J. Hartman

J. Hartman is an American writer and researcher whose work bridges history, faith, and modern society. Born in the heartland of America, Mr. Hartman has lived from coast to coast and internationally, gaining a broad perspective on the issues that shape our world. His views are grounded in knowledge, faith, and lived experience, drawing connections between past and present to uncover lessons that remain vital today. Through Heartland Perspective, he seeks to rekindle honest conversation, critical thinking, and the enduring values of faith, family, and freedom on which this great nation was founded.

Is Believing Seeing?

What if believing in something is not simply the result of seeing it, but the very mechanism that allows it to be seen in the first place?

The Poisoning of the Mind: How Public Education Stopped Educating

The most disturbing part of our failing educational system is how few care. Failing to educate children is failing the present and abandoning the future.

America’s Most Sacred Right: The Vote

If you are an American citizen, it is imperative that you understand that the right to vote is the most important right you possess.

Taking the Hype Out of Hypotheticals

Immigration enforcement is increasingly framed through emotion rather than precision shifting debate away from policy and toward claims of persecution.

Stolen Land or Stolen Context?: What We Are No Longer Teaching Our Children

To assess whether “stolen land” is accurate, we must examine how U.S. land was acquired — historically, not emotionally or rhetorically.

What Happens Next?

Today's political discourse focuses on winning arguments, not on what happens when beliefs collide with reality.
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The Whoa’s of Capitalism

Capitalism isn’t a moral philosophy; it’s a mechanism. It guarantees competition, not fairness, happiness, or equal outcomes.

Hollywood, the Elites, and the Future They Are Trying To Build

A saying often repeated risks becoming background noise, yet remains true: when someone shows you who they are, believe them.

The Great Voter Replacement: Understanding the Modern Democratic Party

The greatest threat to democracy is a population conditioned to stop asking questions, by the very people they should question the most.

What is Happening to People?

The modern world pushes us toward comfort, indulgence, and distraction. But it does not get to steer the ship unless we hand over the wheel.

Laws Are Laws, Not Suggestions

Federal law is the law of the land, occupying the highest position in the American legal hierarchy and overrides state and local laws when conflicts arise.

George Soros and the Power of an Untested Story

There are few figures in modern history whose personal narrative is widely accepted, emotionally charged, yet less rigorously examined than George Soros.