ChatGPT says: Through Alliance Theory, critical race theory is powerful not because of any single claim it makes, but because of the coordination work it performs.
CRT is an alliance technology.
Core appeal.
CRT offers a simple, totalizing map of society that sorts people into moral positions based on group identity and structural power. That map solves a basic coordination problem for elites, institutions, and aspiring moral leaders. It tells them who must be deferred to, who must apologize, who may speak, and who must be managed.
Why it spread so quickly in elite institutions.
Alliance Theory predicts that institutions under legitimacy stress adopt moral frameworks that signal virtue, discipline members, and deflect blame. CRT does all three.
It signals virtue by aligning the institution with the moral arc of history.
It disciplines insiders by creating speech norms and sanction mechanisms.
It deflects blame by attributing failures to systems rather than managers.
Once installed, it is self-reinforcing.
Why the theory is framed as “critical” rather than empirical.
CRT does not compete on truth claims in the ordinary sense. It competes on moral authority. Calling something “lived experience” or “structural” places it beyond falsification and therefore beyond challenge. Alliance Theory predicts this move because unfalsifiable claims are excellent loyalty tests.
Why disagreement is treated as harm.
In alliance terms, dissent is defection. If CRT is the shared moral language of the coalition, questioning it threatens group cohesion. Labeling dissent as violence, erasure, or fragility converts intellectual disagreement into moral breach.
Why it appeals to activists and administrators differently.
For activists, CRT offers moral elevation and clarity. It transforms frustration into righteousness and grants status through accusation and exposure.
For administrators, CRT offers governance tools. It justifies new offices, trainings, compliance regimes, and disciplinary authority. It replaces messy politics with proceduralized morality.
Each side gets power from the same framework.
Why it downplays class in practice.
Although CRT sometimes gestures toward material inequality, its primary function is status management, not redistribution. Alliance Theory predicts this because elite coalitions prefer moral frameworks that reallocate prestige without threatening asset control.
Why it produces intense backlash.
CRT redraws alliance boundaries. It elevates some groups and demotes others symbolically, often regardless of individual behavior or intent. Those who lose status experience it as unjust and totalizing. The backlash is not confusion. It is a predictable response to forced realignment.
Why it persists despite public unpopularity.
Because it is most entrenched where mass opinion matters least. Universities, media, nonprofits, HR departments, and cultural institutions reward internal conformity more than external approval. Alliance Theory predicts durability when elite coordination is stronger than democratic feedback.
Bottom line.
Critical race theory’s appeal and power do not come from persuading skeptics. They come from aligning institutions, sorting allies from enemies, rewarding compliance, and providing a moral language that stabilizes elite coalitions during periods of social conflict.
