The Refusal to Grow Up
There is something strangely adolescent about modern elite culture.
Not youthful in the good sense. Not adventurous, energetic, exploratory, alive. Not the kind of youth that builds things, risks things, tests itself against reality.
Something softer.
A permanent extension of the emotional logic of late adolescence.
A culture increasingly organized around the belief that discomfort is harm, criticism is violence, identity is destiny, and emotional vulnerability confers moral authority.
That is the psychological core of wokeness.
Not compassion. Not justice. Infantilism.
You see it everywhere once you notice it.
The obsession with emotional safety. The inability to tolerate ambiguity. The expectation that institutions should regulate ordinary human friction. The transformation of disagreement into trauma. The constant appeal to administrators, HR departments, moderators, reporting systems, speech codes, and therapeutic language.
It is the emotional architecture of children calling for the teacher.
And the deeper irony is that this mentality emerged inside the safest and wealthiest societies in human history.
Not among people working on oil rigs, fishing boats, construction sites, farms, or factory floors. Not in places where reality answers quickly and brutally. It emerged inside managerial and academic environments where physical hardship has largely disappeared and psychological interpretation becomes the primary battlefield.
That matters.
Because human beings do not simply become peaceful once material survival is secured. The energy moves elsewhere.