Die Zeit

Five Years After

The idea that everything changed on September 11, 2001, was always a conceit. It was a conceit not because it exaggerated the importance of the event, but, curiously, because it underestimated it. The attacks on New York and Washington, for all their terrible human cost, did not change much by themselves. They did, however, change the horizon of political possibility. The shock of that morning, followed by the endlessly repeated images of the collapsing towers and New York’s blasted downtown,… more

Jedediah Purdy | September 7, 2006 | Die Zeit

Democracy and Disaster

In a country as wealthy and technologically capable as the United States, there is no such thing as a simple natural disaster. Every disaster is also a social event, made up by human will and ingenuity--or neglect and indifference. Famines, famously, do not happen in democracies, because no matter how severe a drought or blight, only the voiceless and powerless are ever left to starve. Storms may sometimes wreck cities; but if they also claim thousands of… more

Jedediah Purdy | September 5, 2005 | Die Zeit

American Eating, American Politics

The so-called American character usually turns out to be a chimera. Americans are said to be blunt to a fault, or desperate to please. They are too soft and complacent to stomach combat, or they are warmongers quick to sacrifice their children. They are merciless materialists, or else they are hopeless sentimentalists and irrational religious believers. One quality, however, has grown unmistakable in the eyes of the world, and now enjoys the consecration of statistical confirmation: Americans are fat. Between… more

Jedediah Purdy | September 30, 2004 | Die Zeit

Civilization of Violence?

Europeans can be forgiven the belief that they are confronted by what the American president might call an axis of violence. Bush administration officials are hunched over maps of Iraq, planning an invasion with or without European support. In recent months the United States has repudiated all obligations to the International Criminal Court and announced that it will not help prosecutors working for that court. At home, Americans have eagerly revived the death penalty and increased incarceration… more

Jedediah Purdy | August 14, 2002 | Die Zeit

The Pure Heart

Earlier this month, a group of sixty American public figures issued a statement on the attacks of September eleventh and the conflicts that have followed it. Titled What We're Fighting For, the document was a measured defense of the American war against Al Qaeda and, by implication, its Taliban allies. What we are fighting for, the authors declared, are American beliefs that are also the universal principles of modern societies: all individuals possess equal intrinsic dignity; there are… more

Jedediah Purdy | February 27, 2002 | Die Zeit

Us and Them

What should we make of these facts?

American economists supervise the policies of poor nations in debt to the International Monetary Fund, and the American economy every year presses its ethic of entrepreneurship and creative destruction deeper into Europe, East Asia, and India. American legal scholars and political scientists write constitutions for new governments in Africa and Central Asia, and Americans from financier George Soros's Open Society Institute fund the creation of local civil society.

English is the world's second language:… more

Jedediah Purdy | July 31, 2001 | Die Zeit