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Life after 9/11. (Editor's Note).


I GREW UP in the giant shadow of the World Trade Center. Born in Brooklyn, I was raised in Middletown, New Jersey--a commuter town A commuter town is an urban community that is primarily residential, from which most of the workforce commute out of the community to earn their livelihood. Most commuter towns are suburbs of a nearby metropolis that workers travel to daily, and many suburbs are commuter towns.  that lost almost 50 people on 9/II. My father worked for a shipping company that was one of the center's original tenants, and I myself worked and lived in the city for several years. I now live 500 miles away from Manhattan, but like millions of Americans, I spent that horrific September morning frantically checking on friends and relatives.

It is a measure of the attacks' magnitude that virtually everyone I've talked with in the past year has a close connection to 9/II. Depending on how the situation in Iraq, the crisis in the Middle East, and a number of other things play Out, 9/II may well end up as the defining event of the 21st century, though perhaps not in the way we might have first expected.

I firmly agree with Nobel laureate Noun 1. Nobel Laureate - winner of a Nobel prize
Nobelist

laureate - someone honored for great achievements; figuratively someone crowned with a laurel wreath
 V.S. Naipaul, who recently said, "The idea of [the terrorists'] strength is an illusion....The terrorists can fly a plane, but what they can't do is build a plane. What they can't do is build those towers." The conflict between the liberal West and reactionary elements in Islam has already been ugly, and it may continue for years or even decades. But the outcome is hardly in question:The system that delivers greater material wealth and greater personal freedom will triumph.

Yet the exact long-term effects of 9/II are far from clear. Like everyone else, we at reason have spent much of the past year trying to make sense of the attacks and their aftermath. In dozens of pieces for the magazine and reason online, we've explored the role of anti-Western "Occidentalism Oc·ci·den·tal·ism  
n.
1. A quality, mannerism, or custom specific to or characteristic of the Occident.

2. Scholarly knowledge of Occidental cultures, languages, and peoples.
" in the attacks; analyzed how 9/II has altered American cultural identity; detailed how "vulgar" culture has liberated Islam and the West; documented the real effects of U.N. sanctions against Iraq; reaffirmed that the defining quality of liberal democracy is tolerance; and much more. (These are collected online at reason.com/terror.shtml.)

On the anniversary of 9/II, we continue our efforts in a special section titled "What Price Safety?: Security and Freedom in an Age of Fear" (page 24). Our contributors look at the ways in which 9/II is subtly--and not so subtly--restructuring American life, especially with regard to civil liberties. In "Freedom for Safety;' I suggest that by swapping the former for the latter, we are slowly undermining both. David Kopel and Michael Krause detail the abysmal a·bys·mal  
adj.
1. Resembling an abyss in depth; unfathomable.

2. Very profound; limitless: abysmal misery.

3. Very bad: an abysmal performance.
 track record and massive potential for abuse of increasingly popular surveillance systems that employ "facial recognition Noun 1. facial recognition - biometric identification by scanning a person's face and matching it against a library of known faces; "they used face recognition to spot known terrorists"
automatic face recognition, face recognition
 technology." In "The Forever War," Senior Editor Jacob Sullum Jacob Z. Sullum (born September 5, 1965) is a syndicated newspaper columnist and a Senior Editor at Reason magazine. In 2004, he received a Thomas S. Szasz Award. [1]

Sullum is the author of:
 challenges the conventional wisdom that our current state of alert should abrogate abrogate v. to annul or repeal a law or pass legislation that contradicts the prior law. Abrogate also applies to revoking or withdrawing conditions of a contract. (See: repeal)  constitutional rights. Jeffrey Benner exposes pending legislation that will effectively gut the Freedom of Information Act, and Ted Galen Carpenter lays out the essential elements of an effective U.S. foreign policy. On the flip side Flip side

In the context of general equities, opposite side to a proposition or position (buy, if sell is the proposition and vice versa).
, Associate Editor Jesse Walker reminds us of what hasn't cha nged ("Laughter in the Ruins," page 22).

These are hardly our final words on 9/II and its impact on our lives. Indeed, even as the attacks fade in time and memory, they will continue to cast a shadow over us as long as the World Trade Center's used to be.

Nick Gillespie Nick Gillespie has been the editor-in-chief of Reason magazine since 2000. He has written articles or been a commentator for many media outlets. Gillespie is known for frequently appearing in his trademark leather jacket. He has two sons, Jack and Neal.[1].  
COPYRIGHT 2002 Reason Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Reason
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Oct 1, 2002
Words:563
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