In the news:
Hard-right Republicans forming new caucus to protect 'Anglo-Saxon political traditions'
A group of ultraconservative House Republicans, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., are discussing launching an "America First Caucus" that would protect "Anglo-Saxon political traditions."
I don't think these dopes even know what the "Anglo-Saxon political traditions" were about ... monarchy. To misquote both
Daniel Jackson and
Thomas Hobbes, they didn't call that time the Dark Ages because it was dark ... life then was nasty, brutish, and short.
Some history ...
The Anglo-Saxon political system -= a particular period in medieval Britain lasting only about 500 years. The
Angles and the
Saxons and other Germanic tribes immigrated (yes, they were immigrants ;) to England after the fall of the Roman presence there (after around 400-500 AD). They mingled with the early Britons (Celts, Picts, etc.) and other immigrants from northern Europe (like the
Jutes).
Britain was attacked repeatedly by the Scandinavians (Norway, Denmark) from the late 700s onward, and the Anglo-Saxon period officially ended in 1066 with
King Harold II, who managed to beat the Norse at the
Battle of Stamford Bridge but who then lost the
Battle of Hastings to the French (William, Duke of Normandy) about 2 weeks later. Read
Ivanhoe to get a sense of how the Anglo-Saxons in Britian lost the economic and culture wars to the French under Norman rule (post 1066).
The Anglo-Saxon political system had fractious regional kings, there was a caste system which included slavery, while pagabism survived somewhat there was basically a state religion of Catholicism, and men and women were, of course, not equals. I don't see why anyone (except Republicans) would want to reinstate this.