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The "Rambam" part refers to the medieval Jewish scholar Moses Maimonides, and "1776" evokes the American Revolution. That combination usually signals someone drawing on pre-modern philosophical or theological frameworks (often from a Catholic or classical theist angle) to argue that 1776's Enlightenment ideals—natural rights, consent of the governed, democracy—were a break from sound political tradition (e.g., Aristotelian-Thomistic thought, Divine Right, or mixed government).

If you found a specific post by them interesting, I'd be happy to help break down its arguments, identify the sources they're leaning on, or offer a thoughtful counterpoint. Just paste the text or summarize the main claim.

Thanks for sharing that reference. is a handle you'll often see in online discussions, particularly around traditionalist Catholicism, monarchy, and critiques of modernity—especially American democracy.