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THE JERSEY LEATHERNECKS OF FALLUJAH

Fallujah, Iraq.  The Marines of 1st Platoon, Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines - many from New Jersey - aren't living large, but they're making a huge difference. Bunking in a police precinct headquarters in Fallujah, they're at the forward edge of our current successes in Iraq. It's summertime, but the living ain't easy. The work's tough, the heat's wicked, the "facilities" conjure the old line about what bears do in the woods, and only goodie boxes from home liven up a diet of field rations (great for two or three days, nasty after two or three months). You'd expect complaints. I didn't hear one. And talking to three Jersey boys, I was surprised to hear just how positive they felt about the mission. "I'd do it again in a heartbeat," Lance Cpl. Justin Blitzstein of West Milford told me. Self-assured and ready for anything, he added, "Anybody who doesn't think we should be here should see the difference we've made in the way these people live. And everybody here's a volunteer. We want to be here."

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HOW TO IMPROVE CONGRESS’ UNDERSTANDING OF THE MILITARY

Next week, Gen. David Petreaus will make his report to Congress on the situation in Iraq.  Much will be written about what he has to say.  I'd like to devote a few words to those who will be passing judgment on Gen. Petreaus' report, relative to their military service to America - or lack thereof. We are in the midst of a world war, as the disruption this week of bomb plots in Denmark and Germany reminds us, or ought to.  It figures to be a long war.  What Congress does or doesn't do in response to Gen. Petreaus' report largely could determine whether we win or lose. But the number of senators and representatives who are veterans -- that is to say, who have the experience to make an informed judgment about what Gen. Petreaus has to say -- is the lowest it's been in half a century. There's an easy way to fix that.

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THE TRUTH BEHIND THE 2008 CURTAIN

Pay no attention to Frank Morgan.  The entire gaggle of the Moonbat Left - Pelosi-Reid-Murtha-Daily Kos-Moveon.org-Soros-New York Times-CNN-Time&Newsweek - the whole screaming lot are pretending to have resurrected the marvelous character actor who played Professor Marvel and "the man behind the curtain" in The Wizard of Oz. They're having Frank trying to convince an electorate of Dorothies that the Republicans are mired in gloom over their 2008 prospects, terrified of the Magic Democrat Wizard that will recapture the White House and cement control of Congress. The Mighty Oz has decreed inevitable doom upon the evil, corrupt Republicans, who are helpless to avoid their deserved electoral fate.  Let's have fun and be Toto, exposing the Mighty Moonbats as feckless frauds.  The truth behind the 2008 curtain is that the Democrats are screwed.

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GOOD MORNING! THE QUICK AND DELICIOUS INCREDIBLY HEALTHY TO THE POINT BREAKFAST

Good morning, boys and girls!  Yes, I know, mornings suck:  summer's over, no more sleeping late, you have to get up at some stupidly early hour to rush off to school, your parents are grouchy and harping on you to hurry, there's no time for a decent breakfast - and who's hungry at the crack of dawn? - so by second period you're starving and falling asleep in class from lack of food and energy. Gotta be a better way to start the day, right?  Well, there is - and also for your folks, who  have to rush off to work, so they probably skip a decent breakfast and stuff some sugar garbage into their mouths as they race out the door, just like you. Yet, as any doctor will tell you, breakfast is, health and energy and nutrition wise, the most important meal of the day.  "Yeah, right, whatever," I hear you respond with a sarcastic laugh.  Like, no time, dude, no time! Oh, yes, there is.  You can make and consume the To The Point Breakfast in five minutes flat.  Of course, the ideal here is to get your folks to make it for you while you're getting ready.  Then it will take you less than a minute to gulp it down and you're ready to roll. So, Mom and Dad, here's how to whip up the Quick and Delicious Incredibly Healthy To The Point Breakfast in about four minutes - five if you're still groggy because that first cup of coffee hasn't kicked in yet.

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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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MODOGGIES: THE LATEST MOSLEM FREAK-OUT

The latest event in what is surely one of the world's most fun sports - Moslem Enragement - is the Modoggy Cartoon Contest taking place in Sweden. It started out so innocently.  A group of Swedish artists in the small town of Tällberg decided to hold an exhibition entitled "The Dog in Art," and invited submissions.  A famous (and famously eccentric and mischievous) artist, Lars Vilks, exhibited a large cartoon drawing entitled "Mohammed as a Rondell Dog." A Rondell Dog or Rondellhund has been a harmless art form in Sweden for the last several years.  Anonymous artists have set up plywood or plastic sculptures of dogs in traffic circle roundabouts (rondells) throughout the country.  Here's a typical one: modoggy-r So Vilks puts up this cartoon sketch: modoggy

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ARE THE DEMOCRATS COMITTING HARA-KIRI IN CALIFORNIA?

Democratic leaders in California have pledged to spend millions of dollars to defeat an initiative proposed by a Republican lawyer to divide California's electoral votes by congressional district.  If Thomas Hiltachk can gather enough signatures, the Presidential Election Reform Act will be on the ballot next June. If it passes, it will take effect for the 2008 presidential election in California. [Who Thomas Hiltachk is will blow you away.  See note at end.  -JW] Democrats may have their work cut out for them.  A Field poll indicated 47 percent of voters in the Golden State favored it, with 35 percent opposed. Democratic angst is understandable.  With 55 electoral votes, California is by far the biggest electoral prize.  And it's a prize which has been safely in Democratic hands.  In the last four presidential elections, Democrats have won by landslides. But within California there are 20 congressional districts that reliably vote Republican -- an electoral bloc the size of Ohio.  If it were taken away from the Democrats and given to the GOP, its difficult to see how the Democrats can win the presidency in 2008. The Dem's act of hara-kiri, however, is in what they are proposing to counter the congressional district plan.  It is pure political insanity.

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THE MORAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN DEMOCRAT AND REPUBLICAN VOTERS

Three scandals involving politicians were made public in the past week.  The difference in coverage by the media explains a lot. You've heard about the arrest of Republican Sen. Larry Craig of Idaho for allegedly soliciting homosexual sex in a restroom in the Minneapolis airport.  That's been all over the news since the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call reported it Monday. The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that a lower middle class family in suburban San Francisco has contributed $45,000 to Hillary Clinton and $200,000 to Democratic candidates since 2005, contributions they almost certainly couldn't afford on the $49,000 annual salary chief breadwinner William Paw earned as a postal worker.  On Wednesday, the Federal Elections Commission levied the third highest fine in its history -- $775,000 -- on the George Soros' funded group, ACT (Americans Coming Together) for flouting campaign finance laws in the 2004 election.  ACT claimed it was using money for non-partisan purposes when in fact it was spending millions to defeat President Bush, the FEC said. Sex scandals are, er, sexier than money scandals, which is one reason why you've heard more about the travails of Sen. Craig than you have about Mr. Paw or ACT.  There is another.  And it reveals the grave moral difference between Republican and Democrat voters.

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OLYMPIC TAIWAN

The Chicoms intend to use the 2008 Beijing Olympics as did the Nazis in the 1936 Berlin Olympics - as a glorification of their rule and a demand that the world provide it with the prestige it so desperately craves.  That's their dream. Last May in Chinese Wishes, we discussed how the Chicoms' dearest dream may turn out to be a nightmare of protests and boycotts, a human rights debacle of Olympian proportions. It looks like Taiwan is going to make this nightmare a lot worse.  And the Chicoms won't be able to do a thing about it.

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WIRED MONGOLIA

[Richard Rahn send us this from Mongolia, about which I wrote when I was there five years ago (August 2002) in Glaciers in the GobiYes, there really is a glacier in the Gobi Desert. -JW] Ulan Bator, Mongolia. This, one of Asia's poorest countries, has been an economic laggard relative to most of its Asian competitors. But now the economy has begun to grow rapidly. The question is, can this growth be sustained and perhaps even speeded up? Mongolia is landlocked in the center of Asia between two powerful neighbors, China and Russia. Though twice the size of France, it has less than three million people. Traditionally, the Mongols have been nomadic, tending their animal herds along the thousands of miles of Central Asian grasslands. Despite its handicaps, Mongolia has a few things going for it.  Consider:  by 2010, it is expected that 60 percent of Mongolians will have access to high-speed Internet.  Compare that to Russia, where little more than 1% do.

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