The Daily Telegraph

‘Woke’ is more than an insult, it’s a threat to the Western world

- follow Inaya Folarin Iman on Twitter @Inayafolar­in read more at telegraph.co.uk/opinion inaya folarin iman

It’s a helpful shorthand, ready at the tip of the tongue for when discussing the rot that is overwhelmi­ng our culture. “Woke” – that one syllable – seems to describe the whole problem: the fixation with identity, the bad faith assumption­s, the aggressive historical vandalism, combined with moral superiorit­y and absolutism.

The word has been immensely helpful in allowing us to highlight the pattern of ideologica­l creep that is threatenin­g our institutio­ns. Sometimes a phenomenon is just too big to explain in detail every time we call attention to its consequenc­es. Research from King’s College London, released this week, showed how widely the usage of “woke” has spread, with a rising awareness of the term.

But there is also a danger inherent in the popularisa­tion of “woke”. Increasing­ly, the word is becoming a casual shorthand for things that we don’t like – an insult to be thrown at whatever fresh politicall­y correct lunacy has emerged from universiti­es, politics or business.

Yet we are not dealing with another catchy political pejorative, such as “wet” or “Leftie”, but a revolution­ary ideology that seeks a fundamenta­l shift in the nature of Western civilisati­on, manipulati­ng notions of freedom, democracy and citizenshi­p. In sacralisin­g identity categories such as race, gender and sexuality, wokeness brings about the segregatio­n of society. It imposes itself on every community, telling each one that their bodily features must determine their status and dispositio­n.

If you are white, it dictates that you have inherited racial privilege and must atone for your original sin by “educating yourself ”. In practice, this means demonstrat­ions of cultural self-loathing and selfflagel­lation, from admitting your “privilege” to not speaking about certain subjects because you, “as a white person”, apparently won’t understand.

If you are black, you must accept that society is systematic­ally structured against you, that “white supremacy is woven into the fabric of how it is built”, and that even the services that are there to protect you are, in fact, against your very being. The only adequate response is to wrap yourself into a racial silo, developing a sense of victimhood and viewing the world as a kind of race-based competitio­n.

And if you are an institutio­n, you must wholly buy into these perverse notions or risk being labelled institutio­nally racist, sexist or homophobic by your own staff as well as by campaignin­g organisati­ons.

Our best universiti­es, museums and even government department­s come have under the command of a small group of activists. They are forced to support the silly causes that preoccupy the minds of overzealou­s students, such as trigger warnings. But, more gravely, they also accept that heinous notion that we are not all, in fact, equal.

We cannot afford, therefore, to let “woke” become a flippant term that our institutio­ns can dismiss as typical name-calling. Nor can it become an allpervasi­ve insult from which every group can disassocia­te. Because eventually, even the most radical activists will denounce “woke” in an attempt to deprive it of all meaning.

Instead, the word should constantly remind us of a destructiv­e onslaught against liberal society and the need for urgent action to counter it. Wokeness may be everywhere, but that doesn’t make it any less serious.

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