Benjamin Franklin once wrote, “Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters.”
Franklin did not mean that virtue should be enforced by the state. He meant that liberty depends on a people who govern themselves through a shared moral order, and that when self-control breaks down, external control inevitably follows.
Few in Franklin’s time questioned the basics of that shared moral order. There were disagreements among denominations, but all were rooted in a common moral vocabulary drawn from the Judeo-Christian tradition. Moral debate took place within that framework, be it Quaker versus Methodist, Catholic versus Protestant, or whatever, but everyone agreed on the basic difference between right and wrong, and that moral agreement made freedom possible.
Institutions designed to protect liberty followed, and it is the nature of building institutions to protect liberty rather than to control the public, that made our founding unique.
As Franklin said, however, liberty requires virtue, and though virtue can exist within individuals without a common moral framework, it cannot exist within a society unless there is a shared understanding for what that word means.
We can see what happens when virtue breaks down and the state does not step in. Portland, Chicago, and other major cities offer reminders that liberty can only exist when personal rights are protected by law.
We now face competing and often incompatible moral frameworks. Moral relativism treats all moral claims as equally valid private choices. Under that view the one moral virtue left is the tolerance of immoral behavior. From that soil a new political species grows. When moral relativism collapses shared standards, some actors create new standards for the public square. They do not offer them as neutral options; they present them as binary moral choices.
Dissent becomes not an argument, but a sin. Belief becomes a litmus test.
I call this phenomenon Political Moralism.
Let’s define our terms: Political Moralism is the reduction of politics into moral absolutes designed to compel obedience, where truth is irrelevant, virtue is performative, and dissent is treated as sin. Political Moralism gives virtue through simple agreement, and rewards those looking to feel morally superior without actually having to do anything to earn it.
Political Moralism is not morality, and nor is it moral. It is the reduction of politics into rigid moral binaries where dissent equals evil. Truth is not discovered by evidence or reason. It is declared by narrative. Those who question the narrative are cast as enemies of the good.
This essay argues that Political Moralism has become the operating worldview through which modern elites implement a framework of control. It is the moral software of a post-truth order, sustained by manufactured narratives, closed-loop propaganda, and vast networks of institutional funding. What makes it effective is not only the design of elites, but the willing embrace of ordinary people.
Political Moralism offers moral clarity without the burden of any moral work. It rewards conformity and punishes inquiry to make virtue a matter of posture.
Political Moralism does not merely shape debates. It replaces the habits of private conscience with public rituals of loyalty, to convert disagreement into heresy and to transform civic arguments into a moral purge.
Origins of Political Moralism
Political Moralism did not arise organically.
It was engineered.
In the aftermath of World War II, America’s intelligence community perfected the art of turning populations against their own institutions, manipulating symbols, slogans, and moral narratives. Under the cover of democracy-promotion programs and USAID grants, it financed “grassroots” movements that were anything but grassroots. These operations fused propaganda with moral theater, teaching people to see obedience to the narrative as a moral duty, and turning the people of those countries against the regimes the CIA wanted to topple.
This is a brilliant strategy, allowing the CIA to choose the leadership of other countries without getting its hands dirty.
Over time this method matured into a disciplined craft: create moral outrage, identify villains, elevate heroes, flood media channels, and destabilize the existing order; all while presenting the Agency’s preferred faction as the only solution. The genius of the system was that it appeared spontaneous. The outrage was acted out by citizens who believed the CIA-sponsored narratives.
We tend to view narratives through the lens of truth, but Political Moralism does not concern itself with truth. It is not that truth is absent; truth is often used to great effect when it serves the objective. It is that truth is irrelevant to the larger goal of regime change. What matters is moving public perception in the desired direction.
When Donald Trump descended the golden escalator to announce his candidacy in the 2016 election, the same intelligence and media ecosystem that once targeted foreign regimes turned inward. The machinery that had been built to shape opinion overseas began shaping domestic opinion, and what had once been foreign psychological warfare became a new form of domestic politics in which our intelligence services decided to pick their own political leadership.
We doubled-down on and normalized this system under Covid-19, and today, much of the public is OK with this, other than that it failed to prevent Donald Trump from winning a second term.
In any other country on Earth, it would have. The Intelligence Services only failed because of the First Amendment, and believe me when I tell you that they are very aware of that fact.
It is my belief that Political Moralism moved the election results between three and five percent, based on studies by Sage Journals and OUP Academic.Those studies were not looking at Political Moralism specifically, but they covered how things are framed and act as a good indicator for how much of an impact to expect
Political Moralism also shifts the Overton Window, so its impact on the public can be seen as cumulative over time.
Political Moralism does not depend on covert agents or secret funding streams, but reproduces itself through media networks, corporate communications, and the USAID/NGO complex.
And it is not just our Intelligence Services anymore, either. Other powers have recognized its utility.
Qatar funds Western media outlets and activist organizations that employ the same moral narratives to advance antisemitism in the West. China, Hamas, and others have adapted the pattern as a form of asymmetric warfare, weaponizing Western moral rhetoric to divide Western societies from within. Qatar and Hamas spend billions on universities and media houses to normalize antisemitism, whereas China funds cultural and academic programs that foster anti-Americanism and anti-Western sentiment.
The United States is not the only Western nation being steered this way. Across Europe, the same moral frameworks are used to turn populations against their own cultural foundations.
Western Society, as we know it, is being systemically destroyed. Future populations will be factional, fragile, and easy to control.
I have written before about how the West is learning to despise itself. I’ve also written on who is behind it. Political Moralism is the underlying framework.
Political Moralism began as a technology of control, or more precisely, as a way to capture the moral imagination of a population and direct it toward strategic ends. It has since become a self-sustaining, political ecosystem that runs on outrage. The method remains the same: define a moral crisis, craft a narrative that offers redemption through compliance, and brand dissent as evil.
Political Moralism as a Worldview
Political Moralism has been on full display during the war in Ukraine. Support for the war effort is treated as a test of moral purity. Calls for negotiation, however rational, are condemned as sympathy for tyranny. The choice is framed not as strategy versus strategy, but as light versus darkness. Facts become secondary to the moral narrative, and policy becomes theatre.
Once the moral framework is in place, Political Moralism becomes the lens through which all issues are seen. Complex realities are reduced to dualities of good and evil, justice and oppression, inclusion and exclusion, or some other such thing. Pragmatic trade-offs disappear, and to disagree is sin.
Rioting, looting, burning buildings, and attacking opponents with bicycle locks are lionized as acts of virtue when done in service to the narrative. Violence is not condemned; it is curated. The trick lies in deciding who is allowed to be violent.
Most people do not wish to be cruel, and they fear social rejection more than they value truth. The architects of moralism exploit this. They invert cruelty, rebranding it as social justice when directed at dissent. The CIA no longer needs to kill; it can provoke others to do so.
The same mechanism governs debates over equity, gender, and economics. The advocate for equality under law is branded an oppressor for questioning “equity,” while the economist who points out that the minimum wage harms entry-level workers is accused of hating the poor. Cause-and-effect reasoning is replaced with moral accusation; even disproven causes survive if they serve the moral story.
Political Moralism promises virtue without cost, which is an intoxicating offer, especially to the young. It allows them to claim righteousness and moral superiority by repeating slogans. There is no need to live responsibly, to give, or to examine one’s own failures. One need only align with the correct tribe.
It also promises belonging. To join the cause is to become part of something larger than oneself, replacing loneliness with a collective purpose that justifies the worst abuses of human behavior. Playing “war” through rioting and destruction is, for many, far more thrilling than holding down a nine-to-five job.
Political Moralism promises protection as well. In an age of public shaming, moral alignment offers safety. To question the narrative is to risk social exile; to repeat it is to be rewarded with acceptance.
For these reasons, Political Moralism is not simply imposed by elites. It is demanded by millions who prefer moral simplicity to moral responsibility.
At the heart of Political Moralism lies a spiritual transaction: the exchange of conscience for narrative loyalty.
Conscience is the inner voice that tells us right from wrong even when we wish it would stay silent. It is a fragile but sacred capacity. A society cannot remain free if its citizens outsource conscience to authority, and that is exactly what Political Moralism demands.
Once moral judgment is externalized, the individual no longer asks, “Is this right?” but “Is this acceptable?” The moral question becomes social rather than personal, and people begin to defend what they know is wrong because their tribe declares it good.
As I showed in Standards of Evil: Competing Moral Frameworks and the Fracturing of the West, Hitler viewed the willingness to put one’s own morality aside in order to do “the will of the people” as the highest possible virtue. Those who think this way today may not be Hitler, but they have studied and learned from him.
You don’t get a nation to follow evil by making them evil. You do it by getting them to adopt your morality in place of their own, and once they do, theirs is gone.
We see this every day. Citizens watch cities burn and repeat that the riots were “mostly peaceful.” They deny biological realities they know to be true. They call peace negotiations “treason” because the narrative tells them virtue allows no compromise.
Political Moralism replaces divine conscience with social conscience, and in doing so, severs the last line of defense against tyranny.
Institutional Anchors of Political Moralism
Once the framework is established, the propaganda system activates. Closed-Loop Virtue Signaling is the process by which the approved moral narrative circulates through media, academia, and corporate culture until it becomes self-enforcing.
In this loop, institutions reward those who echo the narrative and punish those who challenge it. Journalists lose their platforms, professors lose their tenure, and employees lose their jobs for rejecting the required narrative. Each participant polices the others in the name of virtue, so the system functions without even the need for a central censor, and those who go the furthest into the absurd are rewarded for their ‘moral courage’ in doing so.
Public figures like Tulsi Gabbard, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and Elon Musk have experienced this cycle first hand. Someone forward this essay to Dave Rubin – this is the exact process that red pilled him.
Such people were celebrated when they served the moral narrative and vilified the moment they questioned it. Facts do not determine moral standing; loyalty does. Closed-Loop Virtue Signaling transforms propaganda into culture and ensures that moralism feels natural rather than imposed.
Tulsi Gabbard in particular is telling, as it was a person rather than a statement she questioned: Tulsi Gabbard went after Hillary Clinton. Apparently, that is not allowed.
Political Moralism is anchored by a vast architecture that includes education, corporate governance, NGOs, and international bodies.
Education provides the moral vocabulary. From early childhood, students are taught that justice equals equity, disagreement equals harm, and the planet can be saved only through obedience. The purpose of schooling becomes not knowledge but alignment.
Corporations enforce moralism through financial mechanisms such as ESG scoring, which converts political virtue into economic currency. Under this regime, capital flows toward compliance and away from dissent. Profit becomes moralized, and morality becomes monetized.
Non-governmental organizations function as the shock troops of the system, receiving massive funding from governments and foundations to advance the same causes that justify state expansion. The state funds its own activism and then points to that activism as proof of moral consensus.
International bodies such as the United Nations, the World Health Organization, and the World Economic Forum coordinate these narratives globally. Their goal is not debate among sovereign nations but harmonized compliance under the language of humanitarianism.
Together these institutions transform Political Moralism from a movement into a regime.
Political Moralism is not only a system of control; it is a substitute faith. It has its own theology, saints, sins, rituals, and indulgences.
Its sins are racism, denialism, and privilege, which it considers original sins, passed down by birth, that can never be absolved. Its saints are icons of purity such as Greta Thunberg, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and George Floyd. Its rituals are hashtags, marches, pledges, and kneeling ceremonies performed for cameras rather than God.
Its inquisitions are public shaming campaigns that demand confession but offer no forgiveness. Its indulgences are carbon credits, corporate donations, and public apologies that purchase temporary reprieve from condemnation.
This religion offers moral certainty without repentance and social cohesion without grace. It promises salvation through alignment rather than transformation. In doing so, it mimics faith while stripping it of humility. Where true religion binds conscience to truth, Political Moralism binds conscience to power.
Why Political Moralism is Dangerous
Political Moralism destroys the foundations of a free and rational society. It turns compromise into moral betrayal, making polite disagreement impossible.
In a moralized political order there can be no middle ground. The ballot box becomes an altar of purity, and elections become contests of virtue rather than contests of ideas. It also does not matter if a democratic process is legitimate or not, as long as the correct candidate wins.
Should the wrong candidate win, the Political Moralists lose their collective minds.
At its core, Political Moralism erases the distinction between persuasion and coercion. When an opponent is not merely wrong but evil, silencing him becomes a moral duty. The press, the law, and the mob all become instruments of salvation, saving the faithful from dissent.
Freedom of speech, which was once understood as the means through which truth refines itself, becomes the means by which evil spreads. Censorship then appears as protection, and persecution as virtue.
Political Moralism replaces shared truth with tribal narrative. Evidence becomes irrelevant, dismissed as bias or privilege. Dialogue no longer seeks understanding, but loyalty. Words are judged not by accuracy but by alignment, and the question is no longer whether a statement is true, but whether it serves the right cause.
Citizens become enforcers of their own oppression. They monitor their speech, police their thoughts, and condemn their neighbors, not because they are forced, but because they believe their obedience makes them good.
Tyranny no longer requires fear once it is sustained by faith, but those who lack that faith have a great deal to fear.
The danger grows when moralism is combined with moral relativism. Once truth is denied, morality loses its anchor, making good and evil matters of perspective. Violence becomes virtuous if it is performed in the name of ‘social justice,’ and the revolutionary believes he is saving the world even as he burns it down.
Without an objective standard, anger replaces reason and the measure of one’s virtue becomes the strength of one’s outrage. The loudest voice in the square is treated as the most righteous, even when that voice calls for destruction.
When moral relativism joins with postmodernism, the danger becomes complete. Postmodernism rejects objective truth entirely. It teaches that language creates reality rather than describing it. Once words are seen as tools of power, speech becomes a form of violence. Silence becomes violence as well.
If both speech and silence are violence, then real violence against dissent becomes the only moral act left. This is why Political Moralism is so good at regime change.
In the United States, where the Bill of Rights offers some protection, this system has thus far failed, but even here freedom holds on by a thread. History has shown where this road leads. Societies that moralize politics while denying objective truth always fall into tyranny or chaos.
The guillotine and the gulag were built by moralists who believed their violence was virtue. The Jacobins of France, the Bolsheviks of Russia, and the Red Guards of China all saw themselves as the agents of moral renewal. Each replaced conscience with loyalty, reason with emotion, and truth with power.
Once those substitutions take hold, atrocity follows. The human conscience, untethered from truth, becomes a weapon, pointed wherever the narrative directs.
Political Moralism is the modern expression of that same pattern. It presents itself as progress but repeats the oldest formula of tyranny. Its power lies in its sincerity. Few tyrants see themselves as villains. Most believe they are saving humanity from itself. That is what makes moralized politics so dangerous. It turns righteousness into a weapon and convinces good people that evil acts are holy.
Once a society crosses that threshold, freedom can no longer be preserved by law alone. The only defense against Political Moralism is moral courage: the willingness to stand for truth when truth is no longer fashionable. Without that courage, conscience becomes captive to narrative, and liberty cannot survive.
Reverse-Engineering the Framework
If the narratives keep changing but the outcomes never do, we can infer the framework. Each moral panic leaves behind the same result: more centralized authority, less individual freedom, and new institutions that outlive the crisis that justified them.
By tracing the evolution of moral narratives and the flow of money that sustains them, we can see the architecture of control with startling clarity.
Consider three examples:
1. The Climate Narrative
The original environmental movement of the 1960s focused on conservation and pollution control. By the 1990s, it had evolved into a global moral crusade centered on climate. The language shifted from stewardship to emergency, and that change was engineered to justify global governance mechanisms that bypass national legislatures.
The 1992 Rio Earth Summit created the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, which led to the Kyoto Protocol in 1997 and the Paris Agreement in 2015. Each treaty expanded the power of unelected international bodies while imposing obligations on sovereign states. The narrative was moral (“save the planet”), but the outcome was technocratic centralization. None of these treaties achieved their environmental targets, yet the bureaucracies they created continue to grow.
The World Economic Forum’s “Net Zero” initiative now reaches into every major industry, using moral pressure to enforce compliance that democratic voters never approved.
2. The Racial Justice Narrative
The civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s achieved its stated goal of equality under the law. The moral narrative did not stop there. By the 2010s, equality had been replaced by “equity,” a moral inversion in which equal treatment became oppression and unequal outcomes became proof of virtue.
The death of George Floyd in 2020 triggered the largest wave of protests in U.S. history, with more than 10,000 recorded demonstrations according to The Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project. Within weeks, corporate America pledged over $80 billion to racial justice causes, much of it directed to organizations with ideological or partisan ties.
The nonprofit watchdog InfluenceWatch found that Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation alone received tens of millions in corporate and foundation donations, while groups like the Movement for Black Lives and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund received hundreds of millions more.
Federal and state agencies joined in. The Department of Education, the CDC, and even the Pentagon implemented DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) initiatives that now cost taxpayers billions annually.
When the moral fervor faded, the DEI bureaucracy remained. It now reaches into hiring, promotion, research funding, and education policy. It has become a permanent structure born from a single moral panic.
Pete Hegseth is removing DEI from the military, and the media is, of course, outraged.
3. The Health Security Narrative
The COVID-19 pandemic provided another window into how moral crises become mechanisms of control. What began as a public health emergency quickly became a moral crusade. Citizens were told they had a duty to comply, and dissent was portrayed as selfishness or even violence.
In 2021, internal documents from the Department of Homeland Security revealed that federal agencies had partnered with social media companies to monitor and suppress speech deemed “misinformation.” Programs like the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s MDM (Misinformation, Disinformation, and Malinformation) initiative gave government access to the flow of online discourse.
By 2023, even the Stanford Internet Observatory’s Virality Project admitted in its own reports that true information could be labeled “misinformation” if it undermined trust in official policy. That in fact is the definition of ‘Malinformation’: true information that is dangerous to the prescribed narrative.
We now call the truth ‘false’ when it does not fit.
The moral justification was “safety,” but the outcome was mass surveillance and censorship infrastructure, and that still exists today. As always, the crisis faded but the controls did not.
The architects of control understand that people will not surrender freedom for power’s sake, but they will surrender it for moral salvation. If you moralize every issue, compliance feels like virtue. The framework is the constant.
The recurring outcomes reveal the framework’s pillars: technocratic centralization, weakened national sovereignty, expanded censorship, and perpetual moral mobilization. Political Moralism is the story we tell ourselves to make those pillars look holy.
The Role of Funding
Narratives fade. Institutions persist. What keeps them alive is money.
Funding is the skeleton key of Political Moralism, and the process is consistent: a crisis is declared, funds are allocated to organizations that embody the approved moral position, those organizations create campaigns, training programs, and compliance systems that reinforce the narrative, and the narrative then justifies additional funding.
This is measurable. According to the Council on Foundations and Candid, American foundations and corporations pledged over $340 billion to “social justice” causes between 2020 and 2023. Of that, more than half went to nonprofits already dependent on government grants or contracts. In effect, taxpayers finance the very ideologies that divide them.
Groups like BLM and ANTIFA are instructive. Neither movement is sustained by spontaneous activism alone. Both rely on organized networks of NGOs, legal defense funds, and academic partnerships.
Both were funded by USAID, which means they were funded by taxpayers.
A 2020 Politico investigation found that over 90 percent of bail funds and street-level activist groups were connected through the Tides Foundation or the Open Society Network. Those networks receive funding from government agencies, multinational corporations, and foreign donors under the banner of “civil society.”
The purpose of ‘cash free bail’ is not fairness. It is to save these groups money – and again, they are spending our tax dollars.
We shall see how generous George Soros is now that he has to donate his own money to such groups, instead of donating ours.
When the moral narrative shifts, the funding shifts with it, but the institutions remain. What begins as a movement ends as a bureaucracy.
The result is a permanent moral infrastructure that no election can reverse. Each crisis installs a new layer of control, and each layer becomes self-justifying. DEI offices will exist long after the slogans fade, and surveillance agencies will continue long after the next virus is contained.
Climate treaties will persist long after the models are revised.
By following the sequence – crisis, moral narrative, funding, institutionalization – we can see the architecture of Political Moralism for what it is: a system that governs through moral emotion rather than reasoned consent. Its strength lies in its invisibility. It feels like compassion, yet it functions as control.
Reader Tools: How to Spot Political Moralism
Recognizing Political Moralism requires moral literacy. Here are practical steps:
- Observe framing. When an issue is presented as good versus evil rather than cause versus effect, moralism has replaced reasoning.
- Ask who benefits. Every narrative serves power. Identify who gains authority, funding, or status from its adoption.
- Follow the money. Track the grants, subsidies, and donations that sustain moral movements.
- Watch for permanence. When a crisis ends but its institutions remain, you are seeing the framework in action.
- Compare rhetoric and results. If slogans change but the concentration of power continues, moralism is not morality, but control.
A free citizen must think as a moral realist, not a moral consumer.
The antidote to Political Moralism is a return to genuine morality. True morality begins with humility, seeks truth, accepts responsibility, and respects freedom. It is rooted in conscience and tested by consequence.
Political Moralism, by contrast, is rooted in pride. It demands conformity, rewards arrogance, and measures virtue by obedience. It rejects cause-and-effect in favor of emotional satisfaction. Cause is assumed.
A society cannot survive when morality is replaced by moralism. To restore liberty, we must restore truth as the standard. That requires courage: questioning sacred narratives, trusting conscience over popularity, and speaking truth even when silence feels safer, and even when ANTIFA arrives with their bicycle locks.
The narrative does not speak truth to power. It shouts down truth with power.
Political Moralism is the worldview through which elites execute a framework of control. Closed-Loop Virtue Signaling spreads it, funding sustains it, and institutions entrench it. The cost is nothing less than the human conscience.
The path forward is not cynicism but clarity. We must learn to reverse-engineer the framework, follow the money, and expose the machinery of moral coercion. More than that, we must reclaim the moral high ground. We already stand on it. We need to use it and call evil out by name.











