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L i k e U s ! ! !

RUMINATION AND ITS ANTIDOTE

To ruminate means literally to chew over and over again.

It’s what ruminants (cows, sheep, goats, deer, giraffes, buffalo, and antelope) do with grass so they can draw as much of the nutritional value from it as they can.

When we dwell too much on what hurt us in the past, we are ruminating. We “re-chew” our negative thoughts and memories, drawing as much pain and suffering out of them as we possibly can.

This is one of the worst things we can do for our sense of happiness and well-being.

The compulsion to ruminate can be powerful, especially if we’ve practiced it a lot. We can develop an irresistible urge to replay the events that have made us miserable.

Yet some of the popular notions from psychotherapy can lead people to believe this is a good thing. We think we are figuring something out. In fact, it’s more like re-striking a bruised injury thinking that will help it to heal.

When we purposefully remember painful memories over and over again, without changing our perspective towards them, we actually reinforce the pain with each visit.

Remember, our narrative memories aren’t facts, they are stories that can contain facts—but they can also contain mistaken ideas or conclusions. So when we ruminate we are not exploring Truth with a capital “T,” we are replaying a painful and helpless story.

I don’t say this to deny anybody’s experience or to minimize anybody’s trauma, but the best thing we can do with painful experiences is to have them take their proper place in history.

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FLASHBACK FRIDAY – GUINNESS AT THE NORTH POLE

jw-guinness-parachute-jumpApril 15, 1981 – this is the exact moment when I landed on the sea-ice at 90 North latitude, the North Pole, to set a Guinness World Record for “The Northernmost Parachute Jump.”

On a Wheeler Expedition to the top of the world, we landed our ski-equipped Twin Otter on a configuration of ice called an “old frozen-over lead” precisely at 90N. My clients got out, we took the fuel drums out, rear door off, took off again with me, the pilot and co-pilot. I had pilot Rocky Parsons go up to 8,000 feet for a mile of freefall, directed him to the spot – tiny black dots of our people on the ice – told him when to cut the engines, and I was out the door.

OMG what a rush, falling straight down on the very top of our planet, a world of ice below – meadows of rubble ice, rivers of open water called leads snaking through the ice, lakes of water called polynyas, pressure ridges of turquoise ice, terminal velocity, back flips, somersaults, fun in the sky. Altimeter shows 2,500 feet, time to go – pull out the hand deploy, see the canopy furl out in full, grab the hand toggles, spin around for more fun, line it up to come in next to everyone, stand-up landing, Guinness Book. Totally cool. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #5 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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THE REMOTEST CHURCH

baihanluo-catholic-church

Baihanluo Catholic Church is the remotest Christian Church on earth. The isolated village is in a roadless region high on a Himalayan mountain ridge deep in “The Great River Trenches of Asia” – one of our planet’s most dramatic geological features where four major rivers – the Irrawaddy, Salween, Mekong, and Yangtze all spill off the Tibetan Plateau coursing south in tight parallel for 100 miles.

catholic-mission-in-laos

In the late 1800’s, French Catholic missionaries made their way far, far up the Mekong from the French colony of Laos to befriend the Nu and Lisu tribespeople up here. They responded by building this beautiful wooden church that has been lovingly cared for by the local parishioners ever since.

I led an expedition traversing all three of the great trenches twenty years ago (2001). We were welcomed so warmly by the devout villagers. It’s hard to get more remote than this, yet they have retained their faith for at least four generations now. You can imagine how powerful and experience it was to be with them. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #138 Photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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RIZONG GOMPA

rizong-gompaRizong is a Gompa or monastery for lamas or monks of the Gelugpa or Yellow Hat sect of Tibetan Buddhism.  It is built like it is virtually glued onto a steep cliff in a hidden side valley of the Upper Indus River in the remote region of Ladakh or Indian Tibet.

Ladakh is culturally and geographically Tibetan, yet the British were able to sequester this region for India and away from Chinese-Occupied Tibet, so it is here that real Tibet still flourishes. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #206 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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TWO COOL MOUNTAIN TAJIK KIDS AT THE FIRST PEARL OF SHING

tajik-kidsThe high hidden Valley of Shing in western Tajikistan holds a series of seven stepping-stone lakes called the Seven Pearls of Shing.  The valley is dotted with tiny villages of Mountain Tajiks, descendants of the ancient Sogdians who fought Alexander the Great.

Alexander fell in love with and married a Sogdian princess named Roxanna – and the girls of Shing are often named Roxanna to this day.  The Mountain Tajiks of the Shing are a special people – strong, independent and free.  They are also warm and welcoming.  The kids – the girls just like the boys – grow up vibrant and confidant.  These two young brothers exemplify that.

Each of the seven pearls have a unique breathless beauty, for they are of different colors and change according to the time of day.  We are here at Mijnon (Eyelash), the first pearl, followed by Soya (Shade), Hushnor (Vigilance), Nophin (Navel), Khurdak (Little One), Marguzor (Blossoming), and Hazor Chasma (Thousand Springs).  Towering above us are snow-laced mountains 18,000 feet high. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #53 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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HORSESHOE BEND

horseshoe-bendLooking down 1,000 feet above world-famous Horseshoe Bend of the Colorado River at sunset is one of most iconic views our planet offers us. It is to be found near Page, Arizona near the border with Utah. Yet in truth, the number of different mind-blowing iconic views is uncountable in this part of the American West.

Close by are the Vermillion Cliffs, and the simply psychedelic Antelope Canyon. Just a bit further is the Grand Escalante Staircase, a little bit further Zion and Bryce Canyons and Monument Valley. And of course, right next door is something called The Grand Canyon.

There are people who have explored this region for years and will tell you there’s so much they’ve yet to see. You can explore the world over – what I’ve done my whole life – and yet there is so much of Creation to be soul-thrilled by just in this one region of northern Arizona and southern Utah – and I haven’t mentioned Moab which is a total mind-blow all by itself.

Take a break from all the worries of the world to come to here. Pick a place that will thrill your soul for a few days. That’s what’s needed now. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #134 Photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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HALF-FULL REPORT 02/27/26

Trump’s American System.

In every republic, power flows not just through laws or budgets, but through the stories citizens carry in their minds and President Trump’s 2026 State of the Union mastered that terrain.

Trump’s address was a study in classical rhetoric calibrated for the modern era. He layered repetition, contrast, and emotional storytelling to make abstract policies tangible. He drove home the notion of national revival. Guests in the gallery and personal anecdotes humanized policy.

Media fragmentation played to his advantage, with short declarative beats engineered to travel widely and dominate the narrative before opposition responses could land. The result was a speech that forced all others to react within the framework he defined.

Central to the speech was Trump’s economic philosophy: the American System. Tariffs, border security, and industrial policy were framed as deliberate tools to rebuild domestic production, protect sovereignty, and empower a producer culture. He connected these policies to historical continuity, linking contemporary industrial revival to the founding principle of self-government.

Critics fixated on procedural and economic theory, but Trump anchored his argument in tangible outcomes such as rising wages, new factories, energy expansion. This made abstract policy visible to voters and reinforced his narrative of national strength through productive capacity.

Beyond domestic policy, the address underscored global strategy, civilizational priorities, and industrial character. The Supreme Court ruling on tariffs tested executive limits, yet the administration’s tactical pivot demonstrated flexibility within legal boundaries.

And then there is Cuba, Iran and Pakistan.

America needs more of what the Boy Scouts used to teach and will soon again.

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THE ANTI-AMERICAN RIGHT

[This Monday’s Archive was originally posted in TTP on October 29, 2003.  Lately in TTP, you’ve been learning about the Anti-American Right of today in Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens’ Terrifying Descent into Madness, and The Freak World of Nick Fuentes.  So it may be illuminating to realize that the Right has always been infested with once-sane folks who’ve gone wacko.  The causes may be different – although a pathological anti-Semitism seems a common denominator. That and being a Useful Idiot for the Kremlin. Feel quite free to offer your opinion in the Forum.]

TTP, October 29, 2003

Sounds like an oxymoron, doesn’t it?  It’s the Left — liberals, left-wingers, socialists, commies, pinkos, the Noam Chomskys and Alec Baldwins and Barbra Streisands — that hates America.  But the Right — good old flag-waving patriotic God Bless America conservatives?  How could they possibly be anti-American?  It sounds ridiculous.

Yet whatever sense or nonsense it makes, Anti-Americanism is seeping into the entire conservative movement and is threatening to splinter it into pieces.  This is going to cost me friendships as I’m about to name names.

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THE GRAVEYARD OF DESTRUCTIVE IDEAS

How do destructive ideas and bouts of collective madness so quickly become policy, law, and the status quo? After all, most have little public support — and are not Western nations supposedly rationally governed?

There is usually a multi-step process on the road to these self-destructive fits of society-wide insanity.

The suicidal impulse so often begins with left-leaning researchers in elite universities (i.e., the tenured in search of a novel, grant-getting theory).

They begin insisting that a new existential threat requires immediate government intervention, novel legislation, ample funding, and public awareness of the impending danger.

So out of nowhere, the public is warned that the scorching planet will be inundated by rising seas in a mere decade.

Or that millions of transgender youth are our next civil rights frontier, given that they suffer in silence without political advocacy, new laws, programs, and the chance for “life-saving,” powerful hormonal treatments and radical sex-reassignment surgeries. Indeed, the travel time from an outlandish idea by the faculty lounge to liberal status quo is a mere few years.

Next, the media, hand-in-glove with academia, springs into action…

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GUESS HOW HACKERS JUST STOLE MEXICO’S TAX AND VOTER ROLLS

This story doesn't quite feature the gut-punch immediacy of Mexico's drug war escalating into a virtual civil war last week in and around Puerto Vallarta, but as a glimpse into the future, maybe it ought to send a chill or three down your spine.

According to a new Bloomberg story (paywalled, sorry), a weeks-long hacker campaign against the Mexican government culminated in January with a massive data theft of some of the federal government's most sensitive information.

"By the time it was over," Let's Data Science reported on Wednesday, "the attacker had stolen 150 gigabytes of sensitive data — including 195 million taxpayer records, voter registration files, government employee credentials, and civil registry data."

If you're thinking such a massive theft involved a team of hackers, years of planning involving a Stuxnet-like virus, or even physical access to Mexican government computer systems — think again.

The almost unprecedented hack was done by just one guy. Using Anthropic's Claude AI, despite all of Anthropic's safeguards against something exactly like this.

Summing up a report published Wednesday by Israeli cybersecurity startup Gambit Security, Bloomberg wrote that some "unknown Claude user" simply made up "Spanish-language prompts for the chatbot to act as an elite hacker, finding vulnerabilities in government networks, writing computer scripts to exploit them and determining ways to automate data theft."

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ANIMAL PLANET IN AMERICA

I went to see Melania recently.  I was genuinely interested in the life of the very desirable First Lady America is lucky to have for the second time.

Increasingly, I don’t go to the theater for several reasons.  First of all, Hollyweird’s movies suck.  Unimaginative or stupid writing and storylines prevail, and even if the “wokeness” manages not to creep into the script, you know you are funding it by buying a ticket.  Movie “remakes” also tend to suck.

And then there are all of the idiotic people who don’t know how to behave in a theater.  The movie theater has become like the bus station, the shopping mall, restaurants, and all of the other places where you used to be able to sit down and relax without some Pokémon deciding to act out violently or lose their mind.

But what could go wrong by seeing Melania?  It seemed unlikely to attract a viewership of Democrats, or people that act like them.

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PANAMA, CHINA, AND THE ART OF THE DEAL

[TTP:  Mike will be covering the SOTU in the HFR, so we won’t steal his thunder today. This news, ignored by the Legacy Media, should brighten your day. Please take a good look at this picture. As Beege would say, “Dawg!” Isn’t that a hoot?!]

The last time I wrote anything at length about the Panama Canal specifically was last April, so almost a year ago.

The new Trump administration had moved swiftly to reassert American influence in the region and engineered a pretty impressive about-face as far as the Panamanian government went, which had been in the middle of a Belt and Road Initiative build-up with the Chinese Communists.

All that came to a screeching halt.

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth went down there with a couple of US Navy ships for some collaborative maneuvers, managed to back the Panamanians out of a recently extended port management agreement with Hong Kong-based firm CK Hutchinson subsidiary Panama Ports Company (PPC) , and into a multinational deal to sell the rights (among others) for the Panamanian Canal ports to Blackrock.

Heads exploded in Beijing…

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BRICS BEGINS TO BREAK

Sometimes, major historical shifts are virtually invisible.

That’s what just happened in India, and it upends 80 years of geopolitical calculus.

80 years is a very, very long time.

So here’s what happened. The Indian Ministry of Defense posted on X (formerly Twitter) that the Indian Navy has been carrying out raids and capturing Shadow Fleet vessels in India's Exclusive Economic Zone, starting on February 5th. About an hour later, someone deleted the post.

Hardly anyone noticed: Peter Zeihan, me, a handful of others.

But then Reuters and the Wall Street Journal (neither of which gave it serious coverage) confirmed the key details. It’s really happening, in the plural.

Why should you care? A little background will help.

 

India, Our Old Frenemy

India’s mythology is independence. Its identity since independence has been that it bows to no one. It has been reinforced for decades by a justifiable civilizational confidence: poor though it may be, India is not Belgium. India is a continental-sized power. It doesn’t “join blocs.” Blocs join it.

India founded the “Non-Aligned Movement” at the beginning of the Cold War, a mostly anti-American, mostly pro-Soviet group led through the years by such paragons of freedom and democracy as Josip Broz Tito, Gamal Abdel Nasser, both Fidel and Raül Castro, Robert Mugabe, and perhaps my current favorite, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

It’s also a founding member of BRICS (it’s the “I”), the transparently anti-U.S. alliance that will surely displace us, replace the dollar, blah blah blah.

And that’s the thing: for all its talk of “nonalignment,” India has always been all too aligned.

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NAMES MATTER – LABELS SHAPE PERCEPTION

When my autistic son, Hunter, was very young, he sometimes had explosive public meltdowns.

Like many bright children, he also learned quickly that those meltdowns got him attention and could be used as leverage.

One afternoon, we were leaving a shopping center after a long day. Hunter wanted to go into a toy store he spotted. I said no. There was no money, and everyone was worn out. So he threw himself onto the sidewalk.

I turned away, deliberately cutting off the attention that fed the behavior. But behind me, I heard his stepfather say, calmly but firmly, "You know what? You have a cool name — Hunter. When you act like this, you don’t deserve that cool name. Until you calm down and behave, your name is Zelbert.”

Hunter stopped immediately. He stood up, sniffed, and reached for his stepdad’s hand.

No force. No indulgence. No shaming. Just a withdrawal of unearned status. From that point forward, all it took was a look, and Hunter shaped up rather than risk being called Zelbert.

The lesson was simple and profound: Identity comes with expectations. A name is not a costume you wear while refusing the obligations it implies.

That principle applies far beyond parenting.

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