@wowfucktron
Unironically, that steven universe advert is one of the worst
It's on Youtube kids. It's straight up indoctrination. If this was any other ideology, the world would be up in arms and rightly so.
If you know human psychology, you'll know that people naturally form in-groups and out-groups based on identity, and so the idea is to move society away from basing their ingroup on immutable characteristics like race or gender, but on a shared set of principles and values. To me, we should see race as something no different than what color someone's hair is or what color their eyes are, something arbitrary and that doesn't determine how an individual develops.
One of the tactics I've noticed is that puritanical groups will define themselves as against something understood to be bad so the implication by opposing them is that you are that thing, even though it creates a false dichotomy. Against the anti-satanic movement? You're a devil worshiper! Against the council for Unamerican Activities? You're a communist!
It's a witch hunt. The ideal is to be non-racist, as racism will die off naturally if we teach people it's bad. But if you teach people that their core of their identity is race, that their race defines who they are, not the content of their character or the actions they take, then you will naturally end up forming into enclaves based on that proposition rather than on a united identity that transcends such arbitrary distinctions.
Part of comes from the Taoist in me, that sometimes nonaction is better than taking an action, as embodied by principles like "Wu Wei." It's better not to force anything, to let racism die off in the vestiges of fringe society rather than to go on a crusade to purge it utterly. By giving racism such unnecessary attention, you end up only making your own worst enemies, for they are the shadow you, yourself, cast.
@M0NST3R
I don't think you even needed them admitting that the founders were Marxists to cast the movement into doubt. When the leaders talk about "black people" as a class, or about abolishing things like the Nuclear Family and their obsession with community over the individual, I think its safe to call their beliefs marxist and collectivist at the very least, especially as they see capitalism as inherently racist.
Ironically, it reminds me of Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, which is one of the books that resonated more than any other about a black person trying to find his purpose in life and realizing that it was just everyone telling him who to be rather than treating him as an individual, and that all the Marxists and ideologues weren't going to give him any meaning or solve any issues in the world.