The far left envisions a shared future for everyone, regardless of ethnicity, gender, religion, or sexual orientation. It must remain universalist and focused on class struggle for wealth redistribution and equality. However, influenced by liberalism and social struggle failures, new concepts have emerged. Ideas from subaltern studies, post-colonialism, identitarian movements, racialists, and Social Justice Warriors (SJWs) gained ground since the 1990s, often disguising essentialism as progressivism. Post-colonialism emphasizes criteria like skin color or sexual orientation to demand diversity. Yet, identity-focused questions have replaced aspirations for equality and unity. This shift prioritizes subjectivity, emotionalism, and political incoherence. Subaltern studies are used ideologically to justify biases. To avoid irrational, divisive identity conflicts, it’s urgent to revive universalist ideals and a shared future in far-left movements.