Male unwillingness to wear masks for COVID, India's PM Modi's election campaign focusing on his willingness to assert India's strength (described using ideas of manhood) on the global stage, Canadian PM Justin Trudeau getting into the ring with an opponent and showing off his muscled body, Donald Trump's constant attempts to prove his muscular strength, the international popularity of Marvel super hero movies, although are seemingly unrelated, are tied together with the underlying views of a dominant masculinity defined by ideas of muscular strength, martial ability, rationality, and power. The traits that define this dominant view of masculinity also define what is perceived as a national strength on the international arena. Modern nationalisms born in the nineteenth century have centered ideas of a specific form of manhood and an associated view of dominant femininity. The specific characteristics of these gendered constructs differ according to context, but they are firmly rooted in the idea that a national masculine self must defend the feminized nation from an 'other' (read national enemy) however defined. This dynamic both shapes how the nation is gendered but also how the lived experiences of men and women are defined by these gendered dynamics.