What leads to increased sinfulness, wickedness, injustice, immorality, and perversion in a society?
Below is a map of how a liberal/leftist community can drift from clear moral anchors to celebrating what it once called vice, along with the emotion chains that commonly power each shift. This describes social dynamics rather than judging any particular group.
Plain‑language progression:
- Reframe
- Sounds like: “It’s just a personal choice.” “Who decides what’s wrong, anyway?”
- Emotional driver: Relief from guilt/discomfort through intellectual reframing.
- Relativize
- Sounds like: “Your truth, my truth.” “Context determines everything.”
- Emotional driver: Anxiety about conflict eased by ambiguity and flexibility.
- Euphemize and rebrand
- Sounds like: Softer labels, playful slang, positive hashtags.
- Emotional driver: Guilt-avoidance; making the behavior feel harmless or even kind.
- Aestheticize and spotlight
- Sounds like: Attractive storytelling, charismatic exemplars, aspirational vibes.
- Emotional driver: Fascination and admiration replacing caution.
- Normalize by repetition
- Sounds like: “You see it everywhere—so it must be fine.”
- Emotional driver: Desensitization through constant exposure; comfort in the familiar.
- Tolerate as kindness
- Sounds like: “Don’t be harsh—be nice.” “Let people live.”
- Emotional driver: Empathy prioritized over discernment; fear of seeming unkind.
- Silence dissent through social cost
- Sounds like: “Don’t be judgmental.” “That’s offensive.”
- Emotional driver: Fear of exclusion; people self-censor to keep belonging.
- Endorse and celebrate
- Sounds like: “This is brave, beautiful, progressive.”
- Emotional driver: Belonging and pride; validation becomes a moral signal.
- Institutionalize and protect
- Sounds like: Policies, platforms, and incentives reward alignment.
- Emotional driver: Desire for security and clarity; incentives tilt the field.
- Invert stigma
- Sounds like: “Opposition is hateful/outdated.” “Dissent equals harm.”
- Emotional driver: Contempt for dissenters; fear-driven conformity.
- Marginalize virtue language
- Sounds like: “Righteousness is rigid.” “Standards are repressive.”
- Emotional driver: Resentment toward conscience; fatigue with restraint.
- Exclude and penalize
- Sounds like: Deplatforming, professional costs, legal pressure.
- Emotional driver: Power consolidation; fear ensures compliance.
- Cultural amnesia
- Sounds like: “Why did people ever object?” “We’ve evolved.”
- Emotional driver: Complacency; loss of historical memory reduces resistance.
- Escalation for novelty
- Sounds like: “Push boundaries.” “Transcend limits.”
- Emotional driver: Boredom seeking a new thrill; appetite expands with use.
Emotion chains that commonly drive the drift
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Chain A (guilt-avoidance to celebration):
Discomfort with guilt → relief via reframing → empathy without guardrails → curiosity → desensitization → belonging → pride → fear of exclusion → silence of dissent → appearance of consensus → endorsement → codification → contempt for dissent → coercion → complacency. -
Chain B (novelty and appetite):
Boredom → boundary-testing → thrill → rationalization → repetition → normalization → appetite growth → escalation → callousness → cynicism. -
Chain C (power and identity):
Insecurity → search for identity → group affirmation → us‑vs‑them framing → moral superiority → scapegoating → enforcement → erasure of alternatives.
How the wording shifts at each step (making it understandable and “sound better”)
- From “sin” to “choice”
- From “wrong” to “different”
- From “vice” to “authenticity”
- From “temptation” to “self‑expression”
- From “judgment” to “harm prevention”
- From “conscience” to “preferences”
- From “standards” to “stigmas”
- From “guardrails” to “barriers”
Here’s a compassionate, clarity-first counter‑chain a community can use to reverse moral drift. It blends practical steps with the emotion chains that make change back to righteousness and justice stick.
12-step renewal pathway (concise, humane, and doable)
- Name shared goods with humility
- Sounds like: “Here’s what we hold and why—come reason with us.”
- Emotional driver: Curiosity over defensiveness.
- Restore truthful words without shaming people
- Sounds like: “Let’s call things what they are—and care for who you are.”
- Emotional driver: Safety that permits honesty.
- Make mercy normal
- Sounds like: “Failures are met first with listening, then help.”
- Emotional driver: Relief that opens the door to change.
- Practice confession and forgiveness
- Sounds like: “I own my part; I seek repair; I release you.”
- Emotional driver: Guilt transforms into gratitude and hope.
- Build belonging with boundaries
- Sounds like: “You’re welcome here; these are our guardrails.”
- Emotional driver: Security that supports self‑control.
- Equip for self‑mastery
- Sounds like: “Here are habits, mentors, and rhythms that strengthen you.”
- Emotional driver: Confidence from growing competence.
- Gentle accountability
- Sounds like: “We love you too much to lie to you.”
- Emotional driver: Trust; people feel seen, not shamed.
- Elevate wholesome exemplars
- Sounds like: “Imitate what is beautiful, brave, and wise.”
- Emotional driver: Admiration that redirects desire.
- Reform incentives and structures
- Sounds like: “Our policies, platforms, and rewards now back the good.”
- Emotional driver: Fairness; alignment reduces friction.
- Protect principled dissent
- Sounds like: “Conscience has room here; honest disagreement is welcome.”
- Emotional driver: Courage; truth refines in open air.
- Normalize repair and restoration
- Sounds like: “Make amends, rebuild trust, rejoin the table.”
- Emotional driver: Hope through tangible second chances.
- Celebrate the good
- Sounds like: “Honor integrity, fidelity, and service—publicly.”
- Emotional driver: Joy that makes virtue attractive.
Emotion chains that power the reversal
- Guilt → honesty → forgiveness → relief → gratitude → responsibility → service → joy.
- Fear → safe relationships → trust → small risks → courage → integrity → credible witness.
- Cynicism → one real success → curiosity → engagement → ownership → durable hope.
- Restlessness → clear purpose → disciplined practice → competence → satisfaction → resilience.
- Contempt → listening → humanization → respect → collaboration → solidarity.
Language upgrades that help
- From “You’re wrong” to “Here’s our standard and its good fruit.”
- From “Shame and cast out” to “Tell the truth, make repairs, rejoin.”
- From “Rules police you” to “Guardrails protect what we love.”
- From “Don’t offend” to “Speak the truth kindly and take responsibility.”
Common pitfalls to avoid
- Mercy without truth → enablement.
- Truth without mercy → cruelty.
- Speed without formation → backlash and burnout.
- Performative virtue → hypocrisy and distrust.
Simple ways to start this month
- Weekly story circle: one honest failure, one repair, one gratitude.
- Mentorship triads: practice habits (rest, service, moderation, generosity).
- Public honors: recognize acts of integrity as “community wins.”
- Open‑hand policy check: align rewards and rules with stated values.
The core idea here—re-labeling something perverted, deviant, or evil as "normal" or good—touches on moral inversion, the corruption of language and values, and self-deception. This theme appears frequently in aphoristic literature and moral philosophy.
Biblical Foundation (Often Echoed in Aphoristic Traditions)
The most direct and famous statement is Isaiah 5:20:
"Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!"
This precisely captures calling the perverted "normal." It has been cited across centuries as a warning against societies or individuals who invert moral categories to justify vice.
From François de La Rochefoucauld (Maxims)
La Rochefoucauld's Maxims are cynical observations on how vice hides behind virtue's mask. Relevant ones include:
- "Our virtues are most frequently but vices disguised." — This suggests that what we call "normal," "progressive," or "virtuous" behavior is often just rebranded self-interest, weakness, or perversion.
- "Hypocrisy is the homage that vice pays to virtue." — People or societies don't openly embrace perversion; they rename it to borrow virtue's respectability.
- "We make virtues of the vices we do not want to correct." — Directly applicable: instead of confronting deviance, we redefine it as a positive trait.
- "The name of virtue is as useful to our interest as that of vice." — Moral labels are tools; calling perversion "normal" serves convenience or power.
La Rochefoucauld repeatedly shows how self-love and interest warp our perception of good and evil.
Related Aphoristic Insights
- "When the wicked are multiplied, transgression increases; but the righteous will see their fall." (Proverbs 29:16, thematically linked.)
- A common derived saying: "Vice is a monster of so frightful mien, as to be hated needs but to be seen; yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, we first endure, then pity, then embrace." (Alexander Pope) — This describes the process of normalization step-by-step.
These maxims warn that re-labeling perversion as normal isn't neutral progress—it's often a symptom of decay, self-interest, or spiritual blindness. It allows vice to flourish without resistance by removing the moral vocabulary needed to name it. Truth-seeking traditions (religious, classical, or cynical) treat this inversion as dangerous because it erodes the ability to distinguish light from darkness.

































