Over the next week, I will be publishing a five-part essay series on a pattern that has become increasingly visible across contemporary politics.

The pattern is not confined to any one ideology. It appears in different forms, with different moral vocabularies, and at different levels of intensity. But the structure is often recognizable.

A movement begins with a grievance, often a real one. It defines the good chiefly by what must be abolished. The ideal remains vague, but the stain is vividly named. Reality resists. Limits persist. Tradeoffs do not disappear.

At that point, a choice presents itself. The movement can revise its ambitions in light of the world as it is, or it can moralize the gap between promise and outcome. When it chooses the second path, disappointment hardens into blame. Blame hardens into sorting. Sorting prepares the way for coercion.

That is the mechanism this series examines.

The aim is not to collapse different movements into one another, nor to deny that many of the grievances in question are real. The aim is to describe a recurring political logic that can emerge across very different doctrines once ideals are treated as immune to revision.

The essays proceed in sequence:

  • Essay 1: The structure of negative idealism
  • Essay 2: The turn to scapegoating
  • Essay 3: Gender ideology and the breakdown of boundaries
  • Essay 4: Family resemblances across radical movements
  • Essay 5: Settlement against redemption

Each essay builds on the last. They are meant to be read together.

The argument is not that politics should abandon ideals. It is that ideals must be able to survive contact with limits, tradeoffs, and an unfinished world. When they cannot, the pressure to explain failure shifts outward, and the search for the guilty begins.

This series is an attempt at diagnosis. It is also, in its final movement, an argument for a different posture: one that prefers settlement to redemption, and construction to purification.