Both are avid baseball fans--though Noah was elated and Eliah frustrated at the result of this year's Subway Series.
Eliah Seton says geography helped foster both his close relationship with his older brother and his interest in politics.
The two grew up in northern Westchester County, N.Y., and attended school in the Bronx. As a result, they had to commute into the city together everyday and home each night.
"We didn't live too near most of our friends from school," Eliah Seton says. "So we spent a lot of time together."
He says he and his brother got plenty of opportunity to bond on the long car rides to and from school.
"My parents worked in the city, so they would drop us off on the way to work," he says. "We would talk a lot of politics."
Seton says he was interested in the ideological conflicts that occurred between his politically conservative father and more liberal mother.
Somewhere along the way, both Seton and his brother began to lean toward the right of the political spectrum.
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