Opinion Dry Bones Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us . Editorial Exposing The Obsession W hile certainly not the feel-good movie of the year, it may be the most important. Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West is a loud wake-up for those still slumbering. The film reveals the inner workings of what President Bush now calls the "Islamic-fascist" movement — a movement of both stateless and state-sponsored terrorism based on a vision of Islam that glorifies death and seeks to eliminate or subjugate those who do not share its beliefs or who stand in its way. This is a film that needs to be seen, because some still don't get it. How can people still be asleep on this issue? We've had other wake-up calls: 9-11, regular video updates by bin Laden, Hamas heading the Palestinian Authority, the religious trium- phalism of Iran's mullahs and president, and the bombings of Bali, London, Madrid, Moscow, Turkey and so many other places. Don't people get it yet? The answer is both yes and no. Just look around you. Well-intentioned people — and some not so well-inten- tioned — seek to discredit and intimidate critics by charging they are anti-Muslim. They fail to distinguish between the inher- ent equality of people and the inequality and danger of certain ideas. Most recently, we've seen Muslim and Arab leaders around the world condemn Zionism, but either support or remain silent about Hezbollah's theology and its intertwined political agenda. Blaming the Jews still works. Some people figure that since they are pragmatists, everyone else is, too; so somehow all this talk of jihad (holy war) is a bluff. Others find points of agreement with criticism of Israel and the West and are ready to open negotiations. The film effectively challenges such dangerous self- deception, underscoring the threat by ominous and striking comparisons to the appeasement of Nazi Germany in the years prior to World War II. Obsession connects the dots and paints a vivid picture of the threat, and the evil, of radical Islam. While we listen to earnest and articulate Middle East ana- lysts. and historians make their case, nothing in the film is as 'convincing as seeing and hear- ing leading Muslim clerics call for death to America; Muslim children coached to want to kill Jews; and frenzied crowds burning flags, raising rifles and calling for jihad. Seeing Hezbollah (Party of God) leader Sheik Nasrallah and his Iranian patrons call for the destruction of the.United States and Israel, in seemingly rational tones, is particularly chilling. Honestreporting.com, the pro-Israel media monitoring and activist network that produced the film, is seeking a distribution agreement to get a 97-minute version in movie theaters across the country. Not only should that be done, but plans also should be made to get it on network televi- sion. It should spark the free and open discussion necessary to get us united in the face of the threat. But whether it is at the local Kai ANNAN IS ANGRY, THE 10; TRIED TO STOP ARMS SMUGGLING INTO LEBANON. UNFAIR IS ISRAEL. SUPPOSED TO JUST LOOK THE OTHER WAY?! . ,, i ... ..._ ,_,,...„-,.......,_. I.. iv thl AND IGNORE THE REARMING OF THE TER- RORISTS? multiplex, broadcast on TV, shown in special screenings or in living rooms across the nation, we need an unrelenting and unvarnished look at radical Islam, and Obsession provides it. With the fifth anniversary of 9-11 just around the corner, it is not just fitting — it is critically important — that Obsession is seen. As Hezbollah seeks to re-arm and Iran seeks nukes, we must understand our enemy and the seriousness of the challenge because they are deadly serious about what they want and what they are willing to do to get it. Obsession is uncomfortable not simply because of the threat it illuminates, but because it calls for us, in no-nonsense terms, to confront the problem and do something about it. fl Nation and Ohio's Western Reserve. It follows the path of ancient Indian trails along the southern shores of Lakes Erie and Michigan. Farther west, Highway 20 was paved over the wagon tracks of the Oregon Trail. The promise of a boundless future in a new place drew an incredible mix of dreamers and adventurers, artists and generals, scholars and indus- trialists. There were presidents and poets, football coaches and inventors, dancers and tycoons. All of them lived near this road, and in many cases were shaped by it. Knute Rockne and Barney Oldfield. Martha Graham and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Shakers and Amish. The founders of Alcoa, Studebaker, Welch's grape juice and the company that gave us Alka Seltzer. John D. Rockefeller and Simon Pokagon, chief of the Potawatomi. How wonderful it would be to drive this road, some of which remains just as they knew it, and write the stories of how these lives intermingled with the life of Highway 20. Did you know the schoolhouse where Mary took her little lamb lies along Highway 20, too? I can feel my motor run- ning. But another summer has come and almost gone, and I haven't done it yet. Maybe someday. I I E-mail letters of no more than 150 words: letters@thejewishnews.com . Reality Check Carefree Highways 0 nce in everyone's life, they should drive across this country. All the way to the Pacific Coast. At the very least, it gets you away from the TV set in gut- wrenching times like these. But, I also don't think you can really understand how vast, how mag- nificently diverse, America is unless you take that trip. I know this isn't the way most people like to travel anymore. With gas prices where they are, it may not even be the cost effec- tive way, either — although any mode of transportation that keeps me out of airports gets my vote. But to watch the country change; from the greenery of the Great Lakes, to the grain belt and the plains, then across the Rockies and the desert and finally the Sierra, down into the 38 August 31 • 2006 Pacific Slope — this is a true journey of discovery. You can talk all you want about red states and blue states, but until you drive across Nebraska on a hot sum- mer day with a thunderstorm moving in across the treeless expanse, some essential truths behind those colors will elude you. I made the drive four times, and, if someone offered, I'd pack up and leave again tomor- row. Only we couldn't go on the Interstates. We'd have to take the old roads. This is the 50th anniversary of the Interstate Highway System. For those with a load to haul or an appointment to keep or a long distance commute to make, the Interstates have been a blessing. It is possible to make the bi- coastal drive without ever seeing a stoplight. Or a town. Or a country inn. Or a statue of a local hero on horseback. Or a road that lazily meanders between rows of trees. One ofmy ambi- tions is to drive one of those old roads, U.S. 20, start to finish. It is the longest of these high- ways, running more than 3,300 miles from Kenmore Square in Boston to the Oregon coast. Its route was the passage to the West for generations. In parts of Massachusetts and New York, it's still called Great Western Road. This was the way the 17th century Puritans came to settle the Connecticut Valley. Veterans of the Revolutionary War walked this road to claim the rich lands of the vanquished Iroquois George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com .