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  • Are Familicides On The Rise?

    Boston public radio host Robin Young recently looked at a troubling rise in the most horrifying crime: familicide. The term may not be familiar yet, but the concept sure is -- the murder of an entire family, usually by a father who then commits suicide. There are currently four to six of these crimes nationwide each year, yet Young's guest, Dr. Richard Gelles of the University of Pennsylvania, says that today's economic crisis is driving a spike in this type of crime, during which we can expect to see a dozen or more a year.

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  • Controversy: Challenging The Patriarchy

    I thought Adrienne's post on the name issue as it pertains to marriage and children was incredibly interesting - it's something that I've thought a lot about.  I took my husband's last name about three years after our wedding - basically because I finally reached the conclusion that no, the whole Amy Fisher/Joey Buttofuoco thing was never, never, ever, going to go away.  

    So, while I understand why many readers, like Courtney, took their husbands' names "so that we could both share a last name with our kids," my sympathies are definitely more in alignment with women like Laura, who noted that she kept her maiden name because she "just didn't see any reason to change it."

    The question of what to name the kids when both parents have different last names is definitely a thorny one.  I was impressed to read that Miss Chris and Alisa gave their children their last names instead of their husbands', which seemed to be what most women do in this situation.  Susannah's daughter has a hyphenated last name, which may have been what inspired anonymous2 to object, "hyphenating the children's names works for one generation, but then what happens when Mary Smith-Jones grows up and marries John Murray Clark?  Kids named Smith-Jones-Murray-Clark?"

    Well, anonymous2, I have the solution - one which incorporates the names of both parents, creates both a matriarchal and patriarchal line of descent, and restricts the number of names any given child can have to two.  

     

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  • Saudi Women Treated As Children

    Saudi women in HofufA report released by the New York based Humans Rights Group says adult Saudi Arabian women hold the status of “perpetual childhood” with their husbands and the male members of their families. Among the other rights not afforded to Saudi women are the right to drive and the right to health care unless given permission.  

     

    What this means for Saudi mothers is not being allowed to make even the most simple choices for their own children, because they, after all, have the same status as their children...

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