The Christian Science Monitor

‘What’s a patriot?’ Americans stumble over dueling definitions.

Construction worker Don Sapp stands at the downtown plaza in Decatur, Ga., on Jan. 17, 2021 as National Guardsmen and state troopers fortified the gold-domed capitol in nearby Atlanta. Like many Americans, he has been asking what it means to identify as a patriot in the current political climate.

Leaning against a fence near the stoop of the Georgia State Capitol, a man who goes by Nadir Xena and his friend Shadow call up to National Guardsmen standing above. “How’s your day going?” 

Some of the troops chuckle. 

Mr. Xena is in fatigues and combat boots. His partner wears a red bandanna as a mask; a streak of purple runs through his hair. Both are white. Like many gathered at the statehouse on Sunday, both had long rifles slung over their shoulders. But unlike the National Guard troops, these two armed men weren’t there to defend. They were there to protest what they call “tyrannical government”; to do their duty as American patriots. 

“They’re trampling all over the Constitution while they’re laughing at you,” says Mr. Xena. “I feel like we are doing our duty being out here, being armed.”

Nearby in Decatur, Georgia, Don Sapp, a Black construction worker,

A natural fit for conservatives “The perception of fear”Love of country – or Trump?An inclusive idea

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