
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, Steve Teske pulls back the curtain on the modern neutrality movement — and what it looks like when anti-DEI rhetoric runs out of legal arguments and starts policing fonts, museums, and gift shops.
From Confederate school names to scrubbing historical exhibits, Teske explores a simple but uncomfortable truth:
Neutrality is never passive. It is always a choice about what to honor, what to silence, and whose discomfort matters.
If removing monuments to slavery is called “woke,” what do we call censoring exhibits about slavery?
This episode examines:
* The difference between history and honor
* Why neutrality is not the absence of values
* How “colorblindness” can become context blindness
* And why cultural editing disguised as restraint is still activism
When the masks slip, neutrality looks less like principle — and more like performance.
By Judge Steven Teske (Ret.)In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, Steve Teske pulls back the curtain on the modern neutrality movement — and what it looks like when anti-DEI rhetoric runs out of legal arguments and starts policing fonts, museums, and gift shops.
From Confederate school names to scrubbing historical exhibits, Teske explores a simple but uncomfortable truth:
Neutrality is never passive. It is always a choice about what to honor, what to silence, and whose discomfort matters.
If removing monuments to slavery is called “woke,” what do we call censoring exhibits about slavery?
This episode examines:
* The difference between history and honor
* Why neutrality is not the absence of values
* How “colorblindness” can become context blindness
* And why cultural editing disguised as restraint is still activism
When the masks slip, neutrality looks less like principle — and more like performance.