In While America Sleeps, Russ Feingold details our nation’s  collective failure to respond properly to the challenges posed by the post-9/11  era. Oversimplification of complicated new problems as well as the cynical  exploitation of the fears generated by 9/11 have undermined our ability to  adjust effectively to America’s new place in the world. This has weakened our  efforts to protect American lives, our national security, and our constitutional  values. Ranging from institutional failures to “get it right” by Congress, the  executive branch, and the media to the way we have spoken of the war on terror,  the nature of Islam, and American exceptionalism, too often we have not made the  best choices in confronting, in Churchill’s words, the “new conditions under  which we now have
to dwell.”  
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| Former Senator Russ Feingold | 
to dwell.”
 Senator Feingold explores the way in which  the American public has been fed inadequate information or mere slogans to  explain 9/11, Al Qaeda, and related events. This compares unfavorably with the  candor often associated with, for example, FDR’s fireside chats during World War  II. Lumping Al Qaeda into a catch-all category known as “bad guys,” failing to  make it clear that Islam itself is not a threat to our way of life, and  underestimating the extreme difficulty of fully invading individual countries as  a way to root out international terrorism are examples of this misdirection.  Moreover, our general inability to keep our eyes on the international ball seems  to have grown even worse in the years following 9/11. 
 More than ten years  after one of the greatest wake-up calls in human history, our nation seems to  have again grown complacent about the issues that suddenly seemed so urgent  immediately after 9/11. While America Sleeps suggests ways in which we can  awaken a new national commitment to engage with the rest of the world and one  another in a less simplistic and more thoughtful way. Feingold’s hope is that  when the history of this era is written, it will be said that our country was  taken off guard at the height of its power at the turn of the century and  stumbled for a decade in an unfamiliar environment, but in the following decade  America found a new national commitment of unity and resolve to adapt to its new  status and leadership in the world.
 
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