Politesse said:
There is no such group. People talk about "getting woke" or "staying woke", referencing an influential pop song that became something of a popular aesthetic in the mid 2010s. This got somewhat loosely connected to the social theories of Davis Cross, and for a while was quite trendy in Leftist circles. It is now used primarily as a pejorative by conservatives, having peaked and declined as a self-referential term by the end of 2019. But there is (and never was) no differential group of "Wokians" akin to "Christians" or "Communists". To say that the Woke are trying to come after you makes as much sense as saying that the Turned On were after you in the late 1960s. To be sure, people often described themselves as being "turned on" during that time period. But there are no Turned Ons, and there are no Wokes.
Sure there is such group. It's defined, like most terms, ostensively. The Woke are the adherents of the religion, ideology or whatever one calls it that has become increasingly powerful in recent years across the world (and in some universities in other places), and includes as some of the paradigmatic beliefs that all sorts of people engage in things like transphobia (though never against non-trans people), sexism ( never against men), racism (never against Whites), and other things of the sort, alongside with accusations against those classified as 'the rich' , or the 1%, etc. (except maybe for allies), etc.
Sure, their beliefs are loosely defined, but so are those of Christians today and that was the case in some other period as well. Moreover, enforcement via social media (condemnantion, harassment, etc.), major media outlets, and so on, produces compliance and reduces the dispersion of beliefs.