The scandal around the Southern Poverty Law Center matters for one reason above all: it exposes a mechanism.

If the allegations now before a U.S. court are borne out, the charge is stark: an organization built to fight extremism may have been financially entangled with the very actors it claims to oppose. The SPLC says this was an informant program. The Department of Justice says it was something else.

That distinction matters legally. But analytically, the incentive structure is already visible.

Create the threat. Amplify the threat. Position yourself as the authority on the threat. Then monetize the response.

That loop is the story.

And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

Because the real danger isn’t confined to one American organization. It’s the export model.

“When institutions depend on a problem for their legitimacy, they do not simply respond to it.

They begin—slowly, rationally—to ensure it never goes away.”

In Canada, the same structural incentives are in play. Groups like the Canadian Anti-Hate Network operate within a system where funding, relevance, and authority are tied to the persistence of “hate” as a visible social problem. They do not need to fund extremists to reproduce the same dynamic. They only need to expand the boundary of what counts as extremism.

That is the quieter version of the same loop.

If your mandate depends on the persistence of a threat, then ambiguity becomes an asset. Lines blur. Categories stretch. Dissent edges toward designation. Over time, the distance between “wrong” and “dangerous” collapses.

You don’t need burning crosses if you can redefine disagreement as harm.

This is where the SPLC story stops being scandal and starts becoming signal.

Because the underlying logic is identical:

  • The problem must persist
  • The threat must remain legible
  • The institution must remain necessary

And if reality doesn’t supply enough fuel, the system has incentives to… supplement.

That doesn’t always mean fabrication. More often, it means selection, amplification, and framing. The worst examples are elevated. Edge cases become representative. Boundaries widen quietly.

Until the label “hate” no longer describes a phenomenon—it polices a conversation.

That’s the iceberg.

The visible scandal is shocking because it’s crude. Funding extremists while fundraising against extremism is a contradiction people can grasp immediately. But the more sophisticated version—the one that operates through classification, narrative control, and institutional trust—is harder to detect and far more durable.

And once embedded, it reshapes discourse itself.

People self-censor and institutions defer. Then the obsequious journalists haphazardly cite.

With no regard for truth the designation becomes the argument.

At that point, the system no longer needs to prove anything. It only needs to point.

The SPLC case, if proven, is the blunt instrument version of the problem. The more durable form operates without headlines, through incentives that reward threat maintenance over problem resolution.

That is the real risk.

Because when institutions depend on a problem for their legitimacy, they do not simply respond to it.

They begin, slowly and rationally, to ensure it never goes away.

Sources for readers

Much of the current conflict around gender identity is framed as a debate about compassion, recognition, and inclusion. At a more basic level, it is also a conflict about language—specifically, whether individuals can be expected to adopt terms that do not align with their understanding of reality.

Pronouns seem like a small thing. In practice, they are not.

They are not simply polite conventions. They function as statements about a person. To use a pronoun is to make a claim, and when that claim is contested, the disagreement is not about tone but about what is being asserted.

For a time, the direction of that disagreement appeared settled. In many settings, declining to use requested pronouns was treated not as a difference of view, but as a form of harm. Social and professional consequences followed—sometimes quickly, sometimes quietly, but with enough consistency to shape behaviour.

That shift matters because it changes the role language plays. It moves from something negotiated between individuals to something that, in certain contexts, is expected and enforced.

There is a difference between courtesy and agreement.

Courtesy is voluntary. It allows for discretion, context, and mutual recognition. Agreement operates differently. It narrows the range of acceptable responses and attaches consequences to deviation. The two can overlap, but they are not the same thing, and treating them as interchangeable obscures the boundary where disagreement becomes difficult to express.

The argument for using preferred pronouns is often framed as a matter of basic dignity—a small concession that reduces friction in everyday life. At that level, it has real force. Most people are willing to extend minor courtesies to make social interactions smoother, especially when the cost appears low.

The difficulty is that this framing does not remain stable.

“Once language is tied to required affirmation, refusal is no longer treated as disagreement, but as harm.”

What begins as a request for courtesy has, in many contexts, become an expectation of agreement. The distinction matters. Courtesy allows for discretion; agreement does not. Once language is tied to a required affirmation, refusal is no longer interpreted as indifference or disagreement, but as harm.

That shift changes the nature of the interaction. It moves from a voluntary accommodation between individuals to a norm that carries social or professional consequences. At that point, the question is no longer whether one is willing to be polite. It is whether one can be required to make a claim one does not believe to be true.

This is why pronouns became a point of pressure.

They are easy to enforce, highly visible, and symbolically loaded. Agreeing to their use is often treated as a minimal concession. Refusing them is treated as a line crossed. That asymmetry is not accidental. It makes pronouns an effective entry point for broader expectations about how language should function.

There is also a boundary question that is harder to avoid than it first appears.

Individuals are free to describe themselves as they choose. That freedom, however, does not automatically extend to requiring others to adopt the same description. At some point, a shared language is still needed, and that language cannot function if its basic terms are entirely detached from common reference points.

For many people, this is where the conflict becomes unavoidable.

Refusing to adopt certain pronouns is not always an act of hostility. In some cases, it is an attempt to preserve a distinction between what one believes to be true and what one is being asked to say. Whether that distinction is respected or overridden has implications that extend beyond the immediate interaction.

Once language becomes a site of compelled agreement, the scope of that agreement rarely remains fixed.

That is why this feels, to some, like an early point of decision. Not because the issue is small, but because it establishes what can be asked—and what must be said.

   In a previous piece, I described what happens when ideas move from abstraction into mass use. They tend to lose fidelity along the way. What begins as theory arrives as posture, and what returns is often a reinforced version of something only partially understood.

That process raises a second question.

What kinds of systems can survive that kind of pressure?

Whether we are talking about an ideology, a scientific framework, or a political structure, the answer is less mysterious than it first appears. The systems that endure—and, more importantly, the ones that improve over time—share a common feature: they contain some built-in way of correcting their own errors.

At some point in their operation, they turn inward. They compare outcomes to expectations, theory to reality, and allow that comparison to have consequences. When the mismatch becomes difficult to ignore, something gives. Assumptions are revised, methods adjusted, conclusions reconsidered. Not always quickly, and rarely cleanly, but the process exists.

Without that phase, a system can still function for a time. It can even appear successful. But it has no reliable way to distinguish between being right and merely being unchallenged.

This is where the divergence begins.

Some systems treat failure as information. Others treat it as an external intrusion. In the first case, error becomes a resource—something to be examined, incorporated, and learned from. In the second, it becomes something to be explained away, often by shifting attention outward.

The pattern is familiar. When predictions fail, the explanation drifts toward circumstances, interference, or incomplete implementation, rather than toward the model itself.

That difference is not cosmetic. It determines whether a system gradually converges toward reality or begins to drift away from it.

Certain ideological systems illustrate the problem. When outcomes fail to match predictions, the failure is often attributed not to the theory itself, but to contamination from external forces—imperfect implementation, hostile environments, insufficient commitment. The theory remains intact; the world is judged to have fallen short.

“If no possible outcome can count as disconfirming evidence, a system doesn’t just resist error—it begins to accumulate it.”

That move preserves internal coherence, at least on the surface, but it comes at a cost. If no possible outcome can count as disconfirming evidence, then the system has insulated itself from correction. It can adapt in form—changing language, adjusting strategy—while leaving its core assumptions largely untouched.

In practice, this kind of insulation does not operate in a vacuum. Correction, when it happens, is often forced from the outside—through competition, failure, or pressure from systems that are less tolerant of error. The process is uneven, sometimes delayed, and not always recognized for what it is.

Still, the underlying constraint remains.

No system is exempt from it. Any framework that cannot absorb disconfirming evidence will eventually begin to separate from the reality it claims to describe, regardless of how compelling its starting assumptions may have been.

Where error cannot be internalized, it does not disappear. It accumulates.

And once that accumulation becomes visible, trust begins to erode—not necessarily because people have worked through the theory in detail, but because the outputs no longer align with what they can see for themselves.

This is where the two dynamics meet.

Ideas that lose fidelity as they spread place additional strain on the systems that carry them. If those systems can absorb and correct for that loss, they tend to stabilize. If they cannot, the distortion compounds.

The difference is not a matter of intent or intelligence. It is structural.

A system that cannot, or will not, update itself in response to reality does not simply make mistakes it will simply accumulate them.

Would people hold the views they do if they understood the first principles those views rest on?

I suspect many would at least pause. Not necessarily abandon their position, but slow down long enough to ask what exactly they are affirming. This is not a universal pattern, but it shows up often enough in public discourse to be worth paying attention to.

What I am describing is a kind of reverse percolation. Ideas that begin in highly abstract settings move downward into activism and identity, where they are simplified, moralized, and widely adopted. Something is lost in that movement. The underlying logic—the structure that gave the idea its shape in the first place—does not always make the trip.

Take a common example.

One influential strand of queer theory makes a striking claim: that identity need not be grounded in any stable essence, but instead takes shape in relation to what is considered normal or legitimate. At the level of theory, this is an attempt to examine how norms are constructed and how they operate, often in ways that are invisible to those who benefit from them.

But when that framework moves out of the seminar room and into everyday political identity, it tends to arrive in a thinner form. The scaffolding is gone. What remains is the posture.

“Ideas move downward into mass use, losing fidelity as they go, and return upward not as refinement, but as reinforcement—positions hardening around ideas that have already shed much of what made them coherent.”

That shift creates a tension that is easy to miss. If an identity is defined in relation to norms, then friction with those norms is not an accidental byproduct; it is part of the structure. Yet many who adopt the language of queer politics encounter that friction as if it were imposed entirely from the outside, rather than something partly generated by the logic they have taken on.

This is where the gap begins to open—between first principles and lived adoption.

What makes the dynamic more interesting is that it does not run in a single direction.

A similar distortion can be seen in conservative responses, where disparate strands of progressive thought are often folded together under the single label of “liberalism.” In doing so, distinctions that matter are blurred or lost altogether. Classical liberalism, with its emphasis on individual rights, pluralism, and limits on power, is not interchangeable with theoretical frameworks that aim to critique or unsettle those foundations.

Once those categories collapse into each other, critique starts to rest on unstable ground.

The result is less a clash of well-formed positions than a kind of mirrored simplification. On one side, ideas are adopted without much reference to their internal logic. On the other, they are opposed without being clearly identified. Whether the greater loss happens in adoption or in response is difficult to say, and in a sense it does not matter; each process feeds the other.

This is where the reverse percolation effect completes its cycle.

Ideas move downward from abstraction into mass use, losing fidelity as they pass through each layer. They are then taken up again, interpreted, resisted, or amplified by others working from similarly partial models. What comes back is not refinement. It is reinforcement—positions hardening around ideas that have already shed much of what made them coherent.

At that point, disagreement becomes inevitable, because the participants are no longer operating within the same conceptual frame. Understanding does not so much fail as it is quietly set aside.


Glossary 

Queer Theory
A body of academic thought that examines how categories like sex, gender, and sexuality are constructed, regulated, and experienced. It often challenges the idea that these categories are fixed or natural, instead emphasizing their fluidity and relationship to social norms. The field is not monolithic, and different strands place different weight on these elements.

Classical Liberalism
A political philosophy centred on individual rights, equality before the law, freedom of expression, and limits on state power. It forms the foundation of many modern democratic systems and emphasizes pluralism within a shared legal framework.

There are places in the world where violence does not need religion.

And then there are places where religion makes it sharper.

Recent reports of attacks on Christian communities in parts of Africa—especially in Nigeria—have circulated widely. The language online is immediate and absolute: slaughter, persecution, genocide. Some of those claims oversimplify a complicated reality. The violence there is not one thing. It is insurgency, land conflict, criminality, and state weakness layered together in unstable ways.

But that is not the same as saying religion is irrelevant.

It is not.

In conflicts where identity is already strained, religion does something specific. It does not always cause the violence. It clarifies it. It names the sides. It tells participants who they are, who the enemy is, and—critically—why the conflict matters beyond survival or territory.

That shift matters.

A dispute over land can end in compromise. A struggle over resources can be negotiated, delayed, or abandoned. But when a conflict is framed in religious terms, it acquires a different gravity. The stakes move from material to moral. Victory is no longer just advantage. It becomes justification.

Religion does not create the blade. It tells you where to aim it.

This is why the same region can produce multiple kinds of violence at once. Armed groups with explicitly Islamist aims may target Christians as Christians. Local conflicts between herders and farmers may fall along religious lines and then harden under that framing. Criminal actors may adopt the language of faith because it organizes fear and loyalty more efficiently than profit alone.

The result is not a single, unified campaign. It is something less coherent and, in some ways, more dangerous: a landscape where violence can be justified in more than one register at once.

This is where outside observers often get it wrong.

To say “this is purely religious persecution” is to miss the structural drivers that sustain the conflict. To say “religion has nothing to do with it” is to ignore how meaning is assigned once violence begins. Both errors flatten the reality into something easier to argue about and harder to understand.

Religion, at its most potent, is a system for organizing meaning. In peaceful conditions, that can produce cohesion, charity, and restraint. In unstable conditions, it can do the opposite. It can elevate conflict, sanctify grievance, and make compromise feel like betrayal.

That is not unique to any one faith tradition. It is a property of belief when it becomes fused with identity under pressure.

The violence does not need religion to begin.

But once religion enters the frame, it changes what the violence is for.

And that is when it becomes harder to end.

Most Canadians could not point to the Strait of Hormuz on a map.

They are about to feel it anyway.

Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil passes through that narrow stretch of water. When it is stable, nobody notices. When it is threatened, everything downstream begins to move—prices, shipping costs, political calculations. Geography, in this sense, is not abstract. It is mechanical.

The current tension in the region has put that mechanism back into play.

It does not require a full disruption to matter. Risk alone is enough. Insurance premiums rise. Tanker routes adjust. Traders price in uncertainty. Oil climbs before a single barrel is lost. And because energy sits underneath everything—transport, production, food—the effects do not stay contained.

“When energy moves, everything else follows.”

This is where the distance between foreign policy and daily life collapses.

Higher fuel costs bleed into groceries. Shipping delays ripple into availability. Central banks, already cautious, hesitate further. Governments face pressure to respond to a problem they do not control. The system tightens, not through a single shock, but through accumulated friction.

None of this depends on whether people are paying attention.

The map exists either way.

Some concertos announce themselves with weight and grandeur. The Piano Concerto in G major opens with a crack.

Not metaphorical—a literal whip. A sharp, almost mischievous gesture that tells you immediately: this will not be Brahms.

Ravel wrote this concerto in the early 1930s, and you can hear the world creeping in. Jazz rhythms flicker through the first movement. The piano darts rather than declaims. The orchestra sparkles instead of surges. It is music that moves with precision and wit, never overstaying a gesture.

Then the second movement arrives, and everything changes.

A single, long piano line unfolds—so simple it feels inevitable, so controlled it borders on unreal. The accompaniment barely shifts beneath it, like time has been slowed just enough to notice its passing. When the English horn enters, it does not interrupt so much as join a quiet thought already in progress.

Ravel proves that restraint, held long enough, becomes its own kind of intensity.

The final movement snaps the spell. It is brief, fast, and almost playful in its refusal to linger. The piano flashes, the orchestra answers, and before the ear can settle, it is over.

No grand conclusion. No heavy resolution. Just a clean exit.

Ravel once said he wanted this concerto to entertain. It does. But it also reminds you—gently—that lightness, when handled this precisely, is not the absence of depth.

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