The founders weren't just the names in the history books. You count as one, and citizenship is something you practice.
Lindsey Cormack studies how members of Congress actually talk to the people they represent, and she wrote the book on why civics belongs at home long before it reaches a classroom. Corey sits down with her on what it takes to raise a citizen, why disagreement is where the learning happens, and how a new podcast makes the case that government doesn't always have to suck.
Calls to Action
✅ Grab Lindsey's book, How to Raise a Citizen (And Why It's Up to You to Do It): howtoraiseacitizen.com
✅ Follow her new podcast, Government That Doesn't Suck
✅ Enjoyed this one? Leave a quick review: lovethepodcast.com/politicsandreligion
Key Takeaways
Every American is a founder. Lindsey reframes citizenship as something you practice, not something performed on you. The question she puts to students of every age, "what kind of founder are you," turns civic life from a spectator sport into a personal responsibility.
Two classes is not a civic education. Most Americans get one social studies class in middle school and one government class in high school, then nothing. That's too little, too late for a subject this size.
Open with "what have you heard?" Since there's no shared set of facts anymore, that question sets the table without a fight. From there, "what do you think" and "what do you know" move things toward learning instead of scorekeeping.
Winning is the wrong goal. The point of talking across difference is to learn why someone thinks the way they do, not to convert them. The pressure drops the moment you stop keeping score.
Government doesn't always have to suck. Lindsey's new show with Greg Jackson studies the times American government got things right, on the logic that you can't repeat a success you never bothered to examine. Grounded optimism holds up better than either blind cheerleading or constant despair.
About Our Guest
Lindsey Cormack is an associate professor of political science at Stevens Institute of Technology, creator of the DC Inbox database of congressional e-newsletters, author of How to Raise a Citizen (And Why It's Up to You to Do It), and co-host of the podcast Government That Doesn't Suck.
Links and Resources
📘 How to Raise a Citizen (And Why It's Up to You to Do It)
🎙️ Government That Doesn't Suck — podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/government-that-doesnt-suck/id1896938110
🗂️ DCinbox Insights on Substack — dcinboxinsights.substack.com
📸 Instagram — @howtoraiseacitizen
🦋 X and Bluesky — @DCInbox
Connect with Us
Substack: coreysnathan.substack.com
LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, Bluesky, TikTok, X: @coreysnathan
YouTube: youtube.com/@politicsandreligion
Our Partners
Proud to be part of The Democracy Group, a network of podcasts examining what's broken in our democracy and how we can work together to fix it.
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