Resurgence of the right But that's what's yet to be demonstrated. If you simply pre-judge that every observed inequality of outcome is the result of "systemic oppression or structural imbalances," then all you've got is a pseudo-science, because you're denying empirically obvious and evident differences in endowment for the sake of a fantasy idea of what human beings are like.
IOW, you are effectively starting with the unexamined assumption that people have equal potential, therefore any observed difference in outcome must be the result of "systemic oppression or structural imbalances." — gurugeorge
Inequalities that have resulted from structured oppression, historically and up to the modern day, have been well studied and documented. Feel free to read The New Jim Crow, Stamped From The Beginning, The Color of Money, and more. You are simply more interested in pseudo-science which suggests that these inequalities are the result of inherent genetic dispositions of gender and ethnicity. Your pseudo-science also doesn't explain wealth inequality, worker oppression, LGBT oppression etc.
Your whole spiel about "equal potential" and that the Left wants "equal outcome" is a tired strawman that I would expect from a high school student.
Those thinkers did represent a "branch of political philosophy" - it used to be called "liberalism" until the term was hijacked by more socialist-influenced liberals (people who would have been called "social democrats" in Europe) who pushed the liberal faction in the US further to the Left in the course of the 20th century, so Friedrich Hayek (I believe it was, in the 1960s) coined the term "classical liberal" to denote the older form of liberalism. The term has been used that way among conservatives and libertarians since then, but it wasn't invented by them as some sort of grand cover-up plan, far less by the IDW people. — gurugeorge
Mill considered himself a socialist, Jefferson was influenced by Locke, but also by Paine, who was radically different from Locke. While Adam Smith strongly favored pro-worker regulation. My point is is that there is no 'umbrella' term with which to fit these diverse set of thinkers. To place them under a single political philosophy is ahistorical, and yet that's exactly what modern classic liberals attempt to do. Regardless, my main point is that classic liberalism today is just a right-wing marketing ploy.
Hey, blame the journo who invented it in an attempt to mock/smear them — gurugeorge
According to Bari Weiss, who is a fan of and has written about the IDW, the term was coined by Weinstein.