it’s not like the Left has gone away. In fact, it’s oddly quiet about all this,
ugly as it is. Smart money would guess it’s waiting, letting the Woke Right
take conservatives and MAGA too far, and they’ll strike back successfully at
the most opportune times—like right after a crisis or right before an election.
Who
Benefits from the Woke Right?
The Woke
Right didn’t appear out of nowhere. It’s both inorganic and organic; top-down
and bottom-up. On the organic side, it’s a response to a world that feels like
it’s turning against us, amplified by technology and distrust. On the inorganic
side, it’s fueled by agents provocateur, foreign interference, clout-chasing
grifters, and other bad actors. It’s also likely encouraged, if not funded, by
some of the exact shadowy agencies we’ve been fighting on the Left—ask
yourself, who really benefits here? And who is throwing the money behind this?
China? Russia? Islamic countries? The Deep State?
Still,
understanding its roots shows us why it’s a trap. We don’t need to mimic the
Left to win—we need to be better. In the next chapter, we’ll explore why this
shift is a problem, not just for our principles, but for our ability to
actually achieve our goals and save our countries from Woke.
Chapter
5: Why the Woke Right Is a Problem
You might
be thinking, “Okay, so some conservatives are getting a bit intense. What’s the
big deal? We’re in a culture war, and the Left’s playing dirty. Don’t we need
to match their energy to win?” It’s a fair question.
It’s also
a little more complicated than that. There aren’t just two political teams
slogging it out, and not all Wokes are created the same.
Pushers
and Fellow Travelers
First,
there’s a difference between “conservative” and “right-wing.” Second, like on
the Woke Left, there are the pushers and there are the fellow-travelers. The
pushers are the real Woke Right. They’re Woke on purpose and pushing decent
conservatives into the Woke mode. The fellow-travelers are almost all good
conservative people who are desperate, fearful, caught up in the momentum (say,
of “winning”), or just wanting to fit in. The Woke Right pushers are setting
the tone and the trends, and the Woke Right fellow-travelers probably don’t
even know they’re being misled into being Woke.
The Woke
Right fellow-travelers—those conservatives who have taken to using progressive
tactics like moral shaming, identity politics, and cancel culture—come from a
place of passion. They want to protect our values, just like you and me, but
they’ve lost the plot.
Here’s
the problem: their approach isn’t just a different style of fighting. It’s a
trap that sacrifices conservatism from the inside out. It divides us, erodes
our principles, and hands victories to the Left. It also corrupts those who
participate in it, as all evils will do.
The Woke
Right pushers, on the other hand—right-wingers (not conservatives) who are
setting the Woke pace for other conservatives—come from a place of pursuing
power. Some of them are very bad actors or even agents provocateur whose role
it is to make MAGA fail. They’re using the fellow-travelers to get it done.
It’s exactly the same as on the Woke Left, where Woke Left pushers are chasing
power and using fellow-travelers and the name of minority groups to get it.
This is
important because it means the Woke Right pushers are the real problem, and the
Woke Right fellow-travelers, while still acting badly, are welcome and
encouraged to come back to defending family, faith, freedom, and country in
better ways as soon as they can see and escape the trap.
Woke is
evil. It always works like this. Manipulative ideologues create circumstances
like social circles and value structures (say, about what it means to be a
“true conservative”) with cult-like organization and political litmus tests for
“inclusion” to get other good, well-meaning people to carry their dirty water
for them.
Woke
Right Can’t Win
Let’s
unpack why the Woke Right is a problem, not just for our ideals, but for our
ability to actually win.
First,
the Woke Right fractures our coalition.
Conservatism
is a big tent—libertarians, traditionalists, populists, moderates, and lately,
in MAGA and MAHA, a lot of Democrats who want America saved from the Democratic
Party, which has gone bad. They’re all united by a belief in things like
liberty, tradition, free speech, reason and dialogue, and limited government.
But when the Woke Right demands ideological purity, they alienate allies we
need.
Imagine a
football team where the players start brawling over who’s the “real” star
instead of facing the opponent team. That’s what’s happening when we “cancel”
conservatives for minor disagreements. Now imagine their posturing chases off a
lot of the crowd that supports the team. That’s kind of what it’s like. It’s
doing the Left’s work for them.
Second,
the Woke Right undermines the very principles we’re fighting for.
Conservatism
has always stood for free speech, individual liberty and responsibility,
self-government, and reasoned debate—and most of all a commitment to truth and
justice. In fact, it sees these as a sacred tradition from our forefathers that
it is ours to protect and conserve, then pass on to future generations in our
posterity. But when we mimic the Left’s tactics, we betray those ideals.
If we
“cancel” a conservative for questioning a radical proposition, how are we
different from progressives who silence dissent? If we demand loyalty to a
group identity like “true patriot,” “whites,” “Heritage Americans,” or “New
Christian Right” over individual judgment, aren’t we echoing the Left’s
collectivism? If we adopt lying to gain power, how are we standing for truth?
None of this is defending conservatism—it’s punishing free thought and
association, the same way the Left does.
In the
end, however, even if the Woke Right does manage to win, it isn’t conservatism
that won. It’s radical right-wing authoritarianism with “right-wing”
progressive aims. If the Woke Right wins, exactly the things conservatism
exists to conserve will be lost. It’s a form of losing by “winning.”
It Isn’t
About Conservatives; It’s About Americans
This
hypocrisy hurts our credibility. Moderates and independents—the voters we need
to win elections—see us acting like the Left, and think, “Why vote for an
uglier copy when I can get the original?” At least the Left’s marketing slogan
is about equality, not inequality. It sells better. Just look at New York City.
The Right
taking up Woke is like a restaurant advertising “authentic home cooking” but
serving fast food. We lose trust when our actions don’t match our values. It
isn’t like moderates who lean left are supporting conservatives happily. If
it’s the same Woke, different side, they’re going to take the one on their own
side.
This
issue is massively amplified when the Woke Right leans into things most people
abhor, like (real) racism, sexism, antisemitism, and all the rest, not to
mention authoritarianism, Fascism, or even National Socialism. Moderates who
held their noses to vote for Trump will regret their vote and make sure never
to do anything like that again—and they’ll tell ten friends how wrong they were
and how they were tricked. We will not win anything that way, and what loses
most is America.
Perversely,
the Woke Right actually likes that losing situation because for all its talk
about “winning,” it actually cares far more about doctrinal purity, control,
and force, so it will destroy the coalition it takes to win in America by
trying to force it all to be radically right-wing on its narrow terms. Like all
Woke, the belief is that the only way to win is to have a forceful enough cadre
in solidarity that will take power.
But It Is
About Conservatives, Too
Worse,
this hypocrisy and abuse creates a culture of fear within our own ranks.
Conservatives start self-censoring, afraid to speak honestly lest they be
branded a “RINO,” “cuck,” “Jew,” “neocon,” or “sellout.” People will be thrown
out as fakes for not being radical enough.
This is
already happening. The self-censorship is already shockingly deep, even with
conservatives. If we can’t debate ideas openly, we’re not conserving
freedom—we’re building our own echo chamber. If we don’t correct this soon, its
disease will go terminal, just like we watched happen on the Left over the last
ten years.
Having
the Wrong Priorities
The Woke
Right also costs us practical wins. Elections, policies, and cultural influence
depend on broad support, not just passion, but their all-or-nothing mindset
often sacrifices unity for purity.
What
delivered Trump and maybe America out of the clutches of the Democrats was a
big, broad coalition who came together for America, not a small band of abusive
radicals. The mandate of the 2024 election was against the Woke Right radicals,
but they’re acting like it was for them instead, and they’re bullying and
abusing anyone who tells this obvious truth.
This
behavior will turn off voters and shatter the coalition. It’s snatching defeat
from the jaws of victory. These aren’t hypotheticals—they’re real losses we’re
already suffering, and we will suffer them “big league” later because the Woke
Right prioritizes being “right(eous)” over being effective.
Here’s a
simple analogy to tie it together. Conservatism is like a ship sailing through
a storm—the progressive waves are crashing hard. The Woke Right thinks the
answer is to fire cannons at our own crew, who it blames for the rough ride.
They’re shouting, “Only the purest sailors stay on board!” But every time we
throw someone overboard, the ship gets weaker. We lose navigators, engineers,
and deckhands who could’ve helped us weather the storm. Sometimes the cannons
blow a hole in our own deck! The Left doesn’t need to sink us—they just watch
as we sink ourselves.
Much of
the Woke Right’s passion comes from a good place, or is based on real concerns,
but its tactics are a losing strategy and its view of the world is Woke. These
bad tactics are encouraged by a group of self-appointed cultural right-wing
leaders who only care about gaining power—unless they’re plants meant to
undermine us. They divide our coalition, betray our principles, and cost us
winnable fights.
If we
want to conserve what matters—freedom, family, faith—we need to reject this
trap and fight smarter. In the next chapter, we’ll look at how to spot the Woke
Right in action, so you can see it coming and steer clear.
Chapter
6: Recognizing the Woke Right in Action
Now that
we’ve defined the Woke Right, explored its roots, and seen why it’s a problem,
let’s get practical. How do you spot this tendency in the wild? The Woke Right
(mostly) isn’t a secret club with membership cards—it’s a view of the world and
set of behaviors that can creep into our conversations, social media feeds, and
even our own thinking. Woke is a mind virus, and it can infect anyone.
Conservatives have different “receptor sites” for the Woke mind virus but can
suffer the same disease with only slightly different symptoms.
Think of
this chapter as a field guide, like identifying birds in your backyard. By
learning the signs—language, actions, and patterns—you’ll be better equipped to
recognize the Woke Right in action and steer clear of its traps. This isn’t
about pointing fingers; it’s about sharpening our instincts to keep
conservatism strong, healthy, true to itself, and united.
The Woke
Right shows up in four main ways: the language they use, the behaviors they
exhibit, the mindset the hold, and the platforms where they thrive. Let’s break
each down in turn. At the end, we’ll offer a way to check yourself,
because—let’s be honest—we’ve all been tempted to join the outrage at some
point.
Sign 1:
Moral Grandstanding Language
The Woke
Right loves language that paints issues as black-and-white, good versus evil.
They don’t just disagree—they declare war on “traitors” or “fakes.” Words like
“RINO,” “sellout,” “globalist,” “controlled opposition,” or “shill” (and a lot
worse) are their ammunition, used to shame anyone who steps out of line.
If a
conservative says something nuanced, like “Maybe we should prioritize border
security over a total immigration ban,” the Woke Right might respond with,
“You’re either for sovereignty or you’re with the open-borders crowd!” Notice
the absolutism—no middle ground, no debate, just moral ultimatums—psychopathic
splitting again. This kind of language isn’t about ideas; it’s about signaling
who’s “pure” enough to belong.
How to
Spot It: Listen for absolutes. If someone’s calling a conservative a “traitor”
or “fake” over a single issue, or if they frame disagreement as a moral
failing, that’s Woke Right language. Ask yourself: Is this about solving a
problem, or just sounding righteous?
Sign 2:
Shunning or Attacking Allies
The Woke
Right doesn’t just argue with fellow conservatives—they try to exile them. If
someone deviates from the “correct” line, they face boycotts, cancellations, or
public shaming, often online. It’s not enough to disagree; the Woke Right wants
to punish. This mirrors the Left’s cancel culture, where dissenters are cast
out to enforce conformity. This isn’t debate; it’s a purge, designed to silence
anyone who steps off the script.
How to
Spot It: Watch for attacks that go beyond ideas to target a person’s character
or livelihood. If conservatives are trying to “cancel” one of their own over a
single misstep, that’s Woke Right behavior. Ask: Is this criticism meant to
improve our side, or just to destroy someone? If it’s the latter, why?
Sign 3:
The Woke Mindset
Again,
Woke is a way of viewing the world and a way of behaving in it. While we’ve
been talking about the behaviors so far here, there’s also a mindset. It’s
victimhood-driven oppressor-versus-oppressed splitting function. It’s you’re
either all the way with them or totally against them.
It’s a
world of doctrinally pure friends versus everyone else as enemies. It’s a world
in which rebellion against civility, decency, and principle is justified
because it can be framed as being against “the Left.” This is just the same as
how everything Woke Leftists do is allegedly in the name of stopping “racism”
or defeating “Nazis” or “Fascism,” even when they’re mostly targeting normal
people.
How to
Spot It: Watch for expressions that suggest feeling like a dispossessed victim
of society and its structures, deep us-versus-them or Woke-versus-everyone-else
rhetoric and framing, and claims that our problems are structural and require
both structural solutions and group solidarity to “win.” Look for radical
solutions that discard the Constitution as if it’s part of the problem. Wokes
always attack the mainstream of society while pretending they’re attacking the
radicals on the other side.
Sign 4:
Social Media Pile-Ons
The Woke
Right is a very online phenomenon, and it thrives on platforms like X, where
outrage spreads like wildfire. They organize campaigns to shame or “expose”
conservatives who aren’t “loyal” enough, using hashtags, memes, and threads to
rally the mob. These pile-ons aren’t about persuading—they’re about enforcing
tribal loyalty and flexing power. A lot of them are also fake, amplified by bot
networks paid for by our enemies to sow and inflame division.
How to
Spot It: Look for coordinated outrage on X or other platforms, especially when
it’s less about debating ideas and more about rallying a crowd to attack.
Smearing language is common, especially questioning someone’s loyalty,
commitment, moral standing, alignment, or psychological health. If a
conservative is trending for being “disloyal” rather than for a clear betrayal,
that’s likely the Woke Right at work.
Checking
Yourself
Here’s
the tough part: the Woke Right isn’t just “other people.” We’ve all felt the
pull to join the outrage, to call someone out, to prove we’re on the “right”
side. We’ll admit it—we’ve caught ourselves retweeting a snarky post about a
“RINO” before pausing to think, “Wait, is this fair?” Try this: next time
you’re fired up about a conservative who’s “betrayed” the cause, ask yourself
three questions:
Am I reacting to their ideas, or just their
failure to signal loyalty?
Would I call them out this way in person, or
is X making it too easy?
Is my response building our movement and
aligning it with its principled goals, or tearing it down or taking it in a new
radical direction?
Recognizing
the Woke Right starts with awareness. It’s not about being perfect—it’s about
catching those moments when we’re tempted to trade reason for tribalism. By
spotting these signs in others and ourselves, we can keep our focus on what
matters: defending our values without becoming what we oppose.
In the
next chapter, we’ll talk about what we can do to push back against this trend
and strengthen conservatism.
Chapter
7: What Can We Do About It?
We’ve
seen how the Woke Right—radical right-wingers using progressive tactics like
shaming, tribalism, and purity tests—divides our movement and country, betrays
our principles, and costs us wins. It’s tempting to shrug and say, “That’s just
how politics works now. The Left set the rules, and we have to play by them or
just suffer losing.” But it doesn’t have to be like this. It isn’t possible to
beat the Left by becoming a different version of the Left.
Conservatism
thrives when we stick to our strengths: reason, liberty, tradition, and a
willingness to debate ideas without eating our own. The Woke Right is a detour,
not a destiny, and we can steer back to a stronger, true, and united
conservatism. We just have to remember our principles and the societal
tradition we’re really trying to conserve.
This
chapter is your toolbox—practical steps you can take, both as an individual and
in your community, to resist this trend and build a movement that wins without
losing its soul.
Individual
Actions: Maintain Your Principles
The fight
against the Woke Right starts with each of us. It’s not about grand
gestures—it’s about small, deliberate choices that add up. Here are three ways
to keep yourself grounded in principled conservatism.
Know Your
Principles (and Keep Them): You cannot stay true to your principles unless you
know what they are. Spend some time getting to know the principles and the
tradition (Anglo-American liberty and the Constitution) you are trying to
conserve. Understand why these principles matter and why they deserve to be
offended. You cannot defend or conserve your principles if you don’t understand
what they are and why they matter.
Pause
Before You Pile On: Social media, especially X, makes it easy to jump into the
outrage cycle. See a post calling out a “RINO” or “traitor” or something
nastier? Before you retweet or comment, take a breath. Ask: “Do I know the full
story? Is this attack about ideas, or just signaling loyalty?” Count to ten
before hitting “send” on an angry post. It’s a small act that keeps you focused
on principles, not mob mentality.
Engage in
Good-Faith Debate: Woke is almost always bad-faith debate pretending to be
good-faith. The Woke Right shuts down disagreement with labels like “fake
conservative” and “Woke Lite.” Don’t play that game. If you disagree with a
fellow conservative, talk to them like an friend, not an enemy. Imagine you’re
at a pub with a mate who’s got a different take on, say, trade policy. You
wouldn’t scream “globalist!”—you’d argue your case and listen. Online, try the
same. Good-faith debate builds bridges and sharpens our ideas, unlike the Woke
Right’s shaming.
Promote
Ideas Over Identity: The Woke Right loves tribal badges—“true patriot,” “real
Christian”—but conservatism is about ideas, not loyalty tests. Focus on
policies and principles, not who’s “in” or “out.” If you’re sharing a
conservative post, highlight the argument, not the applause. For example,
instead of tweeting, “This guy’s the only real conservative left!” try, “Here’s
a great case for school choice—check it out.” Ideas persuade; tribalism
divides. Put truth over tribe, every time, even when it’s hard to.
Watch Out
for Subversives: Woke Right is mostly not an organic movement. It is shepherded
by bad actors and fueled by the enemies of America, both foreign and domestic.
It is not possible to win over a bot, troll, chaos agent, or subversive.
Therefore, you have to learn to identify bad actors and limit their influence
over you. Mute and block accounts on social media that promote radicalism over
staying the course. Woke is always seductive, so you have to protect yourself.
Disengage
from Political Warfare: A lot of Woke activism is done “reflexively,” and that
requires your participation. You’ve probably heard it called “the current
thing,” which means the “current thing everyone is talking about right now.”
You have to give your opinion, your “take,” and what you don’t realize is that
the game is rigged. It doesn’t matter what opinion you give, just that you
participate in the conflict. If you’re too moderate, you’ll be struggled toward
radicalism. If you are radical enough, you’ll be celebrated by the radicals
posing as being on your side. The point of the game is to raise the
temperature, divide, polarize, and cause a fight that splits people apart. The
only way to win is not to play.
Community
Actions: Build a Better Conservatism
Resisting
the Woke Right isn’t just personal—it’s about the spaces we create together.
Whether it’s your local conservative group, church, or online circle, you can
help foster a culture that rejects divisive tactics. Here’s how.
Support
Leaders Who Model Principled Engagement: Not every conservative hero needs to
agree with you 100%. Back leaders who prioritize principled engagement over
purity tests. In the U.S., a governor (Glenn Younkin, R-VA) recently won
election by uniting libertarians, evangelicals, and moderates around shared
goals like lower taxes and parental rights. When Woke Right voices tried to
brand him “soft” for compromising on minor issues, his supporters pushed back,
highlighting his results. Champion these voices—vote for them, donate to them,
amplify their work on X. They show we can win without tearing each other apart.
It’s not about supporting “sellouts.” It’s about supporting the principles upon
which our society must be built to thrive.
Create
Spaces for Open Dialogue: The Woke Right thrives in echo chambers where dissent
is punished. Counter this by fostering places where conservatives can debate
freely, without fear of being “canceled.” This could be a local meetup, a
church discussion group, or an X thread that invites real talk. These spaces
remind us that disagreement isn’t betrayal—it’s how we grow stronger.
Call Out
Woke Right Tactics—Gently: When you see Woke Right behavior, like a pile-on or
moral grandstanding, don’t stay silent. But don’t fight fire with fire. A
gentle nudge can work wonders. For example, if an X post attacks a conservative
as a “sellout,” reply with, “I get the frustration, but let’s focus on their
voting record—how have they delivered?” Calling out bad tactics with respect
keeps the conversation on track.
Draw
Clear Lines—Sharply: The Woke Right isn’t all just misguided. It is dangerous
to the people it attacks, those it seduces, to conservatism, to MAGA, and to
America and the world. The philosophies it considers unfairly “marginalized” by
the “postwar consensus” (its systemic power dynamic) include not just
conservative and “right-wing” ideas but Fascism, totalitarianism, theocracy,
and a rejection of the American way of life. The behaviors they engage in—from
racism to antisemitism and various forms of division and polarization—are toxic
and deadly to both reputation and movement. A sharp line needs to be drawn
between principled conservatism and Woke Right radicalism, and the sooner and
sharper the better. If we wait too long, it won’t just get worse; we’ll find
ourselves lost to radicalism and destruction like what Woke did to the Left.
But Wait!
Doesn’t that Make Us Woke Right Too?
You might
be thinking, “Wait! If we draw clear lines against the Woke Right and call them
out, isn’t that sort of us being Woke Right too? Aren’t we doing identity
politics by calling them ‘Woke Right’?” These are fair questions.
The
answer to both questions is no, it does not make us Woke Right to reject the
Woke Right, to label them “Woke Right,” or to call out bad behavior on “our own
side” when we see it. Gatekeeping is a necessary function for any political
project. Think about it. Would you knowingly let subversives into your movement
if you knew their goal was to take you down? Of course you wouldn’t. They need
to be gatekept.
As for it
being a kind of “identity politics” or “cancel culture,” what identity group is
the Woke Right? It’s not any identity group at all. It isn’t limited to one
race, one sex, one nationality, or one religion. Even though Christian
Nationalism is almost all led by Christians, most Christians aren’t in
agreement with their radical movement or Woke tactics. Woke isn’t actually
about identity. It’s about radical politics. Woke hides its radical politics
behind identity like a shield so its harder to call out.
And it’s
not cancellation to demand responsibility in doing your job. The Woke Left
tried this deflection too! Several years ago when people started to stand up to
them and as the fight to push DEI out of our institutions has gained momentum,
they cried foul and said it was “cancel culture on the Right.” No it wasn’t!
It’s actually a way to take responsibility to get radicals, revolutionaries,
subversives, and grifters out of positions they abuse. And besides, it’s the
Woke worldview and tactics we’re disagreeing with, not any particular
people—unless we find out they’re deliberate plants or subversives.
A Vision
for Victory
These
steps—pausing, debating in good faith, promoting ideas, supporting unifying
leaders, creating open spaces, drawing sharp lines, and gently redirecting
outrage—aren’t just defensive. They’re a blueprint for a conservatism that
wins.
The Left
wants us divided, distracted by infighting while they push their agenda. They
also benefit by the Right overreacting badly and adopting ugly postures. By
rejecting the Woke Right’s tactics and Woke worldview, we can build a movement
that’s smarter, stronger, and more persuasive. Imagine a conservatism where we
debate policies like adults, rally around shared goals, and welcome allies
instead of exiling them. That’s a conservatism that can attract new voters, win
elections, shape culture, and protect what we love—freedom, family, faith, and
tradition.
But Can
It Work?
You still
might be thinking, “This sounds nice, but the Left’s too aggressive—we can’t
just play fair!” We hear you. The Left’s ruthlessness is real, and we need to
fight hard with firmness and a resolute spirit. But hard doesn’t mean reckless.
The Woke
Right’s tactics are like swinging a sledgehammer in a glass house—sure, it
feels powerful, but it shatters our own foundation. We don’t need to mimic the
Left to beat them. We need to outthink them and beat them with principle, which
they have abandoned. Every time you choose reason (which is our Anglo-American
tradition) over outrage (which is not), you’re helping conservatism stay true
to itself, and you’re helping the good guys win.
So start
small. Next time you’re on social media, pause before joining a pile-on. Reach
out to a conservative you disagree with and have a real conversation. Share a
policy idea instead of a tribal jab. Support a leader who builds bridges. Check
yourself and draw meaningful lines based in solid principles, not the lust for
power. These actions ripple outward, creating a conservatism that’s not just
loud, but lasting. We can fight for our values without becoming what we
oppose—and that’s how we’ll win.
Conclusion:
A Stronger Conservatism
We’ve
traveled a lot of ground in this short booklet, from spotting the Woke Right’s
tactics to understanding why they’re a problem and how we can push back.
The Woke
Right—right-wingers (not conservatives) who adopt progressive-style shaming,
tribalism, and purity tests to defend distorted conservative values—isn’t
(just) a conspiracy or a betrayal. It’s a maliciously misguided response to a
world that feels like it’s turning against us, and it’s trying to co-opt
well-meaning conservatives to grab power for itself.
Progressives
push harder every day, from rewriting history to silencing speech, and it’s
natural to want to fight fire with fire. But as we’ve seen, mimicking their
tactics doesn’t make us stronger—it divides us, undermines our principles, and
hands certain victories to the Left. The good news? We can do better. We can
build a conservatism that wins by staying true to who we are.
The Woke
Right’s challenge is real. When we shame allies as “RINOs” or “sellouts” over
minor disagreements, we shrink our coalition and look like fools. When we trade
reasoned debate for moral grandstanding or cancel culture, we betray our
commitment to free speech and individual liberty. When we prioritize
ideological purity over practical wins, we lose elections and policies that
could advance our cause. When we adopt ugly modes like racism, sexism, and
antisemitism just to prove how not-Left we are, we become ugly ourselves—and
people notice.
We’ve
seen it all in action: right-wingers attacking conservatives on social media,
crying foul and displacing blame for their divisive tactics, splitting voting
coalitions, scaring off normal people and moderates, and costing us winnable
seats in America and Britain and beyond. It’s a trap that feels righteous but
leads to defeat.
But this
isn’t a story of despair—it’s a call to action and a path to victory.
Conservatism has always been about conserving what’s true, good and just:
freedom, family, faith, tradition, country, and the rule of law. We don’t need
to become what we oppose to protect these things. In fact, we can’t. We lose
ourselves that way and won’t be conservatives any longer. We’ll become
“traditionalist” progressives ourselves, which is the gateway to genuine
Fascism and the loss of freedom forever.
Our
strength lies in our principles—reason over outrage, truth over tribalism,
unity over division. Think of the conservative giants who came before us.
Ronald Reagan didn’t win by purging moderates; he built a coalition that
persuaded millions. Margaret Thatcher didn’t shame dissenters; she argued her
case with clarity and conviction. They fought hard, but they fought smart, and
they won because they stayed true to what conservatism means. Trump has done
the same.
The Woke
Right wants to denigrate Reagan and co-opt Trump. Like all Wokes if they cannot
win Trump to their intolerant side they’ll turn on him and try to destroy him.
Trump, though, is not Woke Right and never will be. Unlike the Woke Right, he
is actually based.
Final
Words
You now
have the tools to resist the Woke Right. Pause before joining an X pile-on.
Debate in good faith, even with conservatives you disagree with. Promote
policies, not tribal badges. Support leaders who unite us, create spaces for
open dialogue, and gently call out divisive tactics. Draw sharp lines against
bad behavior, abuse, and radicalism. Do not participate or condone such things.
Support people the Woke Right attacks. These aren’t just ways to avoid a
trap—they’re steps toward a conservatism that’s stronger, more persuasive, and
more effective. Every time you choose principle over outrage and truth over
tribe, you’re helping our movement grow.
The
future is in our hands. Imagine a conservatism where we debate ideas like
adults, not children throwing tantrums. Picture a movement that welcomes
allies, from hardcore traditionalists to pragmatic moderates, because we know
we’re stronger together. Envision a coalition that wins—not just by being
louder, but by being better, with arguments that convince and policies that
deliver. That’s the conservatism we can build, and it starts with you.
So let’s
get to work. The left wants us fighting each other, distracted by purity tests
while they reshape the world. We won’t let them. We’ll fight for our
values—liberty, tradition, truth, justice—with the clarity and unity that have
always defined us. The Woke Right is a detour, not our destination. It’s a pit,
not a platform. Together, we can steer back to a conservatism that doesn’t just
survive but thrives. Take pride in who we are, and let’s fight for what matters
without losing ourselves. The stakes are high, but so is our resolve. Here’s to
a stronger conservatism, a brighter future, and Making America Great Again!
Grokkus
Babeuf
"Grokkus
Babeuf" actually refers to the LLM Grok, styling itself after one of the
original Communists during the French Revolution, Francois-Noel
"Grachus" Babeuf. This pamphlet was prepared by asking Grok to
outline a non-technical, introductory booklet about the "Woke Right"
and then to flesh out each chapter. It was then edited appropriately by James
Lindsay, president of New Discourses, who found it suitable to publish as an
aid to your understanding despite it not quite being what he would write on the
subject.
James
Lindsay
An
American-born author, mathematician, and professional troublemaker, Dr. James
Lindsay has written six books spanning a range of subjects including religion,
the philosophy of science and postmodern theory. He is a leading expert on
Critical Race Theory, which leads him to reject it completely. He is the
founder of New Discourses and currently promoting his new book "Cynical
Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and
Identity―and Why This Harms Everybody," which is currently being
translated into more than fifteen languages.

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