UCLA psychiatrist Dr. Miriam Grossman says teenage girls and young women are not getting the full story on sex, health and relationships. Why? The truth, she says, is politically incorrect.
Her new book, Unprotected, examines the troubling results. Condoms, after all, don't do anything for a broken heart.
"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up." -- Arthur Koestler
Friday, February 23, 2007
Hymowitz on marriage

Kay Hymowitz points out that despite the hysterical condemnation of Quayle, college-educated career women have overwhelmingly rejected "the Murphy Brown thing," preferring to marry and raise their children in traditional families. Hymowitz's new book, Marriage and Caste in America, examines how the decline of marriage (which continues to be a phenonemon associated with a culture of low income, low education, and low achievement) has contributed to the widening "income gap" -- even in a booming economy.
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Blogging Britney

It has been said there is no such thing as bad publicity, but becoming a laughingstock has never helped anyone’s career, and now Britney finds herself compared to “Taxi Driver” psycho Travis Bickle and to late-era Judy Garland — the latter analogy perhaps most apt, since Garland, like Spears, began her career as a wholesome child star.
Don Surber remarks: "K-Fed looks like the better parent now." Latest news: She's ditched rehab again.