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I will almost always raise to $2 on the PP NL25 tables, except maybe in LP or in the blinds with lots of limpers, where I sometimes raise to 3 or 4. You might want to try sometimes limping AA and KK in EP and hoping someone raises behind you. Then you can reraise (I'd probably push or make a huge raise if there were a lot of callers), or if it looks like it's going to be heads-up, you can smooth call to try to trap postflop. If no one raises, that's not so bad either, you only have 50 cents invested in the pot, and anyone could have flopped two-pair, so it should be an easy hand to get away from. If you hit resistance, you absolutely have to proceed very carefully and think strongly of folding. Don't go broke in an unraised pot, like TJ Cloutier says, "If you limp with aces, you should never get broke with aces, but it happens all the time." Additionally, if the flop comes something like K44 when you have limped in with KK and no one raised it, you will likely win a big pot off someone with a 4 who wouldn't have been in the hand otherwise.
I would also limp JJ in early position and maybe even mid position too, since it's very vulnerable to a reraise, and if any overcards flop, you'll probably have to give up the pot anyways. Even if an overcard doesn't flop, a lot of the times you're either going to get no action or lose a big pot to QQ, so unless you make your set or run into 99 or TT with a rag flop, I don't think JJ has all that much value in a raised pot and it's a very dangerous hand to be out of position with, so it is generally correct to just limp it in EP and oftentimes MP.
I could even make the case for not raising QQ in EP, especially if you don't want to lose a big pot with the hand. If no one raises behind you, great, you put no money into the pot if an overcard flops, bet small (2/3 of pot is good, and in an unraised pot that's not a lot) and don't stand a lot of resistance if you have an overpair (if you're reraised you should probably just lay it down), and try to win a huge pot from hands that wouldn't have been in the pot in the first place if you're lucky enough to make a boat or set. One exception that I could think of to playing the hand slowly if you flop an overpair w/ QQ in an unraised pot is when the flop comes something like J24. In that case, you should push hard (probably check-raise) and try to win a big pot from someone with JK or JA. Even then though, you must beware of the blinds and fish who might be in there with J4 or 24.
If someone does raise behind you preflop when you've limped with QQ, that's fine too, just smooth call the raise (unless you're heads up and the raiser is shortstacked or makes a lot of weak raises), fold to any bet if an overcard flops, and check-raise the flop big if there's no overcards, and it's not a dangerous flop (i.e. no 3 straight or flush) and you don't think the bettor has AA or KK to either take the pot right there, make a draw pay to try to draw out, or break someone w/ TT or JJ. Of course, there's always the danger of running into AA or KK and getting broken yourself, but the same thing would probably happen if you made the original raise yourself (though a preflop reraise might tip you off if you raised instead of limping).
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