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Grievance Culture: The New Currency of Moral Power

Dr. Doug Cardell

An Eclectic Economist Explains Evidentiary Economics

Clear Thinking in a Complicated World

“Ideology asks for acceptance—Intelligence asks for evidence.”
Why Socialism Struggles book cover
Buy Dr. Cardell's Book

Why Socialism Struggles

by Dr. Doug Cardell

   June 19, 2026

Grievance Culture: The New Currency of Moral Power

In the article 'The Capitalist Conundrum', we explored why capitalism—despite its extraordinary success—still provokes discomfort, suspicion, and even hostility. In this article, we will explore how grievance culture affects people's perception of both society and economics. How success contains the seeds of discontent in the system that created the success.

How Victimhood Becomes Coin-of-the-Realm

Every society has a dominant currency. In market economies, it is money. In aristocracies, it is lineage. In theocracies, it is piety. But in the modern West — especially in affluent, post‑scarcity democracies — a new currency has emerged: grievance.

Grievance culture is not simply the presence of complaints or the recognition of injustice. Those are universal and often necessary. Grievance culture is something different: a social system in which moral authority, social status, and political leverage are increasingly derived from one’s perceived victimhood rather than one’s achievements, character, or contributions.

It is a culture where the most powerful position is not that of the builder, the innovator, or the creator — but the aggrieved. Where the moral high ground is claimed not by those who rise above hardship, but by those who can most convincingly demonstrate that hardship has been inflicted upon them by others.

This change in perception is not accidental. It is the predictable outcome of a society that has solved most material problems but has not solved the emotional ones. Ironically, it is the byproduct of abundance, not deprivation. And it is deeply intertwined with the themes explored throughout The Capitalist Conundrum series: envy, status anxiety, emotional economics, and the psychological discomfort created by freedom and unequal outcomes.

Grievance culture is what fills the void when prosperity removes the old struggles that once gave life meaning.

The Psychological Roots: Why Prosperity Breeds Fragility

One of the paradoxes of capitalism is that the more it succeeds, the more fragile people become. When life becomes materially easier, the threshold for what counts as “harm” drops. When survival is no longer the challenge, identity can become the battleground.

In societies where people once fought nature, famine, disease, and scarcity, grievances were luxuries. Today, in societies where capitalism has delivered unprecedented comfort, grievances can and do become identity anchors.

The Loss of Hardship as a Source of Meaning

Human beings are wired for struggle. We derive purpose from overcoming obstacles. When capitalism removes many of those obstacles, people search for new ones — often in the realm of identity, emotion, and perceived slights.

When life is materially easy, people begin to interpret discomfort as injustice.

The Rise of Comparative Suffering

As explored in 'The Economics of Envy', capitalism makes differences visible. Social media amplifies this visibility. People compare not only wealth but experiences, lifestyles, and emotional states. The result is a constant sense of being shortchanged.

Grievance becomes a way to reclaim moral superiority in a world where others seem to be doing better.

The Therapeutic Turn in Culture

Over the past century, Western culture has gradually shifted from a stoic model of self‑mastery to a therapeutic model of emotional validation. Feelings are treated as facts. Emotional discomfort is treated as harm. And harm demands redress.

This creates fertile ground for grievance culture: a world where subjective experience outweighs objective reality.

The Social Incentives: When Victimhood Pays

Grievance culture is not just psychological — it is incentivized.

  • In academia, it grants moral authority and intellectual legitimacy.
  • In media, it drives engagement and clicks.
  • In politics, it mobilizes coalitions and votes.
  • In corporations, it shields organizations from criticism by signaling virtue.
  • In social groups, it confers status and a sense of belonging.

Grievance has become a marketable product, a brand identity, a badge of honor. It is no longer a response to injustice — it is a strategy for profit.

The Moral Hierarchy of Victimhood

Traditional moral hierarchies rewarded courage, discipline, and achievement. Grievance culture inverts this. The highest moral status now tilts toward those who can claim:

  • the deepest wounds,
  • the most systemic oppression,
  • the most historical grievances,
  • or the most emotional fragility.

This creates a competitive marketplace of victimhood — a race to the bottom in which the most aggrieved wins.

The Institutionalization of Grievance

Entire bureaucracies now exist to process, validate, and amplify grievances:

  • diversity offices,
  • bias response teams,
  • HR grievance channels,
  • campus tribunals,
  • corporate compliance departments.

These institutions do not merely respond to grievances — they depend on them. Their existence requires a steady supply of perceived harms. And like any bureaucracy, they tend to expand their mandate over time.

What begins as protection against genuine discrimination becomes a system that rewards hypersensitivity and punishes resilience.

The Market Value of Outrage

Media companies have discovered that outrage is profitable. Social platforms reward content that triggers emotional reactions. Outrage spreads faster than reason. Grievance becomes a form of entertainment — a spectacle.

In this environment, grievances are not resolved. They are monetized.

The Economic Logic: Grievance as a Substitute for Merit

Capitalism rewards value creation. Grievance culture rewards value defacement — portraying success as failure or harmful.

This creates a tension: grievance culture thrives in the very societies capitalism makes possible.

When Merit Becomes Threatening

In a merit‑based system, success is earned. But earned success creates uncomfortable comparisons. It reveals differences in talent, effort, discipline, and choices. For many, this is intolerable.

Grievance becomes a way to delegitimize merit:

  • “Success is privilege.”
  • “Achievement is oppression.”
  • “Excellence is exclusionary.”

When success is framed as unjust, then failure becomes virtuous.

The Redistribution of Status

Grievance culture is not primarily about redistributing wealth — it is about redistributing status.

In a world where markets reward competence, grievance culture rewards resentment. It elevates those who feel wronged and diminishes those who excel.

This is why grievance culture is especially attractive to groups whose skills are not highly valued in the market — the same dynamic explored in a previous article, Emotional Envy. When the market does not validate one’s self‑perceived importance, grievance becomes a tool to reclaim status.

The Economics of Perverse Incentives

When grievance becomes a path to power, people respond rationally:

  • They seek out slights.
  • They reinterpret neutral events as hostile.
  • They escalate minor conflicts into moral crusades.
  • They adopt identities that confer victim status.

This is not irrational behavior. It is rational behavior in a system that rewards grievance.

The Political Weaponization of Grievance

Mobilizing Through Resentment

Political movements have always used grievances to mobilize supporters. But modern grievance culture goes further: it treats grievance not as a means to an end, but as an end in itself.

The goal is not resolution — it is perpetual agitation.

The Fragmentation of Society Into Competing Victim Groups

Grievance culture divides society into an ever‑expanding array of identity groups, each with its own historical wounds and moral claims. This creates a political landscape where:

  • coalitions are built on shared resentment,
  • policy debates become moral battles,
  • compromise becomes betrayal,
  • and unity becomes impossible.

A society organized around grievance can never be a mutually tolerant society. It can only fracture into angry tribalism.

The Erosion of Free-Society Norms

A free society and a free market both depend on:

  • individual responsibility,
  • free expression,
  • equal treatment under the law,
  • and the presumption of innocence.

Grievance culture undermines all four.

It replaces individual responsibility with collective blame.
It replaces free expression with emotional vetoes.
It replaces equal treatment with preferential treatment.
It replaces the presumption of innocence with the presumption of guilt — based on identity, history, or power dynamics.

This is not a minor cultural shift. It is a fundamental challenge to the foundations of a free society.

The Moral Consequences: A Culture That Punishes Strength

The Pathologizing of Strength

Traits once considered virtues — toughness, stoicism, independence — are now treated as signs of privilege or emotional repression. The ability to overcome adversity is reframed as insensitivity to others' suffering.

Strength becomes suspect. Weakness becomes sacred.

The Infantilization of Adults

Grievance culture encourages people to see themselves as fragile, vulnerable, and dependent on institutional protection. This infantilizes adults and erodes the capacity for self‑governance.

A society of children cannot sustain a system built on freedom.

The Loss of Forgiveness and Redemption

In a grievance culture, there is no path to redemption. Apologies are admissions of guilt, not steps toward reconciliation. Mistakes are permanent. Offenses are unforgivable.

This creates a moral environment in which people are afraid to speak, afraid to act, and afraid to engage honestly with one another except within the confines of their tribe.

A culture without forgiveness cannot heal. It can only accumulate grievances.

The Way Out: Reclaiming Responsibility, Resilience, and Reality

Re‑establishing the Value of Agency

The antidote to grievance is agency — the belief that individuals can shape their own lives. This requires a cultural shift back toward:

  • personal responsibility,
  • self‑discipline,
  • resilience,
  • and the dignity of earned success.

Rebuilding Institutions That Reward Merit

Institutions must stop rewarding grievance and start rewarding excellence. This means:

  • restoring academic rigor,
  • eliminating bureaucracies that incentivize victimhood,
  • prioritizing competence over identity,
  • and reaffirming equal treatment under the law.

Re‑embracing Free Society Norms

A free society requires:

  • open debate,
  • tolerance for disagreement,
  • the presumption of innocence,
  • and the courage to offend and be offended.

These norms must be defended — not apologized for.

Replacing Grievance With Gratitude

Grievance culture thrives in societies that have forgotten how fortunate they are. Gratitude is not naïve. It is a recognition of reality: that we live in the most prosperous, free, and opportunity‑rich era in human history.

Gratitude does not deny injustice. It simply refuses to define life by it.

Conclusion: The Moral Choice Before Us

Grievance culture is the shadow of prosperity. It is what happens when a society becomes so successful that it forgets the virtues that made that success possible. It is a culture that elevates resentment over responsibility, fragility over strength, and victimhood over agency.

But it is not destiny.

The Capitalist Conundrum is not that capitalism creates injustice — it is that capitalism creates abundance, and abundance creates the conditions for people to lose sight of what made that abundance possible.

George Washington's warning in his Farewell Address in 1796 foresaw the dilemma. He warned Americans against the “baneful effects” of factions. He argued that the “alternate domination of one faction over another” would ultimately lead to despotism and divide the nation.

Grievance culture is built on the kind of tribalism, or factions, that Washington warned about 230 years ago. Grievance culture is a warning. It tells us that prosperity alone is not enough. A free society requires not only wealth, but wisdom. Not only opportunity, but character. Not only rights, but responsibilities.

The question is whether we will reject grievance culture and tribalism and reclaim the virtues that led to success.

Quick Quiz

Question: In the modern West — especially in affluent, post‑scarcity democracies — a new currency has emerged: patriotism.




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