I just learned a new term that is developing some currency among the MAGA crowd. It is "heritage Americans," here is a Politico article describing it.
In its most basic sense, the phrase refers to present-day Americans who trace their ancestral roots to the colonial period, or shortly thereafter.
I'm one of those, the first Cotton came to the Massachusetts colony in the 1600s, 13 years after the Mayflower. John was a scholarly Congregational minister whose austerity got him driven out of "high church" Britain. His grandson Cotton Mather - another scholar/minister - wrote a defense of the Salem witchcraft trials.
When phone books were still a thing, the Boston phone book had a half page of folks with our family name. It is also occurs with some frequency in Britain.
As a heritage American I believe our culture has much to admire and is worth defending here in its birthplace. If other nations wish to copy it, I'm okay with that. If they wish to go their own way, that's fine as long as they can let us be us.