
Why I Am An American Nationalist
- omahacheeks

- Nov 10
- 2 min read
I believe a nation should protect its people, its borders, and the values that built it.
America’s strength comes from Judeo-Christian principles—human dignity, liberty, responsibility, and the belief that our rights come from God, not government.
When a nation honors God’s moral order, it thrives.
When it turns away, it falls.
Working with other nations is good, but surrendering our sovereignty or our faith is not.
God believes in borders and mercy.
He scattered the nations, and He sends messengers across them.
When He told Jonah to go to Nineveh, it wasn’t about politics—it was about repentance.
God wanted that nation to turn back to Him, to cross from rebellion into truth.
Every belief system claims to lead to God, but only one does.
YHVH, revealed through Yeshua, is the one true God—the Light, the Truth, and the Way.
That truth is what sets a nation apart.
A righteous nation is built on truth, not compromise.
Equality among people is right; pretending all gods are the same is deception.
That’s why I call myself an American nationalist.
I want my country to remember the God who blessed her, to guard the freedoms He gave, and to live by the truth that sets people free.
A nation that walks in His ways will always open its doors to those seeking life—but keep firm walls against the darkness that destroys it.
Why I Reject Globalism
Globalism sounds noble, but it concentrates power, erases identity, and replaces God-given freedom with human control.
It carries the same spirit as ancient Babylon—humanity trying to unite without God.
It promises peace but ends in bondage.
The elites want to make every religion and philosophy equal—but they’re not.
YHVH, revealed through Yeshua, is the one true God, and that distinction matters.
Without that truth, “unity” becomes conformity.
True unity comes when free nations honor God and govern themselves by His truth—not when the whole world kneels to one system.
I’m not an isolationist. Free trade is good. Immigration is good and biblical—but with boundaries. Even Heaven has gates, and its immigration policy is strict.


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