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THE DOOMED CITIES

As we mourn New Orleans, let us also celebrate it, as New Orleanians famously celebrate their own dead.

The city has long been admired for its literary creativity, its exceptional food, its wonderful music, and deplored because of its legendary corruption and degradation. The possibility of its destruction no doubt played a role in the character of its people, and it is no accident that an annual bacchanal took place there, in the riotous celebrations of Mardi Gras.

Death has always been omnipresent in the consciousness of the city; dancing in defiance of death was the city's trademark, and the spirited music that defined New Orleans for much of the world was played at the happiest occasions, and at the most famous funerals.

New Orleans is one of a handful of cities that are defined in large part by the recognition that it can all come to an end most any day. Joel Lockhart Dyer wrote that “New Orleans is North America's Venice; both cities are living on borrowed time.”

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THE TROJAN HORSE AND HOW IT WORKS

Trojan horses are named for the ur-Horse of Greek mythology, where the hapless Trojans didn't realize they had been invaded before it was too late. They’re getting more sophisticated by the day and your computer could easily be targeted.

So a review of how you protect yourself from hackers, viruses and Trojan horses is in order. And while your Internet service provider has already probably sent you an e-mail urging you to sign up for premium safety services, there are some things you can do on your own that will probably protect you just as effectively - for a lot less money.

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OBAMA HAS KILLED AMERICA’S FREEDOM AGENDA IN THE WORLD


For all of my life, America has stood for freedom in the world. Until now. Ever since Obama’s rise to power, America’s “Freedom Agenda” – the promotion of and support for expanding freedom and democracy – has been squelched.

Supporting, for example, the Green Revolution in Iran in 2009, and the protesters in Ukraine today would have been no-brainers if the Obama administration had the slightest inclination to cultivate US allies and the cause of freedom more generally.

Both the Iranian democracy activists then and the Ukrainian protesters today demonstrated through their actions that they do not seek the mere overthrow of unrepresentative, repressive governments. They seek freedom, and are willing to work for it.

The situation in Iraq, and in Ukraine – as well as in Iran, Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, Yemen, Afghanistan and beyond – makes clear that Obama has killed America’s freedom agenda. And that isn’t all.

Obama doesn’t simply neglect democratic forces in favor of authoritarian regimes. In country after country, under his leadership the US sides with anti-American forces of authoritarianism against pro-American forces. Why?

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HALF-FULL REPORT 06/21/13


Tweet, tweet!  As of yesterday (6/20), thanks to Miko, TTP is on Twitter: @2thepointnews.  Or click on the Twitter icon in the right side bar.  Now you can tweet your favorite quotes from or link to any TTP article to any of your followers.  Tweet and Retweet away!

There is so much to Tweet about this week.  Marco Rubio morphing into Charlie Crist.  Zero stepping deep in two cowpies. Sarah Palin is back!  Dems defeating their precious trillion dollar Food Stamp bill.  Dems crying over their prospects all the way to 2022.  Technology protecting us from the Surveillance State.  The EPA failing to fault fracking.  And there's more.

We'll end with a story appropriate to today:  June 21st, the Summer Solstice (in the northern hemisphere).  No, it's not about flower-bewreathed New Agers communing with the Druids at Stonehenge.  It's about one of the most extraordinary geniuses in history you may have never heard of.

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PAUL KRUGMAN’S SILLY KEYNESIAN DESPERATION


What do you do if the facts don't support your beliefs? If you are honest, you will rethink what you previously believed. If you are a Keynesian economist, though, like New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, you make silly assertions.

In his Jan. 31 column, Mr. Krugman said he wants to see "some example, somewhere, of austerity policies that succeeded."

If you are a Keynesian school economist like Mr. Krugman, you define "austerity" as a reduction in government spending as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP). If you are a classical Austrian school economist, you view a reduction of government spending not as austerity, but a growth-enhancing policy.

Mr. Krugman seems to have forgotten that the government share of GDP dropped after Reagan was able to get most of his policies through the Democrat-controlled Congress (which Mr. Krugman would define as austerity). The economy boomed and employment soared. Likewise, when government spending was reduced as a share of GDP during the Clinton administration and the Republican Congress, the economy and employment boomed.

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ROMNEY IN POLAND


[This is the full text of Mitt Romney's speech in Warsaw yesterday (7/31).  As inspirational as it was to the Polish people, it is also a call for Americans to be inspired by the Poles to have the courage to be free and to prosper. -JW]

Thank you all very much for the warm welcome to this great city.

It has been a privilege to meet with President Komorowski, Prime Minister Tusk, Foreign Minister Sikorski, and Former President Walesa.

This is a nation with an extraordinary heritage that is crafting a remarkable future. At a time of widespread economic slowdown and stagnation, your economy last year outperformed all other nations in Europe.

I began this trip in Britain and end it here in Poland: the two bookends of NATO, history's greatest military alliance that has kept the peace for over half a century. While at 10 Downing Street I thought back to the days of Winston Churchill, the man who first spoke of the Iron Curtain that had descended across Europe.

What an honor to stand in Poland, among the men and women who helped lift that Iron Curtain.

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WILL WE BE FORCED TO FEED THE STARVING CALIFORNIANS?


Britain's former Chancellor of the Exchequer (like our Treasury Secretary), Alastair Darling, has gotten a lot of UK press recently for claiming that if Greece doesn't get its bailout money and its economy collapses, countless billions will have to be sent there anyway in order to "save starving Greeks."

We think that America is in deep debt kimchee because we're $15 trillion in the hole.  Since there's some 300 million of us, that's a per-person debt of $50K.  The total debt hole of Greece owed to foreign banks and governments is $550 billion - and there's little more than 11 million Greeks. 

Same as us, $50K per Greek.  And dolts like Darling see the only solution is to keep pouring increasingly worthless euros into the bottomless Greek abyss.

The typical Greek attitude regarding this is epitomized by a retiree in Athens being interviewed by German television.  "How old are you?" he was asked. "56."  "And what does your pension pay you?" "I'm guaranteed 80% of my final salary for life." When told that most Germans would object to this, he exploded in indignation. "What?! Do you expect us Greeks to live like Germans??"

Reminds me of folks in California.

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SHOPPING AT THE WASHINGTON MALL


Here’s a question: Would you go shopping for shoes at a grocery store?

Why not? Oh, yes, grocery stores don’t sell shoes. You only go to a particular store because it’s selling what you want to buy. You don’t go to a store that doesn’t sell what you want to buy. Right, boys and girls?

This Kindergarten lesson came to mind when I saw the Democrats over at the Library of Congress yesterday (January 18) ostentatiously signing what they called their “Declaration of Honest Leadership and Open Government.”


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CRYSTAL BALL 2006


The title is a tease – because contrary to what some think, I really don’t have a crystal ball. That’s because there’s no such thing as the future. How could there be – it hasn’t happened yet! What there are in reality is a large number of possible futures – some of which are more possible than others.

The trick is to not confuse what you want to happen with what’s likely to happen to best handicap the possibilities. That’s not easy.

I have to admit that 2005 has left a bad taste in my mouth. The dominant story of the year has to be the treasonously vicious and pathologically dishonest war of the liberal “mainstream” media and the Democrat Party waged relentlessly against the Presidency of George W. Bush.

Yet I see 2006 as a far better year than 2005. Here’s why…

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THE MOSQUE OF NOTRE DAME DE PARIS



The great cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris has been called "the noblest architectural conception of man." Its construction was begun in 1163 by Maurice de Sully (c.1110-1196), the Bishop of Paris, and completed 87 years later in 1250.

The small island in the River Seine has been a sacred site for millennia. It was a sacred grove for the Celts who held their most holy rituals there, then for the Romans who built a Temple of Jupiter. Upon the ruins of this temple, Childebert (496-558), son of Clovis who founded the French Merovingian dynasty, built a basilica to St. Etienne in 528. Since that time, the site has been sacred to Christians.

Elena Chudinova thinks it won’t be for very much longer. One of Russia’s most popular writers, her latest novel, The Mosque of Notre Dame de Paris is currently a runaway best seller in Russia. So current that it has not yet been translated into English. Let’s hope it soon will be.

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GOING WIRELESS

WiFi has turned out to be a hacker's paradise; unlike with wired networks, you don't need to be connected by wire to a computer, directly or indirectly, in order to "invade" a system. With wireless, a determined hacker could tap into the radio signals as your computer collects them.

A "radio hacker," for example, can't change the record playing in the studio and can't remotely change the station on your radio - but they can listen to the same station you're listening to on their own radio. Same thing here; the data on the server is (hopefully) protected, and the data on your hard drive is protected by your firewall or other security system.

But while you're downloading your data from the Internet wirelessly, you're vulnerable.

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ABLE DANGER AND ATTA

At first I thought there was a short circuit in my ouija board, because there were sparks coming out of the thing, just when I thought I’d finally connected with my old friend, the late James Jesus Angleton, former legendary head of CIA counterintelligence.

But then I realized that it was, indeed, Angleton, cursing and sputtering (his poetic side — the side that made him the editor of The Yale Literary Review when he was an undergraduate in New Haven back in 1940 — somehow got lost when he got angry).

ML: Hey! That used to be my ear...

JJA: Sorry, sorry, but this Able Danger business is just too much.

ML: You mean Congressman Curt Weldon’s discovering that a military intelligence unit called Able Danger figured out a year before 9/11 — from open sources — that Mohammed Atta was part of an al Qaeda cell inside the United States, but Clinton Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick stopped them (three times!) from telling the FBI?


JJA: Damn right, but that’s not even the half of it. All these stories, all this faux shock, “oh my gosh, we knew it but we couldn’t act on it”, they just make me sick.

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THE FIVE SURPRISES OF INHERITED IQ


Recently, the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, outraged the Left by claiming people of low IQ need people of high IQ to carry them on in life.  Mr. Johnson has thus sparked a recent burst of interest in IQ, that despite the Left's apoplexy has been encouraging in one sense.

As Robert Plomin, probably the world's leading expert on the genetics of intelligence, put it to me, there used to be a kneejerk reaction along the lines of "you can't measure intelligence," or "it couldn't possibly be genetic." This time the tone is more like: "Of course, there is some genetic influence on intelligence but . . ."

The evidence from twin studies, adoption studies and even from DNA evidence is relentlessly consistent: in children, in Western society, the heritability of IQ scores is about 50 per cent. The other half comes equally from family (shared environment) and from unshared individual experiences: luck, teachers, friends.

This numerical precision easily misleads us into thinking genes and environment struggle against each other. In fact, they are like two pillars supporting an arch: nature makes you seek out nurture, which brings out your nature. But here is where things get interesting.

The acceptance of genetic influence on intelligence leads to some surprising, even paradoxical implications, some of which turn the assumptions of both the Right and the Left upside down.  Particularly to those of Mr. Obama, who is totally clueless in this regard.

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HALF-FULL REPORT 06/14/13


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Fifty-one years after her death, Marilyn Monroe still remains the most iconic movie star of all time. 

Last Sunday (6/09), the London Daily Mail ran a story with the headline, "I Listened to Marilyn Die."   The daughter of a famous Hollywood private detective, Fred Otash (1922-1992), recently found eleven boxes of her father's files and notes in a storage unit.  The files reveal that Otash had been hired by Howard Hughes to bug the home of Marilyn Monroe.

Otash's notes say that on August 5, 1962, she had a violent argument with Bobby Kennedy and Peter Lawford (Bobby's brother-in-law), yelling that she had been "passed around like a piece of meat" by the Kennedy brothers (Bobby, Teddy, and JFK).  The notes continued:

"She was really screaming and they were trying to quiet her down. She's in the bedroom and Bobby gets the pillow and he muffles her on the bed to keep the neighbors from hearing. She finally quieted down and then he was looking to get out of there."

That is followed by the note:  "I listened to Marilyn Monroe die."

The tape has never been found.  Marilyn Monroe died on August 5, 1962.  Otash never talked or wrote anything published about this.  His private notes seem to confirm what many have suspected over the years:  That Bobby Kennedy killed Marilyn Monroe.

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IN PRAISE OF THINK TANKS


A "think tank" is an organization where scholars and specialists seek to find solutions to problems and then promote their findings. Some think tanks deal with many public policy issues, and others concentrate on one or a few, such as medical care, defense, foreign policy or economic policy.

Both the number and size of think tanks has grown exponentially in the past several decades. One reason is the growth of governments, which has created a need for organizations to feed government policymakers with ideas and information -- and, more importantly, to fulfill the need for independent research to critique the many bad ideas emanating from policymakers, politicians and the media.

For instance, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Peter Wallison, a former general counsel of the U.S. Treasury, has just written a book explaining, with all the supporting evidence, how a politically inspired, false narrative about the financial crisis led to the destructive Dodd-Frank Act and what corrective action is needed.

It's: Bad History, Worse Policy: How a False Narrative About the Financial Crisis Led to the Dodd-Frank Act.

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