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THE WASHINGTON POST’S WARPED VIEW OF IRAN

As part of its relentless campaign to blame all of mankind's misfortunes on George W. Bush, this Tuesday (3/14) the Washington Post unleashed Karl Vick (my candidate for the Walter Duranty Memorial Prize) and David Finkel on American efforts to help Iranians who dare to challenge the mullahs.

In keeping with the paradigm established by Walter Duranty - the New York Times reporter who never found Stalin the least bit objectionable - Vick/Finkel blame Bush for the ongoing savagery of the Islamic republic.

No matter that pro-democracy dissidents have been arrested, tortured, and murdered for 27 long years in Iran.  Such news would undermine the whole thrust of the Post's latest effort at agitprop, so we don't hear anything about anti-regime protests, even though they are the true background to all events in contemporary Iran.

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POCKET OR PALM SOFTWARE?

There are lots of reasons for buying PDAs, and not all of them have to do with the devices' utility; some people just like the image they think PDAs project - that of a busy, connected mover and shaker. Of course, in some circles, carrying a PDA makes you an info-geek who needs to get a life. It's sort of like the people who carry three cell phones and two beepers whenever they go out; are they "connected," or just insecure?

Ours is not to analyze the psychology of workaholics; as far as most of us are concerned, the point of a PDA is productivity when you're away from your computer, and an easy way to store bits of information you pick up on your travels, whether it's phone numbers or appointments. Ergo, the value of a PDA - to you - is in its software. So let's see just how useful a PDA can be.

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GOOD NEWS IS NO NEWS


Is this the most ghastly season ever? August 2014 has brought rich pickings for doom-mongers. From Gaza to Liberia, from Donetsk to Sinjar, the four horsemen of the Apocalypse - conquest, war, famine and death - are thundering across the planet, leaving havoc in their wake.

And (to paraphrase Henry V), at their heels, leashed in like hounds, debt, despair and hatred crouch for employment. Is there any hope for humankind?

Think only of how often you have seen images of dead children this summer: strewn across a cornfield in Ukraine, decapitated on a street in Iraq, blown apart on a beach in Gaza, wounded in a hospital in Syria, being buried in Liberia. The fate of the girls kidnapped by Boko Haram in Nigeria is hardly any less horrible. Man is a wolf to man.

In the world of money you can find plenty to cry about too. Argentina has defaulted on its debt. Britain's national debt has doubled in four years. The Eurozone is in permanent recession and teeters on the brink of its next crisis. Stock markets are wobbling.

All true and all horrible. But the world is always full of atrocity, violence, death and debt. Are things really worse this year or are journalists just reporting the clouds in every silver lining?

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FATCA: OBAMA’S NEXT DISASTER AFTER OBAMACARE


How would most Americans and Congress react if a foreign government passed laws regulating U.S. businesses and people in the United States?

Probably with justified outrage. The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act or FATCA is U.S. financial imperialism at its worst.  It's causing great resentment in much of the world, which is hurting U.S. interests.

The administration and many in Congress seem to have learned nothing from the Obamacare disaster. Now that they have destroyed the world's best health care system, they are in the process of further destroying what was at one time a very functional global financial system.

In its place, they would erect a tax law whose costs were far higher than its benefit, that may drive hundreds of billions of dollars of job-creating foreign capital out of the United States, and that could trigger a global financial crisis.  Only the Democrats could do something so sinister and masochistic -- and try to stymie any Republican effort to repeal it.

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ENDURANCE


Grytviken, South Georgia Island, Antarctic Ocean.  It's a shame I can't transmit pictures where I am, but at least I can send this text for Miko to post on TTP.  Then again, there are no pictures that could do this place justice, for you can't put awe into a photo.  That's something you can only experience first-hand.

There is no place on earth I know of with more spectacular geology, geography, and jaw-dropping scenery, combined with such a hyper-abundance of wildlife it puts Africa's Serengeti to shame, than South Georgia.  Add to this one of history's most heroic sagas, the perseverance of one man to overcome odds that are beyond belief, which can serve to inspire us to surmount the travails our country faces today.

It is considered the most impressive accomplishment in the history of exploration.  Let me tell you the story - and the lesson we can learn from it.

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AMPUTATE OR DIE


It was a sobering dinner party last night (6/16).  Hosted by a London billionaire in his exquisite home - a Boccaccio hung on the wall behind me - the wine flowed liberally, but the conversation between the ten of us was stone-cold serious.

There were lighter moments, as when I proposed a toast to "a great hero of Europe - Geert Wilders."  Every one raised their glass in a smile, but the biggest smile was that of a spectacularly gorgeous super-model (you've seen her in many a high-fashion ad).  She was from Holland.

Then a well-known Hollywood producer raised his glass to toast his hero - Ronald Reagan.  "We need him again," he commented.  I guarantee you've watched one of his TV shows.

But when a self-made billionaire with an 11-figure private equity fund and a clear grasp of Austrian economics starts to talk about America's prospects, you listen.  So we all listened.

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RENDEZVOUS ROUNDUP


Folks, I just can't adequately express what a wonderful time we had at the To The Point Summer Rendezvous last weekend in Colorado Springs. 

The friendship, with everyone so obviously enjoying each other's company, was such a marvelous experience.  We ate well - the buffalo steak was fabulous - drank good wine, had endless scintillating conversations, hiked in the Garden of the Gods, and all of us can hardly wait to get together again.

I owe a lot of thanks - to Miko Reyes, TTP General Manager, who put everything together while I was on the other side of the world.  To Joan Johnson, John Nehring, and Bill Gregory, without whose help Miko tells me he couldn't have succeeded.

To Joel Wade, Jack Kelly, and Dagny D'Anconia, who so copiously shared their insights with us.

And to all TTPers who attended, for the more I got to know them, the more interesting and fascinating they became.  Their skills, intelligence, values, patriotism, and just plain likeability were really overwhelming.

Of all the myriad of questions during the weekend, the one most asked was:  When do we get to do this again - when and where's the next Rendezvous?

It'll be mid-January, and as we've had two now in the West (Vegas and Colorado), it should be in the East.  But warm - forget winter in, say, Boston or DC.  Also historic, memorable, and fun.  So we're thinking Charleston, maybe Savannah.  Let me know what you think.

So thanks to all for a great Rendezvous.  Don't miss the next one.  I can hardly wait for it myself.

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GEORGE BUSH’S BETRAYAL AND DESTRUCTION OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY


The worst fears of conservative Republicans in Congress came true this Monday (11/13), six days after their November 7 wipeout.  The tapping of Senator Mel Martinez (R-FL) as RNC Chairman is confirming evidence that George Bush is intent on destroying the Republican Party.

The most stunning defeat the GOP suffered on election day was that of Michael Steele for the open Senate seat in Maryland.  Here is a black Lt. Governor who is really smart, really articulate, and really conservative Republican.  The Dems were desperate to see him lose and they succeeded.

Outgoing Republican National Committee (RNC) chairman Ken Mehlman immediately recognized the value of Steele to the GOP and asked him to be his successor.  Rove and Bush squashed the offer like a bug.  Steele has been humiliated and is infuriated - he may drop out of politics now to the GOP's great loss.

Bush and Rove instead forced their choice of Martinez upon the party.  Why?  Because Martinez, a Hispanic, is a fierce advocate of amnesty for illegal aliens.

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THE NEW YORK TIMES LOVED STALIN, THE WASHINGTON POST LOVES AHMADINEJAD


It’s only fair that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad should be subject to a fawning puff piece the Washington Post. After all, Stalin’s greatest p.r. agent was a Pulitzer-prize-winning journalist at the New York Times. Stalin’s guy was Walter Duranty, and Ahmadinejad’s is Karl Vick, who began his long wet kiss Wednesday with:

On the afternoon of Jan. 4, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad reached for the phone and got Latin America on the line. In quick succession, he chatted with President Fidel Castro of Cuba, rang up President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and, sensing yet another kindred spirit, reached out to Evo Morales, the young firebrand who had just been elected president of Bolivia.
I suppose it would be bad form to point out that the three Latinos are united in their hatred of the United States, or that Castro and Chavez are distinctly anti-democratic. And indeed, Vick does not annoy his readers by mentioning either fact.

Instead he calls them “relatively poor, disempowered nonaligned nations” who “glory in defying the West.”

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THE LURE OF LCDS

At the end of last year, CRT monitors still outsold LCDs by a large margin. More than 60% of monitors sold in 2003 were CRTs. However, there’s no going back; LCD sales have been growing over the past two years, while CRT sales have been dropping.

Within the next few years, CRTs will go the way of the eight-track and VCR.

There’re still making CRTs, and that’s good news if you’re looking for a bargain; although prices of LCDs have been dropping, CRT manufacturers have lowered theirs proportionally, and the price ratio of CRT of LCD monitors - about half - remains where it was two years ago.

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OIL PRICE FALL AND RUSSIAN RUIN


Oil prices have fallen to a nine-month low, with surging supply from OPEC - the Saudis have opened the taps - the US flooding the market, and fresh demand wilts, leading to an "oil glut" in the Atlantic region despite the twin crises in Iraq and Russia.

The Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA), the leading oil think tank, said yesterday (8/12) that the world will consume less crude than experts had thought this year. Saudi Arabia's supplies are running at the highest level since last September and crude from Libya is back on the market.

The IEA cut its forecast for the rise in global consumption to just 1m barrels a day (b/d) this year due to near recession conditions in Europe and as pervasive weakness in the world economy disappoints.

This comes as supply rises by a further 300,000 b/d beyond what was already planned. The warning sent Brent crude prices tumbling to $104 a barrel, the lowest this year.  US crude is now at $96.

The sudden shift in the balance of the market has allowed the OECD club of rich states to build up their oil stocks at the fastest rate in eight years, creating an extra layer of protection against any possible supply shock from Russia and Iraq.  This good news is disastrous for the Kremlin.

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HALF-FULL REPORT 03/28/14


Is this the most fabulous 30-second political ad you've ever seen in your life?

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Joni Ernst is a 43 year-old state senator, a Lt. Colonel in the Iowa National Guard who served in Iraq, and a rock-solid conservative - see her issue positions - who is a Republican candidate for the US Senate.

On Monday (3/24), she released the ad above that's been hailed by NRO as having "The Greatest Opening Line in the History of Campaign Commercials."  To wit:

"I'm Joni Ernst... I grew up castrating hogs on an Iowa farm, so when I get to Washington, I'll know how to cut pork."

On Wednesday (3/26), the front page headline in Iowa newspapers was "Sarah Palin Endorses Joni Ernst." 

That evening, Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show showed the ad in his opening monologue, then commented:  "I don't know what she's running for but just give her the job."  On Comedy Central, Stephen Colbert endorsed her, explaining:

"Joni, you had me at 'castration.' Folks, it does not matter what else she stands for. I'm pulling for her whole-hog, or whatever is left of the hog when she's done with it."

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WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN THE GOVERNMENT IS AN OUTLAW?


Without the rule of law, a civil and prosperous society cannot long endure. The annual reports of The Economic Freedom of the World and The Index of Economic Freedom show very large declines in the international ranking of the United States in the rule of law over the past decade.

The Obama administration is becoming increasingly arbitrary concerning what laws it chooses to enforce or not enforce, while, at the same time, through executive orders and administrative decisions, just making up "law" outside of the constitutional process.

Perhaps the clearest examples of this abuse can be found at the IRS, which increasingly acts as a rogue agency with the support of its masters at the Treasury and Justice Departments. 

The IRS has a long record of ignoring the Constitution and the rule of law.  Now it's become much worse.

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OBAMAS BLUFF


President Obama has adopted the unsustainable position that he will not negotiate with Congress over spending and the debt ceiling. He is betting he can get Republicans to fold without having to give up anything he wants.

That's why we're hearing ridiculous claims from him like the one he made speaking to the Business Roundtable this week:

"You have never seen in the history of the United States the debt ceiling or the threat of not raising the debt being used to extort a president or a governing party and trying to force issues that have nothing to do with the budget and nothing to do with the debt."

This is nonsense, of course. Moreover, the implication that Obamacare has "nothing to do with the budget and nothing to do with the debt" is simply dishonest. The law accounts for a large part of the budget and we now know that it will cost twice as much in the next ten years as President Obama promised before it was passed.

The truth is the President may soon be forced to negotiate.  Here's why.

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CHILDREN OF THE ICE AGES


Wilhelmena Bay, Antarctica.  This is a land of ice caps, gigantic glaciers, and frozen earth.  The waters of the bay are filled with icebergs, chunks of glaciers calved off and fallen into the sea.  In a month or two, the bay will be frozen over with pack ice, but now at the end of the austral summer, it is teeming with life.

Rookeries of gentoo and chinstrap penguins cover the patches of bare earth on the shore.  Crabeater and Weddell seals are lounging on the bergs sunning themselves.  A pod of humpback whales is slowly skimming the surface, scooping up massive mouthfuls of seawater containing hordes of krill, tiny shrimp upon which they feed.

It is a wondrous world on a sunny summer's day. Soon, however, the sun will vanish over the horizon and not reappear for months, plunging this world into a dark, lifeless, frozen hell.  The Ice Ages still exist here, just as they do in the Arctic, where life blooms extravagantly in the northern summer, then vanishes with the sunless winter.

It is a world that seems alien, remote, and exotic to us.  Yet it is in this world that our species emerged from evolutionary history.  Human beings are children of the Ice Ages - and we make a grave mistake to think we are no longer. 

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