Matthew Perry’s Untimely Death and the Hidden Struggles We All Face
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Matthew Perry’s Untimely Death and the Hidden Struggles We All Face
By: Zachary Mettler
Actor Matthew Perry’s unexpected death on Saturday afternoon quickly led to an outpouring of heartfelt tributes and heartbroken reactions.
Perry was found dead in a home in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles from an apparent drowning. He was 54.
Perry was a beloved actor best known for his portrayal of Chandler Bing on the sitcom Friends for which he won a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series. He also received Primetime Emmy Award nominations for his performances in The West Wing and The Ron Clark Story.
The challenges Perry faced throughout his life started early. His parents divorced before his first birthday. He was raised mainly by his mother in Ottawa, Canada.
At age 10, he began misbehaving — stealing money, smoking and letting his grades slip.
At age 14, he began drinking — an innocent first sip turned into a lifelong struggle with alcoholism. By 18, he was drinking every day.
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If You’re a Parent with Children in the Home, These are the ‘Golden Years’
By: Paul Batura
Writing for the Institute for Family Studies on Wednesday, Thomas O’Rourke highlights key findings from the American Time Use Survey — a measurement tool used by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics that calculates how people spend their time across the day.
O’Rourke, who is a policy researcher and writer studying social capital, economic mobility and anti-poverty policy, sets his sights on how much free time single people and married people have available to spend.
Not surprisingly, single people have more time — one hour and ten minutes, on average. The survey also found that married people spend 90 minutes of their day caring for others compared to single people who spend just 7 minutes.
How they spend their respective free time is also revealing. Those who are single and childless spend 63% alone while those who are married spend just 37% on solo activities.
Apart from leisure availability, the data also reveals that married people spend more time on household chores and less time socializing and relaxing.
Yet — and here is the kicker — despite a significant daily disparity in available free time, married people are almost twice as happy as single childless Americans.
It seems the carefree lifestyle so regularly touted and championed in popular culture as a pathway and elixir to endless mirth and merriment is a myth.
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Woman Sues American Academy of Pediatricians and Doctors Who ‘Transitioned’ Her
By: Jeff Johnston
A young woman whose body was damaged by testosterone is suing the American Academy of Pediatricians (AAP), the Lifespan Physician Group, and doctors and counselors who prescribed this treatment. The suit charges the defendants with civil conspiracy, fraud, medical malpractice, gross negligence and failure to give informed consent.
According to the Daily Wire, which broke the story, “Isabelle Ayala, now a twenty-year-old woman, had just turned fourteen when she was committed to the hospital for suicidal thoughts, according to the lawsuit.”
The AAP is named in the suit for publishing a policy statement in 2018, “Ensuring Comprehensive Care and Support for Transgender and Gender-Diverse Children and Adolescents,” which the suit says, “not only misrepresented or misleadingly presented its purported evidentiary support but was also rife with outright fraudulent representations.”
Dr. Jason Rafferty, who authored that position statement and prescribed testosterone for Ayala, is named in the case, along with Drs. Michelle Forcier, Brittany Allen and Ilana Sherer, part of the AAP “LGBT Health & Wellness” committee that started the process to create the new policy.
Forcier gained notoriety when she appeared in Matt Walsh’s documentary, What Is a Woman, where she put on full display the ridiculousness of the ideology used to harm so many children. She discussed the gender identity of egg-laying hens with Walsh, asking, “Does a chicken have a gender identity? Does a chicken cry? Does it commit suicide?”
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Campus Protests Expose Antisemitic Rot in Academia
By: Emily Washburn
Less than a month ago, Gaza-based terror group Hamas massacred more than 1,000 Israeli civilians — and raped and kidnapped hundreds more — in the largest single-day killing of Jewish people since the Holocaust.
I, like many others, expected the vast majority of Americans to come to Israel’s defense, particularly in light of America’s own history with Islamic extremist terrorism.
Instead, I watched aghast as thousands of college students participated in marches, chanted slogans and signed letters glorifying Hamas terrorists as freedom fighters.
Pro-Palestinian students argue Israelites are colonizers who have systematically abused people in the Palestine region since the country’s formation in 1948.
They believe Hamas’ actions are justified as an attempt by Palestinians to decolonize their land.
The following compilation, while not exhaustive, is meant to illustrate the depth and breadth of this emerging antisemitism on college campuses.
As believers and members of a post-Holocaust America, we cannot let such cancerous beliefs take root in America’s academic institutions.
Student groups at several colleges drafted and signed statements articulating the pro-Palestinian — and largely pro-Hamas — argument, including:
- Columbia Palestine Solidarity at Columbia University
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Nearly One Quarter of the World Feels Lonely
By: Zachary Mettler
Nearly 25% of the world — over 1 billion people — feel “very” or “fairly” lonely, a new survey has found.
According to the new Gallup-Meta study, feelings of loneliness now pervade our planet.
The survey found that 24% of adults worldwide feel “very” or “fairly” lonely; 27% feel “a little lonely”; and 49% of adults feel “not at all lonely.”
However, Gallup notes the number of people worldwide who report feeling lonely could be much higher because the survey was not conducted in China — the second-most populous country in the world.
Additionally, the survey examined the difference in reported feelings of loneliness between age groups.
There is a popular perception that elderly adults are the ones who experience the greatest degree of loneliness. The Gallup survey brings that narrative into question.
It found a 10-point gap in loneliness between younger and older adults, but it is younger Americans who report higher rates of loneliness.
Twenty-seven percent of adults aged 19-29 report feeling “very” or “fairly” lonely compared to just 17% of adults aged 65 or older.
“Although many calls to reduce loneliness are focused on older adults, majorities of those aged 45 and older do not feel lonely at all, while less than half of those younger than 45 say the same,” Gallup reports.
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