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The Left's Radical Ideas Quickly Becoming Law
How destructive ideas and collective madness swiftly become policy, law, and the status quo
Published on Mar. 2, 2026
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The author examines how outlandish ideas from left-leaning academics and activists rapidly gain traction and become institutionalized, despite lacking widespread public support. He describes a multi-step process where the media, celebrities, and activist groups help push these radical notions into the mainstream, often through tactics like silencing skeptics and creating new victim groups. The article cites examples like the rise of transgenderism, the 'defund the police' movement, and the dismissal of standardized testing, showing how these once-fringe ideas have become enshrined in law and policy in a matter of years.
Why it matters
This trend highlights how a small but vocal minority can leverage the power of institutions, media, and activist groups to rapidly transform society, even when their ideas lack broad public backing. It raises questions about the role of democracy, the influence of elite institutions, and the ability of the public to resist ideological shifts that many see as destructive.
The details
The author outlines a common pattern where left-leaning academics first propose radical new theories, which are then amplified by the media and embraced by celebrities and activist groups. This creates an illusion of growing grassroots support, leading politicians to enshrine these ideas into law and policy. Examples include the rapid mainstreaming of transgenderism, the 'defund the police' movement, and the dismissal of standardized testing, all of which occurred within a matter of years despite lacking widespread public backing.
- A few years ago, the public was told of a new and huge victimized group suffering from 'gender dysphoria'.
- Drag shows, once confined to enclaves, were suddenly mainstreamed into military bases, children's libraries and cruise ships.
- In 2025, these destructive manias began shriveling up and being forgotten.
The players
Left-leaning researchers in elite universities
They begin insisting that a new existential threat requires immediate government intervention, novel legislation, ample funding and public awareness of the impending danger.
The media
They work hand-in-glove with academia to persuade the skeptical public to 'follow the science' and 'trust the experts', castigating any doubters as cranks or 'conspiracy theorists'.
Hollywood and sports celebrities
They often piggyback on the frenzy, hijacking awards ceremonies and pre-game national anthems to out-virtue-signal each other, warning the public that they must adapt and change.
Liberal foundations
They begin funding more 'research' to 'prove' that partisan 'experts' should not be ignored, and fund activist groups that hit the street to gin up popular support.
Democratic politicians
They keep quiet about initial crackdowns on illegal immigration, but later equate ICE with the Nazi Gestapo after massive and violent demonstrations in major blue cities.
The takeaway
This trend highlights the power of a small but vocal minority to rapidly transform society through the strategic use of institutions, media, and activist groups, even when their ideas lack broad public support. It raises important questions about the role of democracy, the influence of elite institutions, and the ability of the public to resist ideological shifts that many see as destructive.
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