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Politics & Power Quote by H.G. Wells

"Our true nationality is mankind"

About this Quote

A line like this only looks like a warm handshake until you remember who’s offering it: H.G. Wells, the sci-fi prophet who spent his career puncturing Victorian self-satisfaction. "Our true nationality is mankind" reads as a rebuke dressed up as a creed. Wells isn’t trying to abolish passports with a poetic flourish; he’s insisting that the nation-state is an invention, and therefore optional - a temporary story we tell ourselves that can be revised when it starts getting people killed.

The intent is moral, but the subtext is political. Wells watched industrial modernity tighten its grip: mass newspapers, mass armies, mass propaganda. National identity, in that world, becomes a technology for organizing loyalty at scale. By calling nationality "true" only when it expands to "mankind", he exposes the smaller version as counterfeit - not merely narrow, but deliberately manufactured to make sacrifice feel noble and suspicion feel natural.

Context matters: Wells wrote in the shadow of empire and the approach (and aftermath) of world war, when "civilization" was a slogan that could coexist with trenches and colonies. He was also a utopian internationalist, attracted to world-government ideas long before the phrase sounded like conspiracy bait. The line works because it turns patriotism inside out: it doesn’t ask you to stop belonging; it demands a bigger allegiance, one that treats borders as administrative facts rather than moral destinies. It’s optimistic, yes, but edged with Wells’s real warning: if we keep worshipping smaller flags, modernity will keep supplying larger catastrophes.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
Source
Verified source: The Outline of History (H.G. Wells, 1920)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Our true State, this state that is already beginning, this state to which every man owes his utmost political effort, must be now this nascent Federal World State to which human necessities point. Our true God now is the God of all men. Nationalism as a God must follow the tribal gods to limbo. Our true nationality is mankind. (Chapter 41 (§1) , "The Possible Unification of the World into One Community of Knowledge and Will"). This line appears in H. G. Wells’s own text in the concluding portion of The Outline of History, in Chapter 41 (§1). The earliest book publication is commonly cataloged as 1920 (e.g., Macmillan’s 2-volume issue; WorldCat notes "Published November, 1920"), with many later one-volume and revised editions (e.g., 1921 3rd ed.). The Wikisource transcription shows the quote in context in Ch. 41. I did not locate an earlier (pre-1920) primary-source occurrence in Wells’s writings during this search; the most defensible ‘first published’ attribution is therefore the 1920 publication of The Outline of History (in print), with Chapter 41 containing the sentence.
Other candidates (1)
On Nationality (David Miller, 1995) compilation95.0%
... H. G. Wells : ' Our true nationality is mankind . ' H. G. Wells and the Body Shop in tandem epit- omize the moder...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wells, H.G. (2026, February 8). Our true nationality is mankind. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/our-true-nationality-is-mankind-12841/

Chicago Style
Wells, H.G. "Our true nationality is mankind." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/our-true-nationality-is-mankind-12841/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Our true nationality is mankind." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/our-true-nationality-is-mankind-12841/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

H.G. Wells

H.G. Wells (September 21, 1866 - August 13, 1946) was a Author from England.

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