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Read At Your Own Risk.

The End.

By JAMES STRAUSS at 7:52PM on February 12, 2012
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News and views from the newsstand

 

 

"...Ever since the ratification of the 14th Amendment, the rule in the United States has generally been that if you are born here, you are a citizen. In recent months, though, congressional Republicans like Steve King have called for an end to birthright citizenship. They've been fixated on people who immigrate illegally (usually, in the telling, from Mexico) to have a so-called "anchor baby" on American soil, allowing a whole clan to claw its way into citizenship.
Put aside for now the way "anchor baby" has become as mean-spirited a meme as "welfare queen" once was. Put aside the consensus among most legal scholars that an end to birthright citizenship would require not an act of Congress but a repeal of Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment. Put aside, even, the powerful stories of people like..." More.

 

 

 

"...Normally it is the press that hounds celebrities, politicians and judges, not the other way round. But for the past three months a public inquiry led by Lord Justice Leveson, an appeal-court judge, has pulped the British newspaper industry. A parade of people—some famous, some not—have told of ill-treatment at the hands of reporters and photographers. A normally aggressive press has been cowed. The inquiry began following the revelation that the News of the World, part of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, had illegally accessed messages left on the mobile phone of a girl who turned out to have been murdered. But it has gone far beyond that narrow outrage. Lord Justice Leveson has heard of a young woman driven to suicide; of people accusing their families of spilling their secrets when in fact their phone messages were being listened to; of a mother (Joanne Rowling, author of the “Harry Potter” books) opening her five-year-old daughter’s school bag to find a note from a journalist inside. It is no surprise that..." More.

 

 

 

"...Harper’s has been reporting on monopoly capitalism almost since the magazine’s founding in 1850, criticizing the system whenever it appeared to be concentrating too much power in the hands of a greedy few, and sometimes spurring change. Our first significant piece on the subject was a two-part essay by Richard T. Ely on railway trusts, which ran in 1886. “I propose to show in these articles,” Ely wrote, “that our abominable no-system of railways has brought the American people to a condition of one-sided dependence upon corporations, which too often renders our nominal freedom illusory.” The following year, Congress passed the..." More.

 

 

 

 

"...When U.S. President Barack Obama took to the podium during a rare visit to the Pentagon early last month, he announced a new strategy for the country's military posture abroad. The United States would shift from being able to fight two major wars simultaneously to increasing its focus on Asia. But the president also explained that reductions in the U.S. nuclear arsenal would be key to future defense: "We will continue to get rid of outdated Cold War-era systems," he said, "so that we can invest in the capabilities we need for the future." Policy, meet budget..." More.

 

 

 

Social networking giant Facebook debuted on the stock exchange on Feb. 1with an initial public offering of $5 billion, a small fraction of the up to $100 billion the company is thought to be worth. With over 800 million users, Facebook is (at least in the English-speaking Internet) the undisputed king of social networking. But the ascendance of the site Mark Zuckerberg launched only eight years ago in his Harvard dorm room was not guaranteed. It has vanquished a number of competitors along the way. Some, like Myspace, are fading into obscurity. Others, like Twitter, have settled comfortably into a more specialized role. But some of Facebook's onetime foes have found an unlikely second wind in some unexpected places. Like aging American rock stars who can still pack the house in Kiev or Yokohama, the sites have attempted, with mixed success, to reinvent themselves for their new audience..." More.

 

 

 

"...The U.S. labor market grew in January at its most robust pace since last spring, a sign that the economy's momentum carried into the new year. Nonfarm payrolls rose by 243,000 last month, the Labor Department said Friday, marking the biggest gain since April. The jobless rate fell by two-tenths of a point to 8.3%, the lowest it has been since February 2009. Both figures contradicted expectations of..." More

Inside this month's issue

 

Pg.2

Writing of God, Yahweh or even Allah is humorous at times. Some people will only write g-d for god, some people (like me) always capitalize the "G.".

 

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Pg.10

The international monetary system rests on just two currencies: the dollar and the euro. Together, they account for nearly 90 percent of the foreign exchange reserves held by central banks and governments.

 

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Pg.17

In January of the year 1868 an influential writer by the name of Emil Zola wrote a letter about a grand injustice that occurred in the previous year. The 1867 of which I write is not about that time period of our culture’s development.

 

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Pg.22

The child who was not a child crouched, his back to the warm window. It was below zero in Wisconsin, but not in the deep window well. A mouse looked up at him, its puzzled stare demonstrating no understanding, but also no willingness to back down.

 

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pg.25

Charlotte who thinks she is a horse. A call came into The Geneva Shore Report of a deer in trouble. The person on the other end of the phone was nearly unintelligible but finally calmed to the point that he could tell his story, and the story of Charlottethe deer that thinks it is a horse.

 

___________

 

pg. 28

Darren and Jimmy never climbed Diamond Head during the week. A small Army facility was located deep down in the bowl of the crater accessible by a tunnel located behind the PX in Fort Ruger itself.

 

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Pg.30

I asked a gentleman at a big benefit why he'd outsourced 2000 of his employees and he said that he had no choice. He could not stay competitive and stay here. I asked him if he'd broken all the mirrors out of his seven homes around the world.

 

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Pg.38

Pakistan's deeply troubled relationship with America has survived so many intense provocations this year, it will probably also get over the latest bloody incident.

 

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Pg.44

For all the horrors of Stalinism, brutality, incompetence and other dreadfulness of the Soviet Union, a small fan club remains.

 

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Pg.57

If the world is going to end on December 21, 2012 it is very important that we wake up every day not believing it. Why? Because, if we do not believe it then  we can enjoy the remaining 17 month of our lives with some semblance of comfort and bliss. Joe Campbell, the famous ethnologist, did not write or say that, but it was his study of the power of myth that makes me write it.

 

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Pg.65

Play the pipes lowly. We need time in our current cultural circumstance. Maybe this is what our remotely operated drone of a president is gifting us with. Nothing, nowhere and inaction are his hallmark, with a good dose of passive aggressive thrown in. I am not certain that his recipe of leadership is not exactly what is called for as the free fall of our society continues and everyone among us waits for what we know not.

 

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Pg.
75

We live our lives through responding to beliefs we hold to be true. We deal with danger, threats, success and even love by having developed an understanding of what those things are and how we should respond to them. Genetically, we fear heights and snakes, some of us spiders, but not much more. We need cultural education and support to know other things to fear. We call this process nurture. Nature gives us some but nurture gives us a whole lot more, or at least so we believe.

 

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Pg.
85

A few years back it became commonplace for people to begin re-reading books instead of buying new ones. Oh, they still purchased new material but a shift was in place that caused them to begin buying less and less of the new material and read more of the old stuff.

 

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Pg.
95

[It does not exist. That’s right. There is no international team set up by the United Nations, or anyone else, to rush to the aid of people caught up in natural disasters.There is no United States coordinated effort to respond. Supposedly the Federal Emergency Management Agency does all that within U.S. Borders.

 

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Pg.
105

Bailey didn’t search the position he knew the woman had occupied the night before. He didn’t need to, as he knew he’d find nothing. The sand responded to the slightest of pressures from anything touching it but it responded to all pressures equally.

 

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Pg.
125

Now this is funny. NASA spent a bunch of bucks to have a university research and study how aliens might treat us if we come upon any.

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