• Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us. trawl la/. Essence Of The Absurd T hese are the countries whose land or water borders with Iran are currently in dispute; Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, United Arab Emirates, Russia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. Syria claims all of neighboring Lebanon as its own and is doing all it can to under- mine its government. Claims to the territory of Kashmir have led to three major wars between Pakistan and India. to the discredit of the Iraq Study Group that if fell into the same mud puddle in making its report. The road to peace in Baghdad may be long, winding, potholed and dangerous, but it doesn't go anywhere near Jerusalem. The Arab states have been pound- ing that drum for decades, all the while ignoring their own fractious borders. War between Iran and Iraq in the 1980s over the estuary to the Persian Gulf cost an estimated one million lives. That is a quantum jump over the toll on the closer both sides in all of Israel's conflicts combined. Yet it is suppos- edly the Israeli- Palestinian dispute and only this that blocks the realization of peace. Clearly settled international borders are almost an anomaly in the world. Not even islands are spared, to which the history of Ireland and Cyprus attest. Events of the last few months indicate how unsettled the frontier between the United States and Mexico really is, and the War of 1812 had to be fought before anything approach sta- bility arrived on the border with Canada. Chaos theory holds that the closer one comes to the edge of any entity, the more Chaos theory holds that one conies to the edge of art;' entity, the more unstable it becomes_ Egypt's disputed borders with Sudan and Libya have been the source of conflict for years. In fact, its only border that is internationally recognized is the one with Israel. And yet it remains the conventional wis- dom in almost every discussion of Middle East policy that until Israel's territorial disputes are resolved to everyone's satis- faction, there can be no peace. Or as the popular phrase goes: The road to peace in Baghdad runs through Jerusalem. This is, of course, nonsense, and it is Dry Bones 4R2 4 14 ..1 , IS: r THE "ARE QUESTION OUR ARAB 4# unstable it becomes. So `NEIGHBORS RATIONAL a conflict over territorial ENOUGH TO KNOW boundaries is as close THAT IRAN IS A to being natural as any THREAT TO US ALL?" aspect of human affairs. According to Iranian journalist Amir Taheri, there have been 22 full scale wars over territori- al disputes in the last 50 years in the Middle East and not one of these had anything to do with IT'S THE the Israeli-Palestinian ANSWER THAT'S conflict. DEPRESSING! It is, instead, the absence among these nations of any willing- ness to resolve conflicts by compromise, the essence of a democratic society, that permits small disputes to esca- late irrationally into DryBonesBlog.com full-blown warfare. Israel is only a tiny part of the much larger issue: How do you settle dif- how easily they were led into believing the ferences in a culture that sees issues only absurd. I in black and white? There were highly intelligent people E-mail letters of no more than 150 words to: letters@thejewishnews.com . who labored long and diligently over the Iraq Study Report. It is sobering to realize Reality Check Shape Up, Celebrities T hings are messy in Iraq. The auto industry is tanking. The dollar is used as tissue paper in Europe. But I always thought that just as long as America kept its lead in celebrities, we would be all right. I'm not so sure anymore. We're just not turning out celebrities the way we used to. I grew accustomed long ago to musi- cal stars who can neither sing, dance nor play an instrument, and whose one tal- ent seemed to lie in being able to talk in rhythm while waving their arms. Well, that's democracy at work. Is it fair that musical stardom should be denied to someone simply because they lack musical ability? That's outright dis- criminatory. People now seem to feel that they are entitled to be famous. Talent is only the frosting, pleasant but not essential. But now we're getting to the point where reality show contestants who can't even talk in rhythm and wave their arms in the correct manner are regarded as celebrities. I saw one guy who was described that way and his biggest accomplishment was that he lost more weight than any of his competitors. What kind of example is that to set for the world? There is Paris Hilton, who seems to be famous for being rich, acting stupid and starring in a sex show on the Internet. Things are so bad with Britney Spears that we are told we musn't make fun of her anymore. To top it all off, there is the late, ubiquitous and repulsive Anna Nicole Smith. This isn't good, friends and neighbors. America must do better. Is there any wonder we are losing inter- national respect? We're even letting some British guy on "American Idol" define talent, when it's obvious the man can't tell an original presence from Rex the Wonder Horse. It's all the fault of those 24-hour news channels. They have so many hours in which to broadcast, it's inevitable that gar- bage fills the void. Crime and justice stories that would have run two or three days at most in a local newspaper now are magnified into national carnivals; analyzed endlessly by people who seem to be able to suspend their disbelief and disgust and pretend that any of it matters. So the victim becomes a celebrity, the perp becomes a celebrity and the news channel analysts become celebrities, too. I think we need to ask more from our celebrities. At least, the contestants on "Dancing with the Stars" know how to dance, although the only "stars" I have recognized on that show were a couple of retired foot- ball players. Even "Hollywood Squares" used to have a higher recognition factor than that. It's all coming to pass just as Paddy Chayefsky foretold in his classic script for "Network," more than 20 years ago. It's news filled with gimmicks and someone becoming a national political figure for no other reason than, "You're on television, stupid." I say let's just surrender to it and elect Oprah president. If we're going down in the celebrity wars, we might as well fire the biggest gun we've got. J George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com. March 8 2007 29