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When Civility Becomes Erasure: Unmasking the Far-Right Agenda in Peter Boghossian’s Podcast Format

The invitation arrives in polished, reasonable tones: Dr. Peter Boghossian, philosopher, former Portland State University professor, and host of "Conversations with Peter Boghossian," extends an offer for dialogue. "No dogma. Just dialogue." The podcast promises candid, intellectually rigorous exchanges with dissidents and public figures on divisive issues—free speech, institutional decay, cultural conflict, radical Islam, migration, and the excesses of "wokeness." Guests range from evolutionary biologists to French lawyers discussing whether "truth" itself has been branded "far-right." The format appears open: questions, rapport-building, Socratic probing via "street epistemology" techniques adapted from Boghossian's earlier work challenging faith. It frames itself as a bulwark against polarization, a return to Enlightenment values of reason, evidence, and mutual understanding in a world fractured by identity politics.

Yet this invitation, and the conversations it structures, functions less as neutral ground than as a carefully engineered rhetorical architecture. It performs centrism while advancing a discernible agenda often aligned with critiques of mass migration, cultural relativism, and progressive orthodoxy. This performance of balanced inquiry operates as an architecture of erasure: it recenters certain premises—particularly those coded as defenses of "Western civilization"—as the unmarked default, while positioning challenges from the "margins" (racialized migrants, "woke" critics of power) as threats requiring containment through civility. The result is not genuine dialogue but communicative inequality, where the rules of engagement themselves mainstream codes of whiteness and perpetuate marginalization.The Structure of the ConversationBoghossian's podcast and related work follow a repeatable template drawn from his book How to Have Impossible Conversations (co-authored with James Lindsay). The structure prioritizes rapport first: build emotional safety, find common ground, then deploy calibrated questions to probe confidence in beliefs ("What would it take to change your mind?"). Episodes often open with genial framing—"let's explore this honestly"—before steering toward data on crime rates, assimilation failures, fertility collapses in Europe, or the incompatibility of certain Islamic practices with liberal democracy. Guests frequently include voices skeptical of open borders, multiculturalism's downsides, or DEI initiatives. Discussions of "far-right" labels appear, but typically to question their overuse: "Is concern about inbreeding in migrant populations or parallel societies now 'far-right'?"
The agenda surfaces not through overt polemics but through selective emphasis. Episodes dissect "woke religion" as a dogmatic substitute for declining traditional faith, critique moral relativism as eroding the West's foundations (Greco-Roman, Judeo-Christian), and highlight migration's cultural costs—failure of assimilation, rise of Islamism in France and elsewhere, threats to women's rights and secular norms. Boghossian has discussed being "picky" about immigration, colonial guilt's role in self-flagellation, and whether truth-seeking itself is being smeared as reactionary. The "far-right agenda" here is rhetorically constructed as the defense of empirical reality against ideological capture: borders matter, culture is not infinitely malleable, Enlightenment universals (reason, individual rights, evidence) are worth preserving against both radical Islam and postmodern identitarianism.
This structure appears moderate because it rejects crude ethno-nationalism or conspiracy. It performs humility ("I'm just asking questions"), contrasts itself with "far-left" intolerance, and invokes classical liberal norms. Yet the agenda coheres: Western civilization faces existential threat from internal "woke" subversion and external "migrant others" who import illiberal values. Integration requires assimilation to host norms, not multicultural accommodation. Data on integration failures, grooming scandals, no-go zones, or demographic shifts enter as neutral facts demanding honest confrontation. Dissenters who frame these as racist dog-whistles are positioned as evading reality, their "lived experience" subordinated to statistics and philosophical scrutiny.Performance of Centrism as Architecture of ErasureThe centrism is performative. Boghossian positions himself outside the binary—neither "far-right" nor captured by progressive orthodoxy. He critiques both extremes, yet the gravitational pull favors one direction. "Far-right" becomes a contested label applied too broadly to reasonable concerns about cultural cohesion. "Woke" is the clear ideological pathology: a totalizing faith that substitutes power analysis for truth, emotion for evidence, equity for equality. The podcast mainstreams skepticism toward mass low-skilled or culturally distant migration by hosting experts who cite integration metrics, crime correlations (carefully caveated), or civilizational incompatibility. It erases structural critiques of the host society—colonial legacies, economic exploitation, racial hierarchies—as secondary or pretextual.This architecture of erasure operates through omission and reframing. Systemic racism, settler colonialism, or white privilege are treated as unfalsifiable dogmas rather than contestable frameworks with empirical weaknesses. Voices emphasizing historical power imbalances or the agency of margins are invited only insofar as they can be probed into contradiction. The conversation's telos is rarely mutual transformation; it is often the exposure of "ideological possession." Genuine leftist or decolonial perspectives rarely set the terms; instead, they react within a frame that privileges Western liberal metrics of success (GDP, crime stats, gender equality indices) as universal and neutral.
Erasure manifests in what remains unmarked: the podcast's own embedded assumptions about rationality, individualism, and progress reflect a particular civilizational inheritance. These are presented as threatened universals under siege by "others"—the migrant who resists secularism, the "woke" activist who rejects merit and evidence for equity and standpoint epistemology. The performance sustains plausibility by occasional concessions or balance, but the agenda advances by normalizing the view that Western decline stems from excessive tolerance of difference, not from internal contradictions like capitalism or historical inequities.
If the structure were reframed explicitly as a debate, it would still fail to qualify as one. It is not a debate at all because it is designed to perpetuate communicative inequality from the outset. The very architecture is premised upon communicative inequality rather than parity. It constructs identities at the margins—racialized migrants, Indigenous voices, or radical critics of liberalism—as inherent threats to coherence, rationality, and civilizational survival. The originating frame that shapes the entire conversation already upholds the structures of whiteness as the neutral, unmarked ground from which all legitimate inquiry proceeds. Participants from the margins are thus forced to enter a rigged arena where they must first defend their right to speak on the center’s terms, rather than contest the legitimacy of the frame itself. What presents as open contestation is in reality a ritual reaffirmation of existing hierarchies, where the "debate" serves primarily to discipline difference and re-legitimize the dominant order under the guise of intellectual courage.Rhetorical Construction of Civility CodesCentral to this is the rhetorical construction of civility codes and codes of engagement. Boghossian's method emphasizes politeness, rapport, avoidance of ad hominem, and Socratic questioning. These are framed as reflections of Western civilization's finest traditions: the Athenian agora, Millian free speech, Habermasian ideal speech situation. Civility becomes the prerequisite for legitimate participation. Disruptive protest, emotional testimony, or refusal to engage "productively" signals illiberalism—often linked to "woke" or migrant-influenced intolerance.
These codes are not neutral. They reflect and reproduce a specific cultural habitus: detached rationality, linear argumentation, suppression of affective or collective trauma narratives. In the podcast, "civil" dialogue means engaging on terms where empirical claims (e.g., migrant crime overrepresentation in certain European statistics) take precedence over historical context or systemic analysis. Framing Western civilization as "under threat" from the migrant other (importing theocratic values) and the woke other (importing identitarian grievance) casts civility as defensive preservation. The invitation implicitly says: join us in reasoned defense of the Enlightenment project, or reveal yourself as its enemy.
This construction is foundationally a form of communicative inequality. The rules advantage those fluent in the dominant discursive style—typically educated, secular, often White or assimilated voices comfortable with abstraction over embodiment, statistics over storytelling. Marginalized participants—racialized migrants, Indigenous voices, or radical critics of liberalism—are placed in a double bind. To participate, they must adopt the codes: cool reason, individual accountability, color-blind universals. Deviation (passion, collective grievance, rejection of "Western" metrics) marks them as unreasonable, dogmatic, or "far-left." Acceptance of the codes requires conceding the frame: that threats to the West are primarily exogenous or from progressive excess, not endogenous power relations.Communicative Inequality and the Mainstreaming of WhitenessCommunicative inequality thus designed can never produce genuine dialogue. Dialogue presupposes rough parity in setting terms, defining relevance, and evaluating evidence. Here, the architecture predetermines relevance: cultural cohesion trumps diversity-as-good-in-itself; assimilation trumps multiculturalism; evidence-based skepticism trumps standpoint epistemology. "Whiteness" here is not mere skin color but the unmarked normative center—the cultural codes of restraint, individualism, empiricism, and property-like ownership of rationality that emerged from European history and became globalized through colonialism and liberalism. Mainstreaming these codes under the guise of neutral civility erases alternative epistemologies: relational knowing, historical memory as living claim, collective resistance as legitimate speech.
The margins are further marginalized because participation ratifies the unequal field. Successful "dialogue" often means the marginal speaker concedes ground—admits data on integration failures, distances from "extremist" elements in their communities, or accepts that "not all cultures are equal" on liberal metrics. Failure to do so confirms their unreasonableness, justifying exclusion or paternalistic correction. The podcast thus performs inclusion while enforcing assimilation to the center. Erasure occurs not by silencing outright but by translating marginal claims into the dominant idiom, where they weaken or dissolve. Decolonial critique becomes "guilt-tripping"; calls for reparative justice become "reverse racism"; resistance to assimilation becomes "failure to integrate."
This perpetuates marginalization by laundering particular interests as universal defense. The "agenda of the far right" is partially rehabilitated and recentered: concerns about demographic replacement, cultural replacement, or civilizational survival shed their stigma when voiced in measured, data-driven, civil tones. What was once fringe nativism becomes respectable preservationism. Meanwhile, critiques from the left or global south are pathologized as anti-Western or anti-Enlightenment. The architecture sustains the illusion of openness while narrowing the Overton window around defense of "the West" against its constitutive others.Genuine dialogue would require unsettling the codes themselves: interrogating why certain forms of knowledge (quantitative, abstract) dominate; why historical power is backgrounded; why the "threat" narrative centers Western fragility rather than migrant precarity or subaltern agency. It would demand reciprocity—allowing margins to set terms, to name whiteness as a locus of power rather than default humanity, to question whether liberal civility has historically coexisted with exclusion (slavery, empire, border regimes). Without this, the conversation remains monologue disguised as exchange: the center speaking to itself about how best to manage, contain, or assimilate difference.
In Boghossian's invitation, the promise of "no dogma, just dialogue" masks a deeper commitment. The structure, agenda, and performance converge to defend a particular inheritance against perceived dissolution. Civility codes function as gatekeepers, communicative inequality as the mechanism, and the erasure of margins as the outcome. Mainstreaming the codes of whiteness—framed as threatened Western reason—does not heal polarization; it entrenches a hierarchy where only certain voices truly belong at the table. True dialogue demands more than polite questioning. It requires dismantling the architecture that predetermines who defines reality, whose threat counts, and whose survival is at stake. Until then, these conversations risk being elegant monuments to exclusion, dressed in the language of openness.

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