Alexis de Tocqueville isn’t exactly a household name in the United States today, but it probably should be. An astute French statesman, Tocqueville visited the United States in the early 1830s and chronicled his travels in the political science classic Democracy in America. Among his most prominent observations was that civil society was thriving; participation in public affairs was a steadfast commitment. Indeed, Tocqueville saw this as the country’s greatest strength. In comparing the young country to one of that period’s foremost superpowers, he writes:
It often happens that the English execute very great things in isolation, whereas there is scarcely an undertaking so small that Americans do not unite for it. It is evident that the former consider association as a powerful means of action; but the latter seem to see in it the sole means they have of acting.
This description of American civil society sounds almost foreign today. In the 21st century, U.S. civic engagement is largely reduced to three acts: voting, posting on social media, and sporadically reacting to current events. In my own travels around the country, politics often come up unsolicited when I say I’m from Washington, D.C. Increasingly, I find that no matter their views, people say they have no one with whom they can talk civilly about civics.