Since culture is considered the primary factor which sustain inequalities, cultural Marxism is opposed to other explanations for inequalities such as religious explanations, individual choices, or genetic factors.
Unlike
Marxism which primarily focuses on economic inequalities and economic classes, cultural Marxism see culture as a main cause for many different kinds of inequalities:
- Race (Whites/non-Whites)
- Culture (Western/non-Western)
- Family (nuclear family/non-nuclear family)
- Religion (Christianity/atheism and religious minorities)
- Gender (men/women)
- Sexual orientation (heterosexual/LGBT)
Cultural Marxism places great emphasis on analyzing, controlling, and changing the popular culture, the popular discourse, the mass media, and the language itself. Seeing culture as often having more or less subconscious influences on people which create and sustain inequalities, cultural Marxists themselves often try to remove these inequalities by more or less subtle manipulation and censorship of culture.
A term describing such censorship is
political correctness where all views on equality that disagree with the cultural Marxist view are avoided, censored, and punished.
Related to cultural Marxism are various forms of
relativism/
subjectivism and denial of the existence of objective knowledge.
The phrase "The long march through the institutions of power" refers to cultural Marxists slowly taking over key positions in the institutions controlling culture in order to create a new culture. In effect this will create revolutionary changes without having to resort to political violence. It also reflects a worldview where cultural Marxists view themselves as infiltrators and subversives. (The phrase is often attributed to
Antonio Gramsci but was instead coined by another cultural Marxist (
Rudi Dutschke) who was influenced by Gramsci's ideas.)