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How did queer move from academic theory to a political movement that challenges the foundations of society itself? This piece traces the rise of queer politics—its rejection of norms, its destabilizing effects on social cohesion, and how we might restore balance between personal liberation and shared moral order.
In earlier parts of this series, we explored how David Halperin, Judith Butler, and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick defined queer as resistance to norms, a deconstruction of identity, and a fluid space of meaning. What began as a radical academic critique of social conformity has since evolved into a cultural and political movement with far-reaching effects.
Today, queer no longer resides in seminar rooms—it animates public policy, education, and identity politics. But in leaving theory for activism, the term’s oppositional nature has escaped its intellectual bounds, producing not only liberation but also a kind of cultural entropy: a systematic unmooring of shared social meaning.
From Theory to Politics: Queer as Permanent Revolution
Queer theory’s original intent was analytical—to question how society constructs categories like man, woman, normal, and deviant. In politics, however, queer became a mandate to dismantle norms altogether.
What Halperin called an “identity without an essence” turned into an activism without limits—one that views all boundaries, including biological sex or family structure, as oppressive fictions. This logic fuels a form of cultural revolutionism, in which dismantling social stability is seen as a moral good in itself.
In queer politics, there are no stable endpoints—only endless opposition. Marriage, gender, education, and even language are treated as battlegrounds for deconstruction. But where theory sought critique, politics now demands compliance with rebellion—a paradox in which resistance becomes dogma and moral relativism becomes orthodoxy.
The Unraveling Effect: When Everything Becomes “Queer”
The activist expansion of queer has dissolved its boundaries. Once a critique of exclusion, it now risks becoming a totalizing lens through which all social order appears suspect.
Institutions that once grounded shared life—family, religion, law, science—are increasingly framed as “heteronormative” or “cisnormative” systems of oppression. The result is not freedom but fragmentation, as the concept of “normativity” itself is recast as injustice.
This produces an untenable social paradox: a society that cannot define normality cannot define harm, health, or truth. When every structure is suspect, moral and civic coherence erode. A politics that celebrates perpetual queering thus becomes a politics of disintegration, unable to build or sustain the very freedoms it claims to advance.
Restoring Balance: Queer Aspirations and Reasonable Critique
Despite this, not all is lost. The queer impulse—to challenge hypocrisy, to broaden empathy, to question power—is valuable. The problem lies not in critique but in absolutizing critique—turning deconstruction into dogma.
Restoring balance requires three things:
- Reaffirming the material basis of human life.
A humane society must recognize biological reality, family structure, and civic order as real—not oppressive myths. Identity is socially shaped, but it is not infinitely malleable. - Distinguishing moral reform from moral anarchy.
Social change is just when it improves justice, not when it destroys coherence. Liberation without moral boundaries breeds confusion, not freedom. - Reviving liberal pluralism.
A society that allows dissent, but also values shared truth, can accommodate queer critique without succumbing to nihilism. We can defend individual freedom while preserving the cultural scaffolding that makes freedom meaningful.
The task is not to “abolish” queer politics but to discipline its insights—to channel its challenge to conformity into dialogue rather than destruction. As with all revolutions of thought, the test of queer theory is whether it can evolve from rebellion into renewal.
Key Takeaways
- 1. Queer politics began as critique but now rejects all norms, turning opposition itself into ideology.
- 2. The loss of shared meaning leads to social fragmentation, as institutions become targets rather than foundations.
- 3. Balance can be restored by grounding freedom in material reality, moral boundaries, and pluralist debate.
References
Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. Routledge, 1990.
Halperin, David M. Saint Foucault: Towards a Gay Hagiography. Oxford University Press, 1995.
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. Epistemology of the Closet. University of California Press, 1990.
Paglia, Camille. Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson. Yale University Press, 1990.
Pluckrose, Helen, and Lindsay, James. Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything About Race, Gender, and Identity—and Why This Harms Everybody. Pitchstone Publishing, 2020.
Devon Eriksen can be counted on to write some thought provoking and challenging ideas.

This is the socialist worldview in a nutshell.
Socialists believe the following:
1. All progress is social. This means that all human problems are solved by rearranging collective human behavior.
2. How to rearrange human behavior to solve problems is already known.
3. Problems therefore exist because there are people who don’t want to behave in this known fashion.
4. Therefore, problems exist because certain people are in the way of progress. Socialist politicians may be grifters who believe in nothing, but their (living) voters, the socialist true believers, hate you, and this is why.
They believe you, your existence, your non-compliance with their plans, is all that stands between humanity and paradise. This is why they will always murder you if they have power. This is why unchecked socialism always leads to the censor, the secret policeman tapping your phone, the neighbors dragged away in the night, the torture chamber, the gulag, the mass grave. Because if you think that nothing stands between you and paradise but stubborn people, then you think you can murder your way to paradise.
When a socialist demands socialism, you either comply or you do not. If you do not comply, he wants to murder you. If you do not comply, then the socialist policy he enacts not only fails to bring about paradise, it makes things worse, so he demands a further socialist policy. If you do not comply, he wants to murder you. If you repeatedly comply, then eventually things get very bad indeed, and the socialist casts about for someone to blame. Surely there must be some non-compliant person around here somewhere. Some counter-revolutionary. He must be found and murdered, and then paradise will be attained.
This isn’t about religion. “Religion” is merely the label they paste on your non-compliance. If you were an atheist, they’d just use another label. That giant finger in the drawing isn’t your beliefs. It’s you. They think you are evil. Not wrong, evil. And they want to kill you. Not all of them think they do, of course. There’s a group called “democratic socialists”, who append the word “democratic” to the front, to mean “I don’t want to kill you, I only want to use the political process to force you to comply.” But when they do, your society enters the same downward spiral described above.
So they eventually decide to kill you.
They will always, eventually, reach the point where they decide to kill someone. Because they always think their utopian plans will work if they kill just one more person, and their utopian plans will never actually work no matter how many people they kill.
What actually works isn’t socialism, it’s technology. Here’s how:
1. All progress is technological. This means that all human problems are solved by figuring out a better understanding of the universe, and creating a piece of technology based on that understanding.
2. Creating new science and technology is hard, and requires a lot time, money, and effort.
3. Problems therefore exist because not enough time, money, and effort has yet been invested to produce the necessary technological breakthrough.
4. Therefore, there is absolutely, positively, 100% no way to solve all human problems right now by acting differently. But we can optimize society for technological progress.
In other words, the “star trek future” isn’t waiting for us to become atheists, because atheism doesn’t produce technology faster or better than any religion that isn’t anti-technology. That “star trek future” is instead waiting on us to invent warp drives, teleporters, and matter nanoassemblers. And every single piece of progress that humanity has achieved came not from social activism, but from technological advancement. The 40 hour work week was merely demanded by unions. It was actually enabled by industrial technology.
Democracy, republicanism, and other forms of populist government were merely demanded by revolutions and philosophies. They were enabled by the rifled firearm. And so on. For every positive change in society and civilization, there is one or more critical pieces of technology that allow it to happen. Once that technology exists, the change is trivial. When it does not exist, forcing that change is disastrous, not positive. A 40 hour work week would exterminate a civilization of bronze age agriculturalists. Democracy would destroy a medieval kingdom. Progress is technological progress.
This is why socialism must be stopped.
Because socialism interferes with technological progress, which is the real driving force behind progress of any kind.
You cannot murder your way to utopia.





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