Journalist Thomas Friedman had a pretty stark open for his recent New York Times opinion piece: “The last year has been one of the most depressing of my nearly 50 years as a
journalist.”
But if you got past that, he soon presented a silver lining: “But then I spent time in my native state, Minnesota, after something else that I’d never seen
in nearly 50 years: a spontaneous uprising of civic activism propelled by a single idea — I am my neighbor’s keeper, whoever he or she is and however he or she got here.”
I
don’t think it’s happenstance that this emerged in Minnesota, one of the most northerly states in the U.S. I have spent a fair amount of time in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area on business.
On those trips, I found something very familiar there, a sense of, for lack of a better word, “Canadianism.” Minnesota's “nice” felt very close to Canadian
“polite.”
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In the piece, Friedman wrestled with a verb that was also new to him: “neighboring.” He described it as “a basic human impulse to look out for
your neighbors and, yes, dig their cars out of the snow on Monday because you know they will do the same for you on Wednesday.”
I think there’s a correlation between neighboring
and living in the north. When you live in a place where the weather can kill you, you’d better be able to count on the people who live next door to you. As Friedman said, “Minnesotans are
winter people. Don’t come for winter people in winter. They’re not afraid of the cold. Just the opposite. The weather has forged a unique Minnesota neighborliness.”
The same
is true -– I would say -- from coast to coast to coast (we have three) in Canada. I have written about this before. When almost half the year is a matter of survival, you tend to huddle
together to fight the common foe.
Northerly = Neighborly
Weather has a way of tying you to your geography. It forces you to define community -- at least in part -- by
those who live in the same area as you. You naturally bond with the people who will help you shovel your driveway, loan you six eggs if you’re snowed in or invite you in on a frosty morning for
a cup of hot coffee (and, in Canada, a shot of rye). It is the great common denominator. For many months every year, weather is the number-one topic for everyone who lives in the north.
Canada
and the northern states are not unique in this regard. The same is true for the Nordic countries in Europe. And this translates into many good things in terms of civic engagement. The World Happiness
Report has consistently found the same pattern. In its 2020 report: “No matter whether we look at the state of democracy and political rights, lack of corruption, trust between citizens, felt
safety, social cohesion, gender equality, equal distribution of incomes, Human Development Index, or many other global comparisons, one tends to find the Nordic countries in the global top
spots.”
Neighboring and Systemic Trust
Still, there's no one-to-one correlation between the northern parts of North American and northern Europe. In my example of the
connection between distance from the equator and civic cohesion, you could rightly say there are anomalies. For example, the politics in the Canadian province of Alberta and states south of the border
in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and the Dakotas, bear little similarity to the politics of British Columbia, Washington, Minnesota or Maine. Yet all of those lie in the north. And what about Alaska, which
is solidly red? You can’t get much further north than Alaska.
“Neighboring” isn’t about politics. It can be misleading to conflate the two. Being a good neighbor
isn’t unique to the right or left. I grew up in rural Alberta and I can tell you from experience that if you need help from your neighbor, Alberta is a pretty damned good place to be.,
But there's something else happening in those places: the remnants of a “cowboy” ethic and a feeling of distrust bred by generations of alienation from the power bases thousands of
miles away in the eastern regions of the country. This is true both in Canada and the U.S.
In this case, geography is our enemy. Big, spread-out countries have a tough time keeping everyone
happy at the same time. This leads to distrust of the system and the federal government. Chances are your neighbors feel the same way as you do.
But Minnesota did show us is that the basic
human dyad -- the relationship between two people who happen to be in the same place at the same time -- is still very much alive and well. We still band together when threatened from the outside.
Still, these social connections are like muscles: The more they’re exercised, the stronger they get. It just happens that in places where winter is more severe, we are more used to relying on
our neighbors to overcome a common threat. That's why Minnesota taught us a timely lesson in what it means to be “neighboring.”