Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us . Dry Bones (- FANATICAL IRAN IS PUSHING AHEAD TO GET NUCLEAR WEAPONS . Editorial ISRAEL TODAY AND NOW THEY'RE SHOWING OFF THEIR MISSILE CAPABILITIES 9-11's Lessons I t is standard rhetoric to say that everything has changed since 9-11. After seven years, the date still rings like an alarm in the night. It has become a numerical incantation that needs no fur- ther embellishment. Yet serious doubts remain that Americans fully realize the scope of the threat or the extent of the danger present- ed by Islamic extremists. Certainly, our lives have been touched by the aftermath. Air travel has become a misery and a simple trip to Canada now requires a passport. Ongoing military cam- paigns in Iraq and Afghanistan have sent convulsions through the political system. Thousands of young men and women have come home seriously disabled, or not at all. For the overwhelming majority, how- ever, the conflict remains smoke from a distant fire. There has been no follow-up attack. Despite several reports of terrorist plots and predictions that such an attack would be inevitable, none have been carried out. While Europe has seen terrorism strike at the very heart of its great cities, there has been no repeat of the disasters at the World Trade Center in New York City and Pentagon in Arlington. The surveillance programs that the gov- ernment has put in place actually affect a very few. A small number of innocent Muslims also have been caught up by over-zealous investigators. But in the greater sense, life goes on pretty much as it was seven years ago. So an increasing skepticism has grown up about the reality of the threat that Islamic extrem- ists pose to us, and a conviction has devel- oped that confrontation is unnecessary. We hear some political leaders say that the extremists who control the government of Iran cannot be regarded as a serious threat and that quiet diplomacy and compromise are the best ways to deal with the problem. Unfortunately, there is absolutely no evidence to support that theory. While talk is always better than war, there must be some indication that the other side is talking to a purpose. But the Islamists are not interested in a live-and-let-live world. They want submission, not compromise. When they look at the United States today they must have every reason to feel their approach is working. Seven years is a long time to live on alert. Seven years after Pearl Harbor, after all, we already were rebuilding our former enemies in Japan and Europe. The sense of triumph in a desperate war defined the country. But there is no victory celebration now APPARENTLY THAT'S WHAT WE'RE COUNTING ONE www.drybonesbloq.com Instead, we still have a hard slog ahead of us against an enemy that has no inten- tion of surrendering because he is sure that time is on his side. It may take another stunning blow before we fully understand that the world has indeed changed, and that phrase is more than mere boilerplate. We pray it never comes to that — but if it does, we will have this growing sense of complacency to blame. ❑ error. mer employer, the Detroit "But if you got that wrong;' he News, and found a reference told me, "how can I trust the rest to a pitcher whose career of your story?" had "digressed" since 2006. I never forgot that. One insig- Well, I'm sure Nate Robertson nificant mistake in the greater wishes he really could picture can raise doubts about change the subject regard- an entire story to the reader who ing his pitching collapse, knows the insignificant to be but the right word here was untrue. regressed:' e Cantor It is no secret that in these Again, it was an error no umnist difficult times, for both the local experienced editor would economy and newspapers in ever make. general, the Detroit dailies are cutting But there are more than errors in urban back. Many veteran staffers have accepted geography and prefixes that annoy me. buyouts, including those who were guard- There is a growing loss of civic identity, ians of the paper's institutional memory too. and the city's history. I was having lunch at a restaurant in I cannot imagine the veteran editors I Eastern Market, the kind that capitalizes knew at the Freep letting this kind of mis- on its attachment to Detroit by placing take go through. historic photographs of the city on its A few days later, I was thumbing walls. The waitress came up and asked, through the sports page of my other for- "Would you like more soda?" That set me off. We drink pop in Detroit, lady. A soda is a concoction with ice cream and fizzy water. Maybe in New York they would call my carbonated beverage a soda. But this is not New York. Just look at the pictures on the wall. I also hate it when people say that are standing "on line." No one ever does that in Detroit. We stand "in line" here, except when we are occasionally unruly. If you are over 55 and grew up in the city, you'll recall that you never went trick- or-treating on Halloween. You went beg- ging; and the appropriate cry was, "Help the poor." It was a Detroit thing. What's the use? Every year the city's distinct identity fades a little more and we become just like everywhere else. But I will go on drinking my pop forever. Reality Check Loss Of Memory A few weeks ago, the Detroit Free Press ran an article lament- ing a fire at a church located on Linwood between "Gladstone and Hazelton." As any old Detroiter from the West Side knows, the next street from Gladstone is Hazelwood. So the error jumped right out at me. Mistakes do happen, especially with young reporters who are not familiar with the geography of the city. But the fact that it would also pass through a few layers of editors was surprising. The paper corrected the mistake the fol- lowing day. Still, it made me wonder. When I was a young sportswriter, I cov- ered a press conference at Notre Dame and described one of the players being inter- viewed as wearing a green sweater. A writer from New York came up to me the next day and told me that, in fact, the sweater had been brown. A very minor ( ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com. iN September 11 • 2008 A33