yeah I think it reflects badly on the parents, but it would reflect 
badly on the parents no matter who they were.  I guess in most cases 
the public doesn't know who the parents are unless they happen to 
know the kid personally from home or something, so it is less of an 
issue.  I wonder if the literally millions of people who have naked 
pics on adult personals have had employment opportunities sabotaged 
as a result.  I guess most of them don't use their real names.


--- In [email protected], k8 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> hahahahahaha.. poor kurtz.  so harmed by frist's kids maybe harming 
frist.
> how can they be so stupid- this is great.  Who's being the old 
fogey now-
> "Oh, look what wonkette has gone and done now...."
> 
> Gawd.. I would throttle my kidz if they were THIS dumb, unaware and 
thought
> they were so untouchable.  What a great story.
> 
> On 6/16/06, Ellen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >   I thought this was interesting:
> >
> > Those Darned Kids
> >
> > By Howard Kurtz
> > Washington Post Staff Writer
> > Friday, June 16, 2006; 7:50 AM
> >
> > I'm getting a little tired of reading all these "exposes" of 
Facebook
> > and MySpace.
> >
> > Hardly a week goes by without some newscast or newspaper 
discovering
> > that it can be hazardous to the college or professional careers of
> > young people to post pictures of themselves engaged in drinking,
> > drugging, loving or other racy activity that might be frowned 
upon by
> > some adult in a position of authority.
> >
> > Okay, we get it. Hasn't dumb judgment always been hazardous to 
your
> > professional health?
> >
> > It's a legitimate story, but I detect a faint whiff of Old Media
> > getting all exercised about the terrible dangers of New Media--why
> > are all those kids wasting their time blabbing on these social 
sites?-
> > -rather than figuring out how to appeal to their young fans.
> >
> > So if college-type kids want to endanger their prospects by acting
> > online like, well, college kids, let 'er rip. But now comes a new
> > wrinkle: Should embarrassing postings be held against their 
parents,
> > especially if their parents are, like, politicians?
> >
> > First Wonkette reports that one of Bill Frist's sons has some 
weird
> > language in his profile in Facebook (aimed at college students and
> > alums): "Lets bomb some people." (He didn't major in grammar,
> > apparently.) And "FREE DUKE" hanging on his wall.
> >
> > Then Roll Call found another son of the Senate majority leader
> > declaring membership in the "Jonathan Frist appreciation 
For 'Waking
> > Up White People' Group" and another group that says: "No Jews
> > Allowed. Just Kidding. No seriously." And there was this
> > gem: "Texans: the lowest form of white man there is."
> >
> > Wonkette posted a picture of the guy wearing--I don't know the
> > technical term--a belt made out of beer cans.
> >
> > Now Wonkette's investigative bureau has uncovered a picture of the
> > daughter of a candidate running for Frist's Tennessee Senate seat
> > under the headline "Bob Corker's Daughter Experiments with
> > Marycheneyism." There is indeed a Facebook shot of two young women
> > doing some serious lip-lock and another involving underwear 
dancing
> > of the kind probably not seen at Senate socials.
> >
> > Do I think any of this stuff should reflect poorly on their 
parents?
> > No. But it's on a zillion Web sites now. It's too bad the kids 
have
> > been singled out because they belong to political families. And 
after
> > all, they weren't exactly busted for cocaine or arrested in a DUI.
> > But that's life in the Internet age: Nothing is truly private.
> >
> >  
> >
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> /k
>






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