Last week, I discussed some of the fraud and corruption that haunt international adoption. If you’re interested, you should know about Erin Siegal, author of the forthcoming Finding Fernanda, which explores kidnapping, fraud, and endemic corruption in adoptions from Guatemala. For years, that country was one of the top “sending” countries in international adoption — […]
E.J. Graff
E.J. Graff writes on social-justice and human-rights issues, particularly discrimination and violence against women and children; marriage and family policy; and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender lives. She is a resident scholar at the Brandeis Women’s Studies Research Center and the author of What Is Marriage For? The Strange Social History of Our Most Intimate Institution (Beacon Press, 1999, 2004).
It Doesn’t Get Better for Bullies
Do you know the “It Gets Better” project? In response to last year’s spate of gay-teen suicides, writer and editor Dan Savage launched a series of online videos in which adults tell teens: Hang on. High school isn’t forever. You will have a good life. Some have been fabulous, burning their way across the Internets; […]
Marry Me
Yesterday, The Washington Post published a nice summary of the various federal lawsuits underway in the court battles over same-sex marriage, a piece occasioned by a panel at the College of William and Mary Law School’s Institute of Bill of Rights Law. The panel, according to reporter Robert Barnes, was debating whether the government’s political […]
Can Tammy Baldwin Win?
Over at TheAtlantic.com, I look into the question of whether openly lesbian Tammy Baldwin can become Wisconsin’s senator. Pop quiz: What’s the ” L-word” that’s likely to hurt her most? Hint: It’s not this one. Here’s an excerpt: In 1998, Tammy Baldwin became the first openly gay candidate to be elected to the U.S. Congress […]
More on The Playboy Club
Here’s a follow-up to my mini-review last week of NBC’s The Playboy Club: a Daily Beast article, “My Mom’s Life as a Playboy Bunny,” by Susanna Spier. Spier interviews her mother about what things were really like. Was Hugh Hefner’s comment — that bunnies could be anything they wanted to be — accurate? Ha. We […]
A pre-2004 Red Sox Nightmare
I’ve only been here in Boston for, oh, a couple of decades. While I enjoyed the region’s collective delirium when the Red Sox finally reversed the curse, I’m an October fan, not a real one. But my wife is a real fan, dating back pre-natally. She lives and dies with each Sox at bat. She […]
In Praise of Hash
Last year in a New Yorker blog item, Susan Orleans explored some of the joys of the #hashtag, that funny and versatile little Twitter symbol, which can help you track public discussion of a subject—or make fun of yourself and others. Over the weekend, I was at the Online News Association’s annual conference, #ONA11, where […]
Dick Cheney Takes a Trip
Attention Glenn Greenwald, Dahlia Lithwick, Chris Hayes, and others who’ve been banging this drum: Human Rights Watch (HRW) is asking Canada to bring criminal charges against Dick Cheney, who’s visiting there today, for “overwhelming evidence of torture by the Bush administration, including at least two cases involving Canadian citizens.” HRW cannot genuinely expect Canada to […]
Friday’s Three Cents
Linda Greenhouse, formerly The New York Times‘ Supreme Court reporter and now teaching at Yale Law School, tapped on the Commonwealth of Virginia’s shoulder and reminds it that the civil war is over. Looking at the state laws and lawsuits launched in reaction to the new federal health-care statute, she writes: Although the courts that […]
Adoption Is Not a Solution for Poor Children
Dr. Jane Aronson is a beloved and dedicated figure in the world of international adoption. It’s a big deal when she weighs in, which she did this week in response to recent coverage of adoption fraud like the exposes in The New York Times about China’s system along with extensive coverage by the Los Angeles […]

