The Week (US)

Editor’s letter

- William Falk

When the doors of my commuter train whooshed open at Grand Central Terminal on my last day in the office, about 20 stragglers emerged one by one from the long line of cars, rather than the usual hundreds. The terminal’s Main Concourse was a vast, nearly empty cave. As people passed each other there and on the eerily quiet streets, we glanced at each other with a paradoxica­l mixture of fear and kinship. In this plague year, we are all potential disease vectors—threats to each other’s well-being. And yet we are all in this together. To minimize the number of deaths and the damage Covid-19 will inflict, we will need to cooperate, sacrifice for the greater good, and take care of those who lose their jobs or become sick. We are each other’s keepers. Deeper truths often are delivered in the envelope of crisis.

“No man is an island,” John Donne wrote in 1624, as he lay ill with a persistent fever, fearing death. “Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main.” In the solitude and delirium imposed by his illness, his connection to all others became manifest. Americans have always viewed the communitar­ian ethos with some ambivalenc­e; our founding ideals are rooted in a rebellion against authority and duty, and reverence for individual liberty. Epidemics, Anne Applebaum recently pointed out in The Atlantic, “have a way of revealing underlying truths about the societies they impact.” This one has caught us in a moment of profound weakness. Faith in science, government, media, and all our institutio­ns has badly eroded, and we are deeply divided politicall­y and culturally, viewing each other as enemy tribes, not countrymen. The coronaviru­s cares nothing for these distinctio­ns; it is a reminder that our separatene­ss is an illusion. We Americans, and all of humanity, are at war with a common foe. We can only defeat it together.

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