“There are [...] in the country, symptoms of unease, a vague feeling of fear,
that something or other which announces revolutions, which often gives rise to them.
This dangerous feeling, I believe it is the government which gave birth to it and which maintains it.
What I see in the governing class worries me, public morals are changing [...].
I ask if selfishness is not the motive for the exercise of political rights.
I ask if this is not a real degradation, a certain decadence […].
I am convinced, gentlemen, we are falling asleep on a volcano. »
Tocqueville 1893