This book was not written to inflame passions, settle political scores, or advance a partisan agenda. It was written because a growing number of Catholics and thoughtful citizens sense often dimly, sometimes painfully that something fundamental has shifted in the moral, cultural, and political order of the modern West, and that the usual explanations no longer suffice.
Many recognize the symptoms: laws that no longer reflect reason, institutions that speak in abstractions rather than truths, language that obscures rather than clarifies, and a public square increasingly hostile to moral realism. Fewer understand the method by which this transformation has occurred. Fewer still are able to articulate why it poses a direct challenge not only to democratic self-government, but to the Catholic Church’s mission to teach, sanctify, and govern in fidelity to truth.
This book seeks to address that gap.
The term often used to describe the strategy examined here popularly called "the Podesta Plan" is not employed as an accusation of secret conspiracy or centralized command. Rather, it serves as a convenient shorthand for a pattern of governance: a method of exercising power through cultural formation, institutional capture, administrative expansion, and linguistic redefinition, rather than through overt coercion or electoral persuasion. The individuals associated with this method are not treated as villains, but as representatives of a broader managerial paradigm that now dominates modern political life.