Faced with a world subjugated by globalist totalitarianism, forces are emerging that seek to restore the balance of power. For decades, elites robbed us of our identity, history, and purpose, imposing social logics that only generated chaos and subjugation. In response, conservatism is emerging as an ideology capable of rescuing lost common sense, offering order, sovereignty, and belonging.
Today, the new multipolar order is strengthening as a counterweight to globalism, fueled by the growing discontent of the people.
In Ibero-American, this awakening has been slower than in Europe, partly due to the lack of international coordination to vindicate our nations.
However, when support and awareness networks began to emerge, it became clear how victimized minorities were used as a tool to impose agendas contrary to the majority.
The elites, blind to social unrest, abandoned real political leadership, leaving a vacuum that the new right was able to fill: nationalist and sovereignist movements, deeply indigenous and traditionalist, whose objective is to defend sovereignty against the globalist machinery that seeks to homogenize cultures and erase identities.
Today, Ibero-American no longer the exception. Anti-globalist leaders have emerged with force and represent the political expression of a people tired of empty speeches and progressive promises that failed to resolve real problems such as insecurity or lack of opportunity.
While the elites obsessed with imposing ideologies alien to the majority, they neglected the essentials: education, work, and stability. It’s not that societies have suddenly become conservative; it’s that globalists have created a parallel world, detached from real life, seeking to erase culture, tradition, and even the very essence of humanity.
One of the hardest hit groups has been young people, especially men, victims of a radical feminist discourse that demonized masculinity and generated profound social confusion.
Faced with job insecurity, lack of opportunities, and the corruption of traditional parties, many young people see in the new right a space for rebellion and resistance.
There they find not only identity, but also the possibility of reclaiming a future that progressivism denied them.
Multipolarity as a context gives millions of young people identity, purpose, and belonging; in short, it restores their humanity.
In this scenario, multipolarity emerges as a great opportunity. A world without hegemonies, where no power can impose its way of life on others, is compatible with anti-globalist conservatism.
Multipolarity opens space for diverse national projects, founded on autonomy and individual identity. It is, ultimately, fertile ground for forging transnational alliances that can curb liberal globalism and restore to each nation the sovereignty it deserves.
Anti-globalist conservatism is fully compatible with the emerging multipolar world.
Because where the shackles of globalism are weakened, the possibility of a patriotic rebirth is born that will restore order, purpose, and dignity to our nations.