To use the handy chart LW provided, you're talking about the neolib and far left progressive movements. I'm super liberal and the idea of forcing others to think in any fashion rather than preventing others from inhibiting/forcing behavior is absurd.
Isn't Current Liberalism all about banning free speech and controlling the thoughts of others? (It isn't... which I have to state because people can't tell when I am being sarcastic... YES there is a growing number of Liberals who preach this... to the extent where it has become a trend that might cause a split in the Liberal parties)
The far left is beyond even the LW provided chart. I'm not being sarcastic because depending on who you're talking about on the left, that's exactly what they're about. It is however a minority that happens to be very loud. A useful split is unlikely to happen though because their MO is infiltrating already established organizations, working their way into a position of power and forcing their way onto everyone else.
I'm not labeling all liberals that way. I'm left of moderate myself. However more moderate liberals aren't doing enough to get their own message out there. It's tough though. It's hard to be loud and attention grabbing when you're a moderate. There's nothing exciting about a message of "Let's move forward with proper planning and due caution!" That doesn't make the news. Well, let's be honest, a slow enough news day, it might. But it's a tough banner to get people to rally around.
Extreme left social liberalism is all about forcing people to think alike. I'm against the extreme ends in both directions. It's just that extreme left is now BLM and Anarcho-feminists and extreme right are now Westboro Baptists. Nobody takes Westboro seriously. The other side? Well... yeah...
Nobody has talked about Westboro recently except you, right this moment. Try again. Hint: "bathroom bill."
Fine, we can talk about the bathroom bill if you want to bring that up. The almost universally maligned bathroom bill that only a small group of conservatives pushed through for basically no reason to little fanfare among the people even among those who might favor it when asked. The bathroom bill that cost the state (guessing here) millions of dollars in revenues and economic deals. The one that made, for a short while, North Carolina the laughing stock of the nation, outpacing for a fleeting moment, even Florida. Yes, because that's taken seriously.