
PostEverything Everything is a Litmus Test w/ George A. Yancey
Feb 18, 2026
George A. Yancey, Baylor sociology professor who studies identity, race, and religion, discusses identity politics, rising polarization, and moral persuasion. He explores how oppressor/oppressed framing reshapes public life. Conversations cover racial dynamics since 2020, Tim Keller’s Third Way, the church’s role in formation, and what virtues leaders need in a fractured culture.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Identity Politics Fuels Dehumanizing Polarization
- Identity politics amplifies polarization by framing opponents as oppressors, which dehumanizes them and removes concern for their rights.
- George A. Yancey illustrates this shifted binary: once-white straight males were labeled oppressors, and now labels flip across contexts, fueling entrenched conflict.
Polarization Turned Science Into Politics
- Polarization turned COVID from a technical/scientific problem into a political struggle, preventing flexible responses like reopening schools when data supported it.
- Yancey shows how partisan alignment with selective scientific claims blocked pragmatic problem-solving.
George Floyd Moment Shocked Broader Sympathy
- George A. Yancey recalls the George Floyd moment catching many off guard because the visual horror provoked broad sympathy beyond usual partisan lines.
- He argues later protests face hardened resistance so similar mass shifts are less likely now.





