Government by Defiance
There was a short season, after the first serious blows landed against DEI, when a certain kind of conservative allowed himself to believe the beast was dying. I never quite bought it. Movements built around status, bureaucracy, and moral self-permission do not expire because they lose an election, suffer a court defeat, or get a bad week in the press. They adapt. They rename themselves. They move from the front office to the compliance department.
DEI is not dead. It is a wounded animal.
That matters because wounded animals do not become reasonable. They become more dangerous in smaller spaces. At the national level, DEI has taken hits. Corporations have trimmed some slogans. Universities have discovered that “racial justice” can become legally inconvenient when written down too plainly. Federal policy may shift. Donors may grow skittish. But in many Democrat-controlled cities, counties, school districts, and state agencies, the lesson has not been humility. It has been defiance.
This is the next stage: government by defiance.
The method is simple enough. The public objects to racial preference, ideological hiring, gender catechisms in schools, or activist bureaucracies pretending to be neutral administrators. Courts or legislatures say, in one form or another, “Stop doing that.” The bureaucracy then pauses, changes the label, rewrites the memo, shifts the money to a new office, and resumes the same project under gentler lighting. Equity becomes “belonging.” Racial balancing becomes “inclusive excellence.” Political training becomes “workplace culture.” The old wine goes into a new bottle, and the bottle gets a grant.
Anyone who has watched a school district operate knows the pattern. Parents complain about ideological material in the classroom. The district insists no such thing is happening. Then, after six hours of public comment and three public-records requests, it turns out the thing is happening under a different title, through outside consultants, or in teacher training rather than the published curriculum. The denial was never quite a denial. It was a routing instruction.
The same is true in city government. A program sold as public safety becomes a social justice employment pipeline. A homelessness initiative becomes a permanent bureaucracy of failure with better vocabulary. A hiring office becomes an ideological checkpoint. Nobody quite votes for this machinery in its full form. It arrives through committees, guidance documents, professional associations, consent decrees, and philanthropic partnerships. By the time the citizen notices, he is told he lacks the expertise to object.
This is why the “woke is dead” line was always too tidy. Woke politics was never merely a fashion of language. It was a transfer of authority. It moved power away from voters, families, local custom, merit, and law, and placed it in the hands of credentialed managers who claim moral jurisdiction over ordinary life. That sort of power is not surrendered because the slogans have become embarrassing.
The far left’s moral compass has also become startlingly reliable in the wrong direction. Give it a choice between order and disorder, and it will call disorder compassion. Give it a choice between the citizen and the claimant, and it will suspect the citizen. Give it a choice between inheritance and destruction, and it will describe destruction as liberation. This is not reform. It is resentment with a pension plan.
The old DEI regime may be too exposed now to strut as openly as it once did. Good. Exposure matters. But exposure is not defeat. The next fight will be against the renamed version, the embedded version, the local version, the version that tells you it has learned its lesson while doing exactly what it did before.
A wounded ideology is still an ideology. And when it controls the office, the budget, the school district, and the forms you have to fill out, it does not need to win the argument. It only needs to outlast your attention.-Rick Wagner










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