“Our political system has been irrevocably poisoned by political partisanship.” “Having a background in history, I naturally gravitated toward monarchism because I felt that my national government wasn’t looking at issues of public welfare or national coherence or national unity,” he said. Sean’s views shifted not only thanks to his medieval studies, but also after learning more about US foreign policy. The monarchies I find most interesting and think we should replicate go back to the late Middle Ages.” While earning his undergraduate degree at a Catholic liberal arts school close to where he grew up, he explained: “I ended up looking into medieval political theory and getting more conservative. “Most people tend to get more liberal in college,” he told me. But in college, a love of history, particularly the Roman Empire, ultimately drew him to monarchism and away from what he described as the “rah-rah American republicanism” of his childhood. The history graduate student, who’s in his early 20s, grew up Catholic in central Massachusetts in what he described as “a pretty staunch Republican household”.
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