Patriots across this country who refuse to apologize for loving America got a shot in the arm when Sebastian Gorka sat down on America Right Now to tell the story of how love of country is finally roaring back. He reminded viewers that this is not a sentimental moment but a hard-fought revival of the values that built our republic — family, faith, and freedom — and Newsmax gave him the platform to say it plainly to millions of Americans hungry for truth.
Gorka’s life story itself reads like a lesson in why love of country matters: the son of Hungarian freedom fighters who knew what totalitarianism really looks like, he carries his family’s scars and their refusal to bow to tyranny as proof that liberty is worth any cost. That family history informs his outrage at the cultural and institutional rot that seeks to make Americans forget why this nation was founded.
Make no mistake, this is not a TV personality talking in a vacuum; Gorka has stood in the West Wing and served as a deputy assistant in the White House, so when he warns that we face an ideological battle at home it comes from experience inside the system. Americans should listen when someone who’s been on the inside says the Left’s experiments in expansive government and cultural reengineering are existential threats.
He drove home the real meaning of the American Dream — that hard work and faith in free markets lift more people than any government program ever will — and he tore into modern socialist ideology for promising equality by stealing opportunity. Conservatives should be vocal and proud in pointing out that socialism doesn’t liberate the poor, it chains them to dependency, and Gorka has made that argument repeatedly in conservative forums and his writing.
On homeland protection, Gorka pressed the point that true security means sovereignty, clear borders, and a government that defends its citizens rather than coddles chaos-makers. His critique of bureaucratic mission creep and the need for a razor-sharp focus on threats to our communities is exactly the kind of common-sense talk that Washington’s insiders too often ignore.
This interview wasn’t a polite chat — it was a battle cry. Working Americans, small-business owners, parents worried about schools and safety: Gorka challenged them to stop waiting for elites to save the nation and to take back the cultural commons and the ballot box with determined, patriotic action.
If you care about the America our grandparents imagined, you should be encouraged, not intimidated, by this moment. Stand with men and women who refuse to apologize for loving their country, hold leadership accountable, and keep fighting for the freedoms that made this nation great.
