A zero-sum safety determination is a specific kind of policy decision. It is not merely contested. It is structurally inverted: the identical outcome, the same door open or closed, the same person housed in the same facility, the same word permitted or forbidden, produces the direct experience of safety for one hero system and the direct experience of danger for the other. There is no compromise position. The thing either happens or it does not, and whichever way it goes, someone experiences it as protection and someone experiences it as threat.
These ten cases meet that standard.
1. Housing biological males who identify as women in women’s prisons
This is perhaps the purest zero-sum safety determination in contemporary American policy. The identical housing decision, placing a biological male in a female facility, is simultaneously a safety measure within the Clerisy’s hero system, which defines the incarcerated person’s psychological safety as depending on placement consistent with gender identity, and a direct physical danger within the traditional hero system, which defines women’s safety in prison as depending on separation from biological males, particularly those convicted of violent or sexual offenses.
There is no middle position. The person is either housed with women or not. One group’s safety is the other’s danger. The women in those facilities who have no ability to exit, many of whom are survivors of male violence, bear the cost if the Clerisy’s definition prevails. The trans-identified person bears the cost if the traditional definition prevails. The decision is a zero-sum distribution of safety and danger with no remainder.
2. Biological sex versus gender identity in women’s shelters
Domestic violence shelters were built on a specific premise: that women fleeing male violence need spaces where no biological males are present. The self-identification policy that the Clerisy’s hero system requires dismantles that premise entirely. A shelter that admits anyone who self-identifies as a woman is, within the traditional hero system, no longer a women’s shelter in any meaningful safety sense. It is a mixed-sex facility using different language.
For a woman who fled a violent male partner and sought refuge specifically from male bodies, the presence of a biological male in the shelter, regardless of that person’s gender identity, is experienced as a direct safety failure. For the trans-identified person denied entry, the exclusion is experienced as a direct safety failure. The door is either open or closed. Both experiences are real. Only one can be honored at a time.
3. Biological males in women’s and girls’ sports and changing rooms
The safety question in sports has two layers that the debate usually conflates. The first is fairness, which is important but not strictly a safety issue. The second is physical safety in contact sports, where biological males who have undergone male puberty retain bone density, muscle mass, and strength that create genuine injury risk for female competitors. The changing room question is not about injury but about something equally fundamental within the traditional hero system: the right of girls and women to undress in spaces free from biological male bodies.
For a girl in a high school locker room, the presence of a biological male, however that person identifies, is experienced as a violation of bodily safety and privacy that the traditional hero system considers foundational to female dignity. For the trans-identified person excluded from that space, exclusion is experienced as a denial of identity recognition that their hero system defines as a safety need. The locker room either contains biological males or it does not. Both experiences of the decision are genuine safety experiences within their respective frameworks.
4. Parental notification and consent for minors seeking sex-change interventions
A minor child who wants to begin hormone therapy or pursue other sex-change medical intervention without parental knowledge is either permitted to do so or not. Within the Clerisy’s hero system, confidential access to this care is a safety measure: the child may face unsupportive or hostile parents, and forcing disclosure may expose them to harm. Within the traditional hero system, allowing a minor to undergo permanent medical interventions without parental knowledge or consent is a safety catastrophe: it removes parents from decisions with lifelong consequences, severs the family’s protective function, and exposes children to iatrogenic harms without the oversight that parental involvement provides.
There is no policy that is simultaneously confidential from parents and disclosed to parents. The decision is binary. One hero system’s safety is the other’s danger, and the stakes on both sides are genuinely high: suicide risk on one side, irreversible medical harm and family rupture on the other.
5. The presence of severely mentally ill and untreated psychotic individuals in public spaces
The policy decision is whether to treat street homelessness combined with serious untreated mental illness as a public safety problem requiring involuntary intervention, or as a social problem requiring voluntary housing-first approaches that do not override the individual’s autonomy. This is genuinely zero-sum in the safety dimension.
Within the Clerisy’s hero system, involuntary commitment or forced treatment of homeless mentally ill individuals is a safety threat to those individuals: it violates autonomy, risks retraumatization, and subjects vulnerable people to coercive state power. Within the traditional hero system, leaving untreated psychotic individuals in public spaces is a safety threat to the people who must use those spaces: transit workers, shop owners, elderly residents, and anyone who cannot afford to avoid public infrastructure. A transit worker attacked by a man in a psychotic episode has experienced a genuine safety failure. So has the mentally ill person subjected to coercive commitment. The same policy decision produces both. There is no option that is safe for everyone.
6. Immigration enforcement and sanctuary policies
A sanctuary policy that prevents local law enforcement from cooperating with federal immigration authorities on individuals with criminal records is simultaneously a safety measure within the Clerisy’s hero system, protecting immigrant communities from the terror of enforcement that makes them reluctant to report crimes, and a safety failure within the traditional hero system, which defines national boundaries and the removal of criminal aliens as foundational to civic order and neighborhood safety.
When an individual in the country illegally, who had prior contact with law enforcement that sanctuary policy prevented from escalating to ICE, commits a violent crime against a citizen, that citizen’s family experiences a safety failure produced by the sanctuary policy. When an undocumented immigrant is swept up in enforcement action while reporting a crime, that community’s willingness to cooperate with law enforcement collapses, producing a safety failure for the crime victims whose cases go unreported. The same policy produces both outcomes. The question of which safety concern takes priority is entirely determined by which hero system you inhabit.
7. School curriculum content on gender identity, sexuality, and family structure
A curriculum that teaches children that sex is a spectrum, that family structures are diverse and equally valid, and that gender identity is self-defined is, within the Clerisy’s hero system, a safety measure: it creates an environment where LGBTQ children feel recognized and reduces the isolation and suicidality associated with invisibility. Within the traditional hero system, the same curriculum is a safety threat: it exposes children to content that contradicts their family’s religious and moral framework, undermines the hero system the family is trying to transmit, and in some cases actively teaches children to question or conceal their emerging values from their parents.
The curriculum either contains this content or it does not. A child from a religious family who is taught that their parents’ view of sex and family is wrong experiences that as a safety violation of the meaning structure they depend on. A gay or trans child in a school that contains no recognition of their existence experiences that as a safety violation of a different kind. The classroom cannot simultaneously validate and invalidate both hero systems. One will be taught and the other will be corrected.
8. The legal status of biological sex
Whether biological sex is recognized as a legally meaningful category in contexts where it was historically treated as one, medical records, athletics, incarceration, single-sex institutions, and legal protections, is a single policy determination with opposite safety consequences for the two hero systems.
For the traditional hero system, the erasure of biological sex as a legal category is an existential safety threat: it dismantles the entire architecture of sex-based protections that women specifically fought for and depend on. For a rape survivor whose medical record no longer accurately records her biological sex, or a female athlete whose category has been redefined to include people with male physiology, the erasure is a material harm. For the trans-identified person, the refusal to legally recognize gender identity is the safety threat: it forces them to operate under a legal designation that contradicts their self-understanding in every institutional encounter. The category either is or is not meaningful in law. Whichever way it goes, someone’s foundational safety architecture is built on it and someone else’s is dismantled.
9. Religious exemptions from anti-discrimination requirements
A religious baker, florist, photographer, or adoption agency either is or is not required to provide services for same-sex ceremonies or place children with same-sex couples. This is a genuine zero-sum determination. There is no policy under which the religious professional is simultaneously required and not required to participate.
Within the Clerisy’s hero system, a refusal to serve is a safety failure: it communicates to LGBTQ individuals that they are not entitled to equal participation in public commercial life, it exposes them to the humiliation of rejection, and it signals that their relationships are considered less legitimate. This is experienced as a genuine dignity and safety harm. Within the traditional hero system, compelled participation in ceremonies that violate the provider’s religious convictions is a safety failure of a different kind: it subordinates the individual’s relationship with God and their deepest moral commitments to the state’s definition of non-discrimination, which they experience as a form of spiritual coercion that threatens their ability to live within their own hero system. One person’s refusal is the other’s persecution. The law either requires the service or exempts the provider.
10. The public role and institutional presence of traditional religion
Whether traditional religious expression, practice, and moral teaching retains a legitimate place in public institutions, schools, civic life, and the formation of public norms, or whether it is confined to private practice with no claim on public space, is the broadest and most foundational zero-sum safety determination on this list.
For the person whose hero system is rooted in traditional religion, the progressive Clerisy’s systematic removal of religious expression from public life is experienced as a direct safety threat: it dismantles the cosmic order within which they make sense of existence, raises children without the transcendent framework that gives suffering meaning, and replaces a stable and tested structure of meaning with an immanent frame that offers no answer to mortality and contingency. Becker argued this was not a preference but a psychological necessity, and the evidence of the meaning crisis, rising suicide, addiction, despair, and the collapse of communities that religious institutions once held together, suggests he was right.
For the person whose hero system is defined by autonomy and self-creation, the public presence of traditional religious authority is a safety threat of its own kind: it is the re-entry into public life of a framework that has historically been used to exclude, condemn, and in some cases physically harm people whose identities fall outside its boundaries. For a gay teenager in a religious community that treats their orientation as disordered, the religious framework is not a safety structure. It is a source of genuine psychological danger.
The public role of religion either expands or contracts. When it expands, one set of people gains a meaning structure that sustains them and another set encounters a framework that condemns them. When it contracts, one set gains relief from that condemnation and another loses the scaffolding through which they understood their lives. There is no position on this question that does not distribute safety and danger along hero system lines.
The Structure of Zero-Sum Safety
What these ten cases share is not that they are difficult political questions, though they are. It is that they are genuinely binary decisions with direct, opposite safety consequences for two hero systems that cannot be simultaneously honored by the same policy.
This is what distinguishes them from merely contested questions. On most policy questions, a reasonable compromise position exists somewhere, a policy that gives each side something and denies each side something, while leaving both groups able to function within their basic framework. On these ten questions, no such position exists. The policy either recognizes biological sex as meaningful or it does not. The shelter either contains biological males or it does not. The curriculum either teaches the content or omits it. The exemption either applies or it does not.
Turner’s framework explains why these questions are managed through coalition control of admissible reality rather than honest deliberation: honest deliberation would require acknowledging that both sides have a genuine safety claim, which would undermine the dominant coalition’s self-presentation as the rational baseline from which the other side merely deviates. Becker’s framework explains why the stakes feel existential to both sides: they are defending not preferences but the meaning structures through which they make mortality bearable. Guldmann’s framework explains why the Clerisy cannot acknowledge the symmetry: doing so would require conceding that conservative hero systems have legitimate claims on reality, which would dissolve the rescuer narrative that gives the Clerisy its moral self-understanding.
The honest statement of where we are is this. On these ten questions, America is not having a debate about facts or even about values in the usual sense. It is conducting a zero-sum negotiation over which hero system gets to define what counts as safety, with the outcome enforced by whichever coalition currently controls the relevant institutions. The people who pay the cost of that enforcement are those whose hero system is on the losing side at any given moment, and they are always the people with the least power to contest the definition.
