We Owe Each Other is not a partisan manifesto. It is a personal reckoning.
In an age of outrage, tribal loyalty, and cultural fracture, Zachary Wiedemann confronts the deeper forces driving America's division - political devotion, selective morality, declining civic literacy, and the quiet psychological wounds that shape how we choose sides.
Blending historical insight with modern analysis, Wiedemann examines everything from the collapse of compromise in the era of Sumner and Brooks to the cult-like intensity surrounding Trump and Biden. He challenges blind allegiance, questions the fusion of faith and party, and calls out the comfort of outrage in a social-media age.
But this book is more than political commentary.
Through personal stories of abandonment, depression, and a near-death experience that reshaped his understanding of fear and control, Wiedemann reveals how instability in our personal lives often mirrors the instability in our civic culture.
We Owe Each Other is ultimately a hopeful call to maturity - a reminder that democracy survives not through dominance, but through integrity. That faith should anchor humility, not tribalism. And that the future depends not on which side wins, but on whether citizens choose responsibility over rage.
This is not a book about saving a party.
It is a book about saving ourselves.
Related Subjects
History Political Science Politics & Social Sciences Religion Religion & Spirituality