0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

White Centrism, Explained

Order, Reassurance, and the Cost of Silence

This video is a clear-eyed, historically grounded meditation on how moments of political theater became templates for a broader centrist habit of disciplining dissent rather than confronting power. I move from the 1990s to the present to show how moral condemnation, when selectively deployed, has often served to reassure anxious majorities while leaving structural violence intact, and how that logic echoes in today’s debates over immigration, policing, and political “extremism.” The through-line is narrative: how America repeatedly chooses stability, tone policing, and symbolic order over an uncomfortable truth, even when the consequences grow more dangerous. It’s part history lesson, part warning flare, and part invitation to stop mistaking rhetorical balance for justice.

You can read the full article here:

Stew'd Over

White Centrism in a Time of Armed Power

White Centrism in a Time of Armed Power

Author’s Note: I’m making Stew’d Over free today. So enjoy. If you like the deep dive, then consider becoming a paid subscriber to get more post-game analysis after my daily free essay.


A paid subscription gets you:

  • Full access to the archives

  • The ability to comment and join the conversation

  • Stew’d Over, and other bonus daily newsletters!

  • Live Ask Me Anything sessions with paid readers

This independent work is sustained by readers who want more than headlines and hot takes.


Leave a comment

Share

Share Stew on This

Discussion about this video

User's avatar

Ready for more?