For most of our lives, “patriotism” felt like a straightforward idea. It meant love of country, respect for democratic principles, support for the Constitution, and a shared responsibility to something larger than ourselves. Today, however, the word feels contested...twisted, weaponized, and bent into shapes that often resemble the very opposite of what many of us were raised to believe patriotism meant.
How absurd have our politics become, especially under Donald Trump? Pretty damn absurd. And dangerously so. Ignorance has been encouraged, rewarded, and exploited.
And layered over it all are the lies...constant, relentless, reality-warping lies.
The uncomfortable truth is simple:
Patriotism has always had competing meanings.
And now, they have crashed into one another in full public view.
How did we get to this point where Americans have to worry about whether our own democracy will survive? What happened to the Republican Party?HOW can so many within it be so blind to the threat THEY'RE Enabling?
That my friends, is for another article and another time and has already been discussed here many times. This is another consideration based in the foundation of all that.
Two Patriotic Traditions — Only One Defends Democracy
1. Civic Patriotism
This is the patriotism of democracy, pluralism, accountability, and the rule of law. It understands that the most loyal citizens are not the quiet ones who salute uncritically, but the ones who demand honesty, confront corruption, and insist that our institutions live up to their promises.
This is the America many of us believed in. The America that expects citizens to protect democracy by participating in it honestly.
2. Tribal or Nationalist Patriotism
This patriotism is different. It is not anchored in principles, but in identity, resentment, and loyalty to a leader, tribe, or grievance. It prioritizes dominance over equality, mythology over truth, and obedience over responsibility. It thrives on anger. It is highly emotional and easily manipulated precisely because it demands loyalty instead of accountability.
One version of patriotism protects a nation and its democratic soul.
The other protects a myth—and the people who profit from that myth.
We are living through the collision between these two ideas of America.
This Did Not Come Out of Nowhere
The angry minority now shaping so much of our politics did not simply appear. It has been simmering for decades. You could see it in movements like Ruby Ridge, Waco, and the militia boom of the 1990s. But even that was not the beginning.
It is rooted in something older: unresolved Civil War grievances, cultural resentment, and a romanticized myth of “real America” defined against everyone else.
This was not patriotism. It was grievance wearing patriotism’s clothing.
Eventually, that culture found a political vessel in Donald Trump. He did not invent it. He recognized it, exploited it, fed it, and empowered it. And while he was doing so, Russian state-backed disinformation networks amplified the fracture lines already inside our country. Intelligence assessments and independent investigations have repeatedly made this clear: Russian information operations existed before Trump, intensified once he emerged, and deliberately worked to inflame division and elevate him.
Russia did not create the resentment.
It simply poured gasoline on the fire.
Turning Fringe Extremism Into “Mainstream Patriotism”
Before social media, these ideas lived in fringe newsletters, conspiracy radio, and underground spaces that most Americans rarely saw. They were monitored by law enforcement, noted by journalists, but mostly isolated.
Then technology changed.
Then politics changed.
Then power changed hands.
Coordinated digital propaganda campaigns pretending to be everyday conservative Americans began to push disinformation and grievance narratives into mainstream right-wing discourse. Soon these talking points were echoed on Fox News, then repeated by newer propaganda platforms like Newsmax and OAN. What was once fringe became branded as “normal conservative thought.”
Trump didn’t just ride that movement.
He weaponized it.
And suddenly, patriotism itself was rewritten by people who confuse loyalty to a leader with loyalty to a nation.
So What Does Patriotism Mean Now?
We return to the central question.
Patriotism has always had two meanings:
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One rooted in democratic values, accountability, and truth.
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One rooted in grievance, identity, and obedience to mythology or strongman authority.
The latter is not patriotism. It is a distortion of patriotism. And right now, it is being used to normalize authoritarian behavior in the United States.
Patriotism worthy of the name is not loyalty to a man.
It is loyalty to the country he swore to serve.
Where We Stand Today
Now we once again find Donald Trump in the Oval Office, and patriotism has taken on yet another meaning. Today, patriotism means defending the Constitution from those who would bend or break it. It means resisting efforts to erode democratic norms and gaslight the nation into accepting authoritarian behavior as normal, inevitable, or harmless.
Real patriotism is not blind loyalty.
It is a commitment to truth, to law, and to democracy itself.
We cannot surrender the meaning of patriotism to those who seek power through fear, division, and false nostalgia. The way forward requires choosing the version of patriotism that protects people, not ego; democracy, not authoritarianism; reality, not myth.
If patriotism is to matter at all, it must mean loyalty to America — not loyalty to anyone determined to damage it.
We need to be better. And we need to do it fast.
Cheers! Sláinte! Na zdravie!







