Law & Order Season 2, airing in 1991-1992, exemplifies traditional procedural storytelling with no detectable progressive ideological influence. The main cast consists of white male actors in core roles—Paul Sorvino as Detective Cerreta, Chris Noth as Logan, Dann Florek as Cragen, Steven Hill as DA Schiff, Michael Moriarty as EADA Stone, and Richard Brooks as ADA Robinette—reflecting standard 90s cop show demographics without forced diversity, race/gender-swapping, or DEI-driven casting. Episodes focus on ripped-from-headlines crimes like religious parents denying medical care to a dying child, jealousy-fueled murders, taxicab disputes, and corporate scandals, handled through neutral legal debates emphasizing law enforcement and prosecution over systemic critiques or identity politics. No prominent LGBTQ+ representation, feminist lectures, or overt challenges to traditional norms appear; social issues like religious intolerance or interracial tensions (e.g., 'Intolerance' involving a Chinese-American victim) are incidental plot devices resolved via individual culpability, not activist messaging. Creator Dick Wolf's intent was apolitical entertainment pro-law enforcement, with no interviews indicating social justice goals for this season. Reception praises it as classic, balanced TV without 'woke' backlash; modern critiques note early episodes' outdated elements (e.g., slurs) that fail contemporary sensitivity standards, confirming absence of progressive elements.