Identity Politics, Polarization & Moral Persuasion — with Dr. George Yancey
Why does every political controversy feel like a Rorschach test?
In this episode of Posteverything, sociologist Dr. George Yancey joins us to explore identity politics, polarization, and whether moral persuasion still works in a culture that rewards outrage over understanding.
We discuss how framing everything through power and oppression reshapes public discourse, why polarization may be a crisis of moral formation rather than ideology, and what happens when shared moral language erodes.
We also examine Tim Keller’s “Third Way,” the limits of political power, and the church’s role in forming people who can engage culture without being consumed by it.
This is a conversation about truth, trust, leadership—and what kind of people we need to become in a liminal age.
🔍 Big Questions We Explore
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Is identity politics a strategy—or a substitute religion?
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When does moral persuasion break down?
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What happens when we lose shared moral language?
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What kind of people do we need to become in a liminal age?
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro
02:15 The Cost of Identity Politics
06:59 Polarization and Its Consequences
13:38 The Evolution of Racial Dynamics
20:29 Understanding Identity Politics
28:19 Tim Keller's Third Way
34:34 Moral Persuasion and Its Challenges
40:20 The Role of the Church in Society
49:18 Navigating a Post-Secular World