<p>Nothing Nellie Bowles - card-carrying lesbian, Hillary voter, <em>New York Times</em> reporter - did shocked her San Francisco neighbors and friends until she started asking whether the progressive movement she loved actually helped people. Gently informed that asking these questions meant she was ''on the wrong side of history,'' Bowles did what any reporter worth her salt would do: she started investigating for herself. The answers she found were worse - and funnier - than she¿d expected.</p><p>In <em>Morning After the Revolution</em>, Bowles takes readers inside the world of the elite woke to paint a devastating portrait of a cultural ideology gone awry. With irreverent accounts of attending Robin DiAngelo¿s multi-day course on ''The Toxic Trends of Whiteness,'' meeting the social justice activists who run ''Abolitionist Entertainment, LLC,'' and navigating the increasingly deranged world of the <em>New York Times</em>, she deftly exposes the more comic excesses of wealthy progre