The poem portrays “cultural Marxism” as a malevolent, almost demonic spiritual force that disguises itself as compassion and progress. It systematically attacks and inverts every traditional pillar of Western civilization: family, sex roles, nationhood, religion, truth, beauty, and freedom of speech.
Rather than using open revolution, it works subtly through schools, media, and culture, teaching younger generations to despise their own inheritance, to see strength as oppression, loyalty as hate, and moral boundaries as tyranny. The poem presents this process as a deliberate, satanic unraveling of the natural and divine order, leaving people isolated, guilt-ridden, and enslaved under the guise of liberation. In the end, it is revealed not as a mere political ideology but as an ancient, serpentine evil masquerading as enlightenment.
In shadowed halls where old gods used to dwell,
A new creed slithered, born of envy’s breath,
It wore the mask of mercy, spoke of hell
As heaven’s foe, and promised life through death.
It cursed the father, scorned the mother’s womb,
Unsexed the child before it learned to stand,
Turned beauty into shame, and every room
Of learning into ash beneath its hand.
It preached that strength is violence, truth a chain,
That borders are but scars upon the earth,
That every oath of blood is stained with pain,
And nationhood a sin before its birth.
With velvet tongue it whispered, “All is power,”
Then seized the schools, the screens, the sacred scroll,
And hour by hour, in academic towers,
It fed the young on bitterness of soul.
It loosed the bonds that hold the world upright—
The covenant of man and wife, of kin,
Of altar, hearth, and law—and called it light
To walk unmoored, unjudged, unshackled sin.
And still it hungers. Every fallen spire,
Each silent church, each tongue that fears to speak,
Becomes its incense on a hidden pyre
Where freedom burns and only masters speak.
Yet deep beneath its sermon’s honeyed rot,
A colder voice, ancient, serpentine,
Rejoices in the soul it almost bought—
The demonic sin that calls itself divine.