Nationalism as Family: Unpacking Vance vs Stewart

The Clash of Worldviews: Particularism vs Universalism

Last week, U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance delivered a decisive rebuttal to Rory Stewart’s globalist moralism, exposing a deep divide between nationalism and cosmopolitanism. Vance highlighted a fundamental truth: the natural hierarchy of obligations—where family and nation come before abstract global concerns.

Like many in his class, Stewart believes in global citizenship, dismissing nationalism as an outdated relic. But this is not about compassion—it is about status. Their disdain for nationalism is not based on moral principles but on a social performance designed to elevate themselves above the working class.


The Elite’s Fear of Nationalism

As Edmund Burke warned, society is not an abstract contract but an organic bond between past, present, and future generations. Yet, the globalist elite rejects this principle, branding national identity as vulgar because it is deeply rooted in working-class culture.

Instead of addressing real concerns about mass migration, these elites dismiss and condescend. They portray populism as dangerous—not because it is illegitimate, but because it threatens their monopoly on moral authority.


The Hypocrisy of the Global Elite

Despite their rhetoric on diversity, the global elite isolates itself in cloistered neighbourhoods, surrounded only by those who share their managerial worldview. They advocate for open borders while ensuring their children remain insulated from its effects.

They welcome refugees, yet many of these individuals return on holiday to the very nations they supposedly fled. The contradictions are glaring, yet no one dares to challenge them. Their liberalism is not about helping people—it is a performance that crumbles under scrutiny.


Nationalism Is the Natural Order

Despite efforts to portray nationalism as unnatural, it remains humanity’s most instinctive form of governance. The nation is an extension of the family—a web of bonds that sustains culture, identity, and stability.

Just as it is natural to prioritise family, it is natural to prioritise one’s nation. Those who deny this reality are the true extremists. They advocate for a deracinated economic system that reduces people to interchangeable labour units disconnected from history, tradition, and belonging.


Join the Homeland Party

As I have previously stated:

“Nationalism isn’t the extreme position. Importing millions of culturally dissimilar people is extreme. Self-determination and being among one’s own was the norm until incredibly recently. The modern Western European state is so unnatural that it requires the entire state apparatus and propaganda to enforce it.”
@AnglikTom, April 2024

If you believe in a nationalism rooted in stability, belonging, and stewardship, join Homeland today. The Racing Green Revolution is not about nostalgia but about renewal. It is about reclaiming what was natural and ensuring that future generations inherit a nation they can still call home.

Join Homeland Today

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