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After : How America Confronted the September 12 Era

After : How America Confronted the September 12 Era

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $35.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Steven Brill's Brilliant Analysis is a Must-Read
Review: "The terrorists' goal is fear, not conquest," states Steven Brill in his treatise on the attacks on America in September 2001. "If terrorists can convince enough people to be scared because their government hasn't figured out how to deal with any number of threats at the same time, they win. Yet from a political point of view, if he or she alarms people so much by talking about all the threats and making the price of addressing them so onerous in terms of freedom, cost, and convenience, the terrorists win that way, too."

AFTER: How America Confronted the September 12 Era is the story of how the nation banded together and fought those fears. In the dark days that followed what will be forever remembered simply as "9/11," millions of people, Americans and non-Americans, wondered how life could ever return to normal. But in Steven Brill's commendable book, readers will learn how quickly attempts were made to get the nation back on track.

Of course, the focus that day was on the victims who perished or were injured in the horrific attacks. The days that followed were filled with palpable sadness and mourning. Jews traditionally have a seven-day period of mourning, after which it is time to get on with life.

Brill, founder of The American Lawyer and former editor of Brill's Content, reports in painstaking detail the efforts made by New York and America, through a handful of examples, to do just that --- the widow, reluctantly giving in to the inevitability of her husband's death; the long-time shopkeeper who lost everything, wondering what to do next; the businessmen on both sides of the insurance table, anxious to rebuild on the one hand and trying to avoid massive payouts on the other; the New York senator trying to get the most available aid for his battered city; the ACLU lawyer, seeking to keep mass hysteria from infringing on the civil rights of those who might become targets of persecution simply because of their nations of origin; the airline official, whose entire industry is already down dramatically, looking for assistance to avoid total collapse in the face of lost business and potential lawsuits; and the Red Cross worker, trying to maximize assistance to victims of 9/11 while juggling political sensitivities.

Unfortunately, there are always those looking to capitalize on such a situation, whether they seek financial, social or political glory. "[I]t is pointless to try to gauge the mix of 'selfish' or 'selfless' motivations at work. We live in a society that depends on both," writes Brill in the book's epilogue.

The sum of AFTER is an amazing collection of research and yet it remains a human story, rather than cold facts and figures. Congressmen cry along with family members, while the phrase "I feel your pain," often considered a joke thanks to the previous Administration, takes on real meaning.

The reader also gets a sense of the enormity of planning to re-seed a new financial infrastructure where the World Trade Center once stood. To do less, to sit and brood for an extended period, despite the unparalleled depths of anguish, would be to grant an even larger sense of victory to the madmen behind the attacks.

Brill's brilliant analysis ends with a note of hope: "Although American freedoms and the legal system that protects its people have been tested and even changed, Americans are still fundamentally free."

Brill concludes: "The American people and the American system have been as resilient as ever. Even as the nation changed, it prevailed, because its people remained fundamentally the same --- motivated enough and tough enough to pursue the same mix of self-interest and public interest in the same spirited, open arena that, since its beginning has been the source of America's enduring strength."

AFTER does not make for emotionally pleasant reading. With the first real test of that national grit since December 7, 1941 --- another date to remember --- it is, nevertheless, important reading. It reminds us how far we have come and how much farther we have yet to go.

--- Reviewed by Ron Kaplan

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Relief
Review: Book is very good. Makes you feel more secure about who is in charge and how 9/11 affected their efforts and resolve. Nice to know there are finally dedicated hard working Americans whose only concern is the welfare of national security rather than their own self-aggrandisement like in the past.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Garbage
Review: Brill could be the re election manager for the New York Senator.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brill's Brilliant From Contrite Cynic To Critical Citizen!
Review: I have come to admire Steven Brill for his honesty to admit when he is wrong, for his defense of public officials who deserve respect and for his ability to seek out the truth to better our society. This book emulates all three outstanding traits of the author by the way he investigates, dissects and proposes changes to the future from history.

Brill's first book, "Teamsters" caught my attention just out of law school. "Teamsters" was accurate, insightful, and dazzling work of spiritual dedication to the subject for the reader and should have been made into a movie.

He lost some creditability when he created "Brill's Content Magazine" to excused Bill Clintons' own personal King Solomon stain of sins that just needed to go away. Yet, I thought it was another brave attempt to save a not so perfect Public Servant President who cared about making tough decisions. Upon reflection, I now see Brill's brilliance in this attempt to teach the public to understand that American Public Service most of the time deserves praise not pity, appreciation not cynics and always respectful criticism.

In this book, he does exactly that by talking about the day after 911 and how America needs a new debate on our civil liberties and public safekeeping. He outlines how globalization combined with technological expansion enhances the destruction that leaves America vulnerable to loss opportunities for freedoms, economic development and public health assaults causing death and fear.

Thus, the writer is voicing the need for our society to approach this new change and re-think old policies and practices that will balance our freedoms with public security to ensure a personal viable existence with knowledge of fear but not domination from fear.

Brill writes the fine points on how President Bush and Governor Tom Ridge together created a Department of Homeland Security. How they change the face on how our bureaucracies can be made better to protect American Transportation, Security and Business Institutions. How they forced Congress to think much bigger rather than remain small fiefdoms for congressional committee critics to wave power by claiming we cannot protect anyone anymore.

The author freely admits his error as a, "New York City Fifth Avenue Ivy League Media Cynic," a long title but nothing to be ashamed of either, and no longer undervaluing the hard work, devotion and dedication of public servants such Tom Ridge, Chuck Shumer and President Bush just as he valued President Clinton's devotion.

He shows how Ridge left a cozy Governor's position to take a ill prepared newly created position that is easy fodder for any heckler and detractor to ridicule him. Yet, he praises Ridge's performance to date nothing short of sparkling dedication to duty and country.

Simultaneously, the author does not have the same feelings or findings for Attorney General John Ashcroft who Brill fears lacks the basic abilities to see the entire picture. The author has concluded the new Department of Justice policies are not well thought out and are having a negative impact on civil liberties while not meeting the needs to provide public security.

Brill blames much on the Department of Justice incompetence managing the Immigration and Naturalization Service and after reading his indictment one must agree with him. The INS is in shambles and need a public press purge to reform the personnel, polices and practices! I call upon every newspaper, magazine and media investigator to rain upon this agency and publicly change it by publishing its failures and the people responsible so they leave and competency is restored for our protection.

Brill concludes America is on the right path towards public safety but a plan is only as good as the people who execute it. Consequently, why he contributed his own voice to calling for more public debates to re-organize and balance of our liberties against national institutional safety.

Our nation needs more Steven Brill's who support our leaders in times of perils by telling us how hard of a job they have for our benefit. I credit him for telling us about the personal sacrifices of these men and women of public service we often put down as politicians preying as public serpents without remorse or apology. At the same time, he teaches us not to be afraid to tell us what needs to be improved and who needs to reform it by providing in clear exact details why someone or some agencies like INS and FAA are deteriorating into threats of our own making.

This book is a first-class read from a author, attorney and media reactionary for the political promotion of true libertarian values. Brill shows his own dedication not because of controversy but because of his honesty to defend, encourage and criticize public service when he feels the need to participate as a citizen.

I highly recommend this book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: amazing
Review: If you want the 411 on what America has really been doing since 9/11, this a book you should read.

Very well written, compelling, and highly informative.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Raises issues you didn't even know existed
Review: If you want to know how the country dealt with the events of September 11th in the year that followed this is the definitive book on the topic. If follows dozens of individuals through that year from victims' families, business owners both small(the owner of a shoe repair shop in NYC) to large (the owner of the twin towers), to those in affected industries (the manager of the Minneapolis airport) to those in government including John Ashcroft and Senator Charles Schumer. It covers both the positives and negatives of issues that arose whether it be how vicitms were being identified, to the changes in views on civil liberties, to victim compensation to insurance. (The question of whether or not the planes striking the World Trade Center was a "single occurrence" or two "events." There was a $3.55 billion difference between those two concepts.) At a whopping 723 pages I finished this book in six days and highly recommend it to everyone.

Here's just one small bit I though was worth sharing:

"One of Ashcroft's closest aids was asked by the author a few days later what protection any American had if someone like Padilla could be arrested on American soil and held secretly just on the government's say so.

"After first correcting his questioner for not using Padilla's Muslim name, he answered, 'Well, I guess his family could speak out if he's missing, and if that creates a political furor, the Pesident would be accountable at the next election.'

"Was that the only protection?

"'That and the good faith of the people who hold these offices,' he replied."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Entertaining Overview Of The Meaning of 911 Afterward
Review: In the wake of the 911 tragedy came a virtual tidal wave of tomes relating in one fashion or another to the effects and meaning of the events of that fateful day. Yet with all those books, none has succeeded quite so colorfully or in such an entertaining and edifying fashion as has noted journalist Steven Brill in "After: How America Confronted The September 12 Era". Focusing on the individual lives of a variety of different people from any of a number of separate and distinct walks of life, Brill pulls us up close and personal into the vortex of what is swirling around within the events and consequences flowing from the actions of nineteen madmen bent on murder and mayhem. Yet this is not a maudlin book, in the sense that it concentrates on a tragic event and its aftermath. Instead, it is a celebration of why we Americans have much to be proud of regarding the conduct of many of the involved individuals.

The book, while meticulously noted and researched, flows rather like a work of fiction, moving us with its portrayal of the shuddering impact of the day's events. Yet, despite its stirring narrative and impressive dialogue, each of the characters in this well-written work are real breathing individuals, most of them still walking among us, most of them still relatively anonymous. And it is due to this sheer raw humanity exposed in its most vulnerable moments of loss and renewal. In so doing, Brill offers us a stirring and unforgettable portrait of how our culture works. Thus we follow a customs officer as he reacts to his own eyewitness experience of the hits on the World Trade Centers with an emotional and yet critical effort to rein in control over a massive field full of potentially dangerous cargo containers, any of which might hold weapons of mass destruction, or a customs officer who suddenly must curtail the rather informal border crossings with few men or resources at her disposal.

We watch as an executive reacts to the news by immediately issuing orders for the materials to expand production of airport x-ray machines needed to ensure greater passenger safety, and as other individuals with loved ones lost in the carnage struggle to draw meaning and sustenance from their bewildering losses. The few negative aspects of the book have to do with Brill's seemingly naïve acceptance of several bureaucrat's spin on the events in self serving ways, a la Tom Ridge and John Ashcroft, who attempt to justify actions taken by the federal bureaucracy on the basis of protecting Americans, when elsewhere it has been demonstrated that there were other, ulterior motives for much of these moves to consolidate power and capability more exclusively within the federal executive branch. Yet the nearly 350 interviews and extensive research accomplished by Brill shine through with a most memorable and meaningful essay into the aftermath of a day that will certainly live in infamy for decades to come. Enjoy!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Sorry, no book
Review: Sorry, but I ordered this book from bluvolt.com who apparently doesn't send out books, according to their recommendation list. It does sound interesting, though and I would review it if I had a chance to read it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: detailed... but accurate?
Review: Steven Brill is a graduate of Yale Law and the founder of Court TV, so After is dominated by a lawyerly insistence on detail and accuracy. The events of September 11 itself are relegated to a prologue of two dozen pages or so. The rest of the 700+ pages (including notes and index) are made up of descriptions of how America dealt with the changes brought about by the terrorist attacks. This could be incredibly tedious in the wrong hands, but Brill is a master at capturing the humanity of his subjects, whom he follows in a diary like format for a full year. I especially enjoyed following the travails of Sal Iacono, whose shoe repair shop was devastated by the attacks but who was fortunate enough to find a dedicated pro bono lawyer who helped him get the grants and loans he needed to recover. Brill's coverage of the difficulties faced by the families of three of those killed in the World Trade Center is sensitive but thorough. Some people and groups come off better than others. Senator Chuck Schumer and Governor Tom Ridge both get high marks for their dedication to solving the myriad problems of the period. Attorney General John Ashcroft appears as a man of limited intellectual curiosity determined to fight terrorism no matter how much he tramples on the Constitution. (The ACLU's leader makes an interesting counterfoil to Ashcroft.) The Red Cross appears first as an organization too eager to collect funds and too reluctant to disperse them, then as being so reckless in spending that multiple abuses take place.

The book ends on a hopeful note in January of 2003, with the US now better prepared for future terrorist attacks and with its basic values intact. After should be one of the books historians turn to in order to understand how we coped with the period after September 11.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly Detailed But Never Dull
Review: Steven Brill is a graduate of Yale Law and the founder of Court TV, so After is dominated by a lawyerly insistence on detail and accuracy. The events of September 11 itself are relegated to a prologue of two dozen pages or so. The rest of the 700+ pages (including notes and index) are made up of descriptions of how America dealt with the changes brought about by the terrorist attacks. This could be incredibly tedious in the wrong hands, but Brill is a master at capturing the humanity of his subjects, whom he follows in a diary like format for a full year. I especially enjoyed following the travails of Sal Iacono, whose shoe repair shop was devastated by the attacks but who was fortunate enough to find a dedicated pro bono lawyer who helped him get the grants and loans he needed to recover. Brill's coverage of the difficulties faced by the families of three of those killed in the World Trade Center is sensitive but thorough. Some people and groups come off better than others. Senator Chuck Schumer and Governor Tom Ridge both get high marks for their dedication to solving the myriad problems of the period. Attorney General John Ashcroft appears as a man of limited intellectual curiosity determined to fight terrorism no matter how much he tramples on the Constitution. (The ACLU's leader makes an interesting counterfoil to Ashcroft.) The Red Cross appears first as an organization too eager to collect funds and too reluctant to disperse them, then as being so reckless in spending that multiple abuses take place.

The book ends on a hopeful note in January of 2003, with the US now better prepared for future terrorist attacks and with its basic values intact. After should be one of the books historians turn to in order to understand how we coped with the period after September 11.


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