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Salon.com February 9, 2000 Laurie Wagner |
Oxymorvan My husband wants me to be a mother in a minivan. I want to be a hot mama in motorcycle boots...  |
IDB America Jul/Aug 2000 Paul Constance |
An epidemic of cesareans Latin America is spending an estimated $425 million annually on over 850,000 needless operations...  |
Salon.com October 9, 2000 Carolyn Magner |
When they were bad My daughter is exiled from the "in crowd" and we suffer a season in hell...  |
Salon.com October 5, 2000 Leah Kohlenberg |
Designer babies? Pediatrician and ethicist Joel Frader says that just because a family has had a child to provide a bone-marrow transplant for an ailing daughter, it doesn't mean custom-ordered kids are right around the corner...  |
Salon.com October 5, 2000 Hank Pellissier |
Nobody does it better I learn from research, and time spent with Momazons, that gays make the best parents...  |
Salon.com May 3, 2000 Hank Pellissier |
My spawn arrives! In the third installment of his lesbian sperm donor saga, Hank Pellissier describes the arrivals of his two babies -- born 21 days apart...  |
Salon.com October 4, 2000 Jennifer Foote Sweeney |
Pluck and circumstance Judith Wallerstein makes a case for marriage, and on rare occasions, a healthy divorce...  |
Salon.com October 3, 2000 Cathy Young |
Dr. Bad News After conducting a massive 25-year study, Judith Wallerstein concludes that children of divorce are hit hardest after they grow up...  |
Reason October 2000 Virginia Postrel |
Politicizing Parenthood I used to think it was nobody else's business whether my husband and I planned to have children. I used to think it was rude to make such personal inquiries. I have given up. I guess my procreational plans, or lack thereof, are the world's business...  |
Managed Care September 2000 Michael S. Victoroff, M.D. |
Women's Health: Is It the Conception or the Delivery? What if human reproduction changed so drastically that the automatic association between women and procreation were uncoupled? What philosophical questions would emerge in a world where "woman" and "man" merely described two ordinary features of physiognomy, like "curly" and "straight?"...  |
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