Sept. 11, 2003, was a beautiful late-summer day in New York -- just as it was two years ago. It's an eerie juxtaposition. Those 3,000 people who were killed in the abominable terrorist attacks of 9-11 were folks who simply went to work to do their jobs. And yet it happened -- the past cannot be changed.

It is impossible to think about those events without a deep-rooted sense of sadness. Psychiatrists tell us that underneath sadness there is almost always a strong sense of anger and resentment. Anger is an especially bad emotion -- it eats away at the insides and takes away from the calmness that is so necessary in life. Then there is a sense of foreboding about the future. No one in New York can entirely escape the fear that another shoe will drop.

This is how I feel -- how many of us feel. And yet, the usual chorus of pessimists and critics of President Bush's resolute wartime policies prey upon this fear. Instead of closure, they seek to reopen the emotional wounds. Unbelievable.

Democrats on the presidential campaign trail ask whether people feel safer now after Afghanistan and Iraq than they did two years ago. It's a viscerally stupid question and a politically mischievous one -- no one can feel entirely safe in the aftermath of 9-11. Polling data show clearly that the Democrats are digging a political grave for themselves with this question. Pollster Stan Greenberg -- an ex-Clinton strategist -- finds that a strong 61 percent to 26 percent majority feels safer now than right after 9-11.

But above politics, the much bigger question for this nation is whether faith will triumph over fear. Fear and negativism are just as debilitating for individuals as for nations. Fear is the Devil's work, faith is the Lord's.

While our government is taking action to slay the terrorist networks on their home turf before they can strike on our soil again, all we can do is put one foot in front of the other, go about our daily lives, maintain our faith that things will get much better rather than worse and keep an optimistic viewpoint about life.

Optimism has always been the heart and soul of America. And there is no leader in recent times who spoke to that optimism more than Ronald Reagan. It is worth pausing a moment to recall the Gipper's great faith and optimism in our country.