Be INFORMED

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Sexualization Of Girls Increasing Problem

   In a report  by the American Psychological Association, they say that, "Sexualization of girls is a broad and increasing problem and is harmful to girls."                        MORE BELOW

                                             

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            AP

The pressure of what experts call "sexualization" can lead to depression, eating disorders, and poor academic performance, said the report, released Sunday.

Adult women dressed as school girls in music videos, bikini-clad dolls in hot tubs, and sexually-charged advertisements featuring teenagers were among the many examples cited.

Such omnipresent images -- on television and the Internet, in movies and magazines -- can also have a negative effect on a young girl's sexual development, the study cautioned.

Also cited was a Skechers shoe ad that features pop singer Christina Aguilera dressed as a school girl in pigtails, with her shirt unbuttoned while licking a lollipop.

The popular Bratz dolls, the study noted, depict "girls marketed in bikinis, sitting in a hot tub, mixing drinks, and standing around, while the 'Boyz' play guitar and stand with their surf boards," it said. The dolls come dressed in miniskirts, fishnet stockings, and feather boas.

   I'm no fan of Aguilera, but she did look hot in the pigtails, don't you think? Advertising does go a bit over board at times and maybe they should get a little more mature adults for their ads. That will never happen because sex, at any age, sells!

 

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Walter Reed Army Medical Center Getting Much Needed Repairs

   Bad publicity will sometimes get good things accomplished such as the repairs that are needed at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. It looks as if those repairs were started yesterday after a Washington Post story over the weekend spoke about the mold and mildew and the suicides of some patients.

   The hospital has even managed to fix a broken elevator!

   This is kind of pathetic when one of the premier military hospitals in the country has certain buildings falling apart and then has the nerve to place wounded patients from Iraq in these buildings. This is our country/administration caring about our troops?

Washington Post

Spec. Jeremy Duncan, whose room has a moldy wall that was featured in one photograph in the Post series, has been moved to another room while workers make repairs. Duncan will be able to return to his room when the work is completed, Weightman said.

Weightman said the medical center has received an outpouring of concern about conditions and procedures since the articles appeared and has taken steps to improve what soldiers and their families describe as a messy battlefield of bureaucratic problems and mistreatment.

"We're starting to attack how we'll fix and mitigate" some of the problems, he said.

Social workers will now be stationed around the clock at Mologne House, the 200-room hotel on the post where many of the outpatients live. Plans are being developed to better train other staff members who deal with outpatient needs.

The Army will also consider moving some outpatients to its other medical centers throughout the United States and will determine over the next weeks whether more workers are needed at Walter Reed.

 

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