In the 1830s, a French aristocrat named Alexis de Tocqueville traveled through the United States and returned home with Democracy in America, a penetrating analysis of a society marked by energetic voluntary associations and a restless spirit of enterprise.
Tocqueville admired much of what he saw, but his verdict was not uncomplicated. Near the end of the book, he wrote, “I feel full of fears and full of hopes.”
Two centuries later, another European visitor is offering a portrait of America. Freddy (@FreddyLA7), a German soccer fan road-tripping across the country for the 2026 World Cup, has become an enthusiastic chronicler of American life.
Where Tocqueville wrote volumes about institutions, Freddy posts photographs and exclamations about Buc-ee’s, Waffle House, and enormous houses. He’s also documenting the kindness of strangers.
Freddy arrived in the United States in early June with a modest budget and planned to attend Germany’s World Cup matches. As he documented his travels this summer, his online following grew from about 10,000 people to over 700,000 followers on X (formerly Twitter).
Freddy’s enthusiasm for oversized gas stations and inexpensive diner meals captured people’s attention. He seemed astonished by the abundance of ordinary American life, such as stores that feel like amusement parks.
Freddy is certainly cataloguing the purchasing power of the American wallet. But he also appears impressed by a society characterized by peace, kindness, and toleration. Strangers have invited him to barbecues and offered behind-the-scenes tours. Former NFL defensive end J. J. Watt noticed Freddy’s posts and arranged a luxurious stay in a Houston hotel suite. A mayor chatted with him at a baseball game. Through his travels, Freddy repeatedly encounters Americans who want to welcome him.
Could this be modest evidence that Tocqueville’s worst fears have not yet been realized, and that at least some of his hopes for America were justified?
Like Tocqueville, Freddy holds up a mirror. Americans naturally focus on our national divisions, policy failures, and cultural anxieties. We know where the potholes are. But an enthusiastic outsider can notice the road.
Freddy’s unfiltered enthusiasm performs something like the function of Tocqueville’s travel notebooks. His observations invite Americans to see familiar institutions and customs through foreign eyes.
Tocqueville hoped America would demonstrate that equality and liberty could coexist. He hoped democratic citizens would remain independent and involved in their communities rather than becoming comfortable but powerless subjects of an increasingly paternalistic state.
There are good reasons to retain Tocqueville’s fears. There are also good reasons to remember the fears of the American founders. Patrick Henry and others worried deeply about concentrated power, and those warnings should not be dismissed merely because modern life is prosperous and comfortable.
Remember: Tocqueville was not only fearful. He was hopeful.
Freddy’s tour does not prove that the American experiment will succeed forever. It does, however, offer a cheerful reminder of what is still worth preserving: material abundance, freedom of movement, and openness to strangers.
For the moment, Freddy the World Cup tourist gives us reason to share a little of Tocqueville’s hope.
Freddy wrote on June 16, 2026:
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