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THE DEMOCRATS’ ”PARTY” MAY FINALLY BE OVER

In 2020, we figured out that Democrats were manipulating elections to win, whether through changing the way votes were cast and counted or through out-and-out fraud.

In early 2025, DOGE taught us that innumerable Democrat institutions functioned solely because of taxpayer money. And now, as 2025 draws to a close, we’re seeing that the Democrats have presided over corruption at a previously unimaginable scale in America. With each of these pillars exposed, and the financial ones being cut down, can the Democrat party survive much longer?

Let’s you and I count the ways it may not.

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DID UKRAINE REALLY TRY TO BLOW UP PUTIN’S PERSONAL RESIDENCE?

Putin’s Lake Valdai Home, one of his 8 palatial homes in Russia
Putin’s Lake Valdai Home, one of his 8 palatial homes in Russia

It was strange for an American President famous for denouncing “Fake News” to believe the claim of a Russian President famous for providing almost nothing but Fake News: Trump Says of Alleged Ukraine Attack on Putin: 'I Was Very Angry About It'.

Especially when: Russia Declines To Provide Proof Of Alleged Drone Attack On Putin's Home, Says Will 'Toughen' Negotiating Stance.

That’s because no evidence can be found that the attack overnight Sunday-Monday (12/29) ever took place beyond the Kremlin’s own claims.

Ukrainian officials led by President Volodymyr Zelensky have widely rubbished Russian reports that Putin’s secluded and heavily guarded residential complex near the Novgorod region village of Valdai was ever targeted. Moreover, they accused the Kremlin of inventing the attack as a pretext for Russia to back out of participation in ongoing peace discussions.

There is compelling and extensive evidence that Ukraine had conducted extensive and often successful drone strikes against targets elsewhere in Russia or in Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory that night, but no  proof or even potentially credible evidence that Putin’s home had ever come under attack.

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THE SCHOOL OF ATHENS

school-of-athens

The School of Athens by Raphael (1483-1520) is one of the greatest artistic masterpieces of the Renaissance. Here you see the two principal figures, Plato on the left and Aristotle on the right. It is a classic example of the picture worth a thousand words.

Plato is pointing to the heavens and his imaginary world of Forms that didn’t actually exist, while Aristotle has his outstretched hand towards the earth – cautioning Plato to pay attention to Reality. For only in the real world can Plato’s ideals of Truth, Justice, and Virtue actually exist, expressed in concrete human action.

Raphael’s masterpiece was commissioned by Pope Julius II for a room in the Apostolic Palace of the Vatican – just as Julius commissioned Michelangelo to paint the ceiling of the Apostolic Palace’s Sistine Chapel at the same time! Raphael from 1509-1511, Michelangelo from 1508-1512.

While the Apostolic Palace is the official residence of the Pope, the part of it containing these masterpieces can be open to the public. It is one thing to see a photo of them, and quite another to contemplate them in person. Only then can you be appropriately overwhelmed by the superhuman genius it took to create them. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #257 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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THE WORLD’S MOST FREEDOM-LOVING PEOPLE

Laas Geel, 5,000 year-old rock art, Somaliland
Laas Geel, 5,000 year-old rock art, Somaliland

[This Monday’s Archive was first in TTP on March 7, 2013, shortly after the depressing spectacle of an Anti-American President’s 2nd Inauguration.  Thank Providence we now have a seriously Pro-American President today. On Friday (12/26): Israel Becomes First Country To Formally Recognize Somaliland As Independent State. Somalia is a completely failed state, the land of pirates, scam-artists, and Ilhan Omar. No country in the world deserves its sovereignty recognized more than Somaliland, yet every other UN country except now Israel insists it belongs to Somalia which is hasn’t since 1991.  Today (12/29), Bibi Netanyahu meets Trump – let’s hope that POTUS realizes: Recognizing Somaliland Would Be Trump’s Ultimate Response to Ilhan Omar.(Note: all photos ©Jack Wheeler)]

 

TTP, March 7, 2013

Hargeisa, Somaliland. Who are the most freedom-loving people in the world?  Certainly not Americans.

Someday, Americans may find the courage to no longer sell their birthright of freedom for a mess of government entitlement pottage, as Esau sold his birthright to Jacob (Genesis 25:29-34).  That’s someday, it sure isn’t now.  Right now, the people who love freedom more than any other are a group of Moslems in the Horn of Africa.

They are the people of Somaliland, who would rather be impoverished and free than sell their freedom for pottage.  Their story is a heroic saga, epically inspirational.  Let me tell it to you.

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THE STONE OF ANOINTING

the-stone-of-anointingThe holiest place in Christianity is the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Old Jerusalem, built by Constantine in 435 over the site of Christ’s crucifixion on the hill of Golgotha. Upon entering, you immediately see displayed the Stone of Anointing, a slab of limestone traditionally revered as where Jesus’ body was laid after taken down from the Cross, and prepared for burial by Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus.

Christian pilgrims come from all over the world to place their hands on the stone, pray in devotion, and place personal objects on it for sanctification. The Stone is one of the most sacred objects on Earth to them and with very good reason.

To say that being here to witness this at the Stone of Anointing is a profound experience is a vast understatement. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #311 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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THE PARTRIDGE IN THE PEAR TREE

For twenty years, it is a TTP tradition to explain the meaning of Partridges in Pear Trees. Enjoy.

I hope you had the Merriest of Christmases yesterday, Wednesday December 25, but according to the song, the First Day of Christmas is the day after Christmas, December 26. That’s today.

Ancient Christians celebrated Christmas starting with the day after the birth of Jesus and ending on January 6th with the visit of the Magi in Matthew 2:11 known as the Epiphany.

Start with 12/26 and end with 1/6 and you get: the Twelve Days of Christmas.

No doubt you’re really tired of hearing Christmas songs by now, including this one, yet you may still be wondering what the heck partridges in a pear tree and eight maids a-milking have to do with the birth of the founder of Christianity.

So I thought it might be entertaining, as we recover from all the festivities, to take a look at the song’s origin, meaning, and myth.

 

First published in London in 1790, it was a "memory and forfeits" game played by children in the form of a song, where the leader recites a verse, each player in turn repeats it, the leader keeps adding verses until a player’s memory fails him/her and has to forfeit a piece of candy.

Even though The Twelve Days of Christmas was a kids’ song-game, it nonetheless had a deep religious meaning. Despite Santa Claus’ cultural appropriation, Christmas is above all a religious celebration. All of the song’s twelve gifts are Christian symbols.

On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me…

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WHERE JESUS WAS BORN

jesus-birthplaceThe exact spot where Jesus was born is marked by this 14-pointed silver star with the Latin inscription Hic De Virgine Maria Jesus Christus Natus Est- "Here Jesus Christ was born to the Virgin Mary."

This is in a cave known as The Grotto of Nativity, enshrining the traditional site of the manger in Bethlehem, over which the Church of the Nativity was built, originally by Constantine the Great after his mother St. Helena visited the Holy Land and confirmed the site in 326.

It is only appropriate to commemorate what happened here over 2,000 years ago on Christmas Day. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #107 Photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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A YUGE FLEET

Donald Trump made headlines this week by announcing the creation of a new class of “battleship”, as he put it—a large, “Trump Class” surface combatant armed with the latest weapons.

The usual detractors sounded off immediately, of course—talking about how such ships are obsolete in this day and age, and even more so when they have anything to do with a President that has attracted a preternatural level of hatred.  For my part, Christmas had come indeed with a great story opportunity for this column.

Is a Trump-class warship a good idea, or just a good publicity stunt?  To answer that, we are going to take a dive worthy of at least most modern attack subs into a subject that is almost never written about—modern naval warfare.

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REMEMBERING AMERICA’S GREATNESS AT CHRISTMAS

The American St. Nick, December 10, 1944
The American St. Nick, December 10, 1944

While woke squishes in America doubt whether America was ever great, there are clear signs of America’s greatness throughout Europe. There are several entire countries and many small towns still show gratitude to the Americans for liberating them during World War II to this day.

I had the privilege of meeting one of those liberators. Richard Brookins played Santa Claus for the citizens of the town of Wiltz, Luxembourg, after the U.S. Army’s 28th Division liberated the town from Nazi Germany’s occupation in 1944. Before the Nazis captured Wiltz, the residents always celebrated Saint Nicholas Day on December 6th. The Nazis, however, banned the celebration.

However, on December 6, 1944, the 28th Division, which was passing through, stopped the war for one day. That day, the troops celebrated by entertaining the people of Wiltz with their own Saint Nicholas Day.  Brookins was recruited to play St. Nick, complete with his Bishop’s mitre and staff. Although the whole affair lasted only a couple of hours, it left a lasting impression.

The people of Wiltz continue to celebrate American Saint Nick Day and have placed a statue of Brookins dressed as Saint Nicolas in the center of town. Brookins, of course, isn’t the only one who is remembered with such love and respect. Many towns in Europe still honor and are grateful for the sacrifice and empathy that the United States demonstrated to them during World War II.

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CLIMBING JACOB’S LADDER ON THE ISLAND OF SAINTS

jacobs-ladderJamestown on Saint Helena in the South Atlantic is two blocks wide and a mile long in a narrow deep ravine. One of the world’s longest straight staircases, Jacob’s Ladder, was an original way to get out – 699 steps each 11 inches high – and it’s a workout.

People who live here call themselves “Saints” and pronounce their island “sent-uhl-LEEN-ah.” It’s famous of course for where the Brits exiled Napoleon after Waterloo. His residence and gardens on a high promontory, Longwood House, is preserved with original furnishings and his death bed. Dying in 1821, he was buried in a beautiful peaceful glen nearby (in 1840 he was reinterred at Les Invalides in Paris).

After climbing the Ladder and visiting Longwood, you’d want to refresh yourself at one of Jamestown’s pubs, where local Saints will be happy to hoist a pint with you. And don’t pass up a visit to the Saint Helena Distillery, the world’s remotest distillery, to learn how Head Distiller Paul Hickling makes his memorable Prickly Pear Whiskey, White Lion Spiced Rum, and Jamestown Gin – all in unique stepping stone bottles in honor of Jacob’s Ladder. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #46 Photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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HOW PRESIDENT TRUMP’S GRANDMASTER MOVES INFUSED FUN INTO DC POLITICS

Making it look fun and easy
Making it look fun and easy

One of President Trump's achievements is his reshaping of the manner in which politics is conducted in D.C.

Once upon a time, shady deals were struck behind closed doors, but the communication was carefully curated. Irrespective of the nefarious intents and the catastrophic consequences, the sentences were beautifully constructed while the countenances appeared grave.

The Iraq War and ObamaCare were advocated by different parties, but the deceitful manner in which they were 'sold' was identical.

Politics was usually dreary, leading people to avoid the news. The powers in D.C. knew that if the presentation is dull, focusing on their nefarious actions is difficult, and this enables them to do as they please, without consequences.

Memoirs of leaders published decades after quitting politics reveal the meetings behind closed doors were frequently unruly and profane, and driven by petulance and pettiness.

However, they feigned 'normality' before the cameras. These acting abilities led to the quote that “politics is showbiz for ugly people.”

President Trump struck all that down with a sledgehammer.

One of the reasons for Trump's success in business is his skill as a negotiator and a strategic thinker.

So the focus of this piece is on the manner in which he effortlessly outmaneuvers his opponents, setting traps whose impact they comprehend only when they have stepped into them.

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SAVORING THE MICRO-MOMENTS OF HUMAN CONNECTION

menopen-doors-for-womenIt’s easy these days to get drawn into a variety of small boxes: computers, televisions, iPads, kindles, smart phones… or occasionally even an actual book. There are a lot of wonderful possibilities within each of these (particularly books, but I’m old fashioned), but they can also deprive us, if we’re not careful, of life’s greatest joys: the treasure of human connection.

Fortunately, it’s fairly easy to counter this tendency, and enjoy the benefits of a richer emotional life, and a healthier physical life, as a result. I’ll show you how shortly.

One of my favorite researchers is Barbara Fredrickson, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who studies “micro-moments of connection.” The nice conversation we have with the checkout person at the grocery store; the warm greeting of welcome by a new acquaintance at a meeting; even the moment of eye contact with a stranger who holds open a door.

That wonderful warm feeling is something that is much more ubiquitous than we might expect.

It turns out that these micro moments of connection are actually filled with stuff that is good for us, emotionally, psychologically, and in terms of our overall health… like a good meal is filled with nutrients.

The more positive emotions we have, the better our “vagal tone” is. Our vagal tone is the strength and health of our vagus nerve, which connects our heart with our brain and our internal organs. Our vagus nerve, among other things, controls our heart rate variability.

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WHERE ALEXANDER HAMILTON WAS BORN

alexander-hamilton-houseOn January 11, 1755, Alexander Hamilton was born in this home on the island of Nevis, part of the British Leeward Islands Colony in the Caribbean. It was his mother Rachel’s home inherited from her father – she and Alexander’s father, James Hamilton from Scotland, were never married. It was a scandal back then to be “born out of wedlock,” over which young Alexander triumphed.

His birthplace is hallowed as a museum with displays and photos describing his extraordinary path from a penniless orphan (James abandoned him, then Rachel died) to being one of America’s principal Founding Fathers. It leaves quite an impact on you, being in the very place where the history described actually began.

Nevis (nee-viss) is an especially beautiful Caribbean island yet less visited than it’s well-known neighbor, St. Kitts. Together, they form the sovereign nation of St. Kitts & Nevis. If it’s ever your good fortune to get to St. Kitts – make sure to take the short ferry ride over to Nevis. It has a history, beauty and charm all its own. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #283 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

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