Jennifer Aniston is Too Talented to Be Annoying or Destructive

Jennifer Aniston

I don't know why old Bill thinks he can make hay out of this:
While promoting her movie 'The Switch' earlier this week, Jennifer Aniston told reporters that women don't need men to start a family or be good mothers. When Bill O'Reilly caught wind of her statement, he debated the topic of single motherhood on 'The O'Reilly Factor' and called out the 41-year-old actress. "She's throwing a message out to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds that, 'Hey you don't need a guy. You don't need a dad.' That is destructive to our society," O'Reilly railed.
FOX News contributor Margaret Hoover and FOX News anchor Gretchen Carlson debated the topic with O'Reilly, admitting young teens wouldn't be able to comprehend the vast differences between a 40-year-old woman and a teenager raising a child as a single mother. "She is glamorizing single parenthood," Carlson said. 
There are far too many people in this country who believe as Aniston does. There are no "nuclear" families anymore. There are merely convenient and inconvenient arrangements where young children are raised. Once they are of age, people scatter and run from having to deal with them. Nobody wants to deal with children anymore. If they did, the birth rate would be up and the divorce rate would be down. This is a life of convenience now, and we are amusing ourselves into a dotage where there won't be anyone around to clean us when we are sick.

I wish Aniston would give up on men, pretend to be a lesbian, and go back to making films and whatnot. She has a great deal of talent; unfortunately, she lost her man to a slightly more telegenic wild child a few years ago and this made her the tabloid equivalent of "Nancy." She is hapless and full of daydreams; her every appearance in the tabloids is a non-sequitur that leads to yet another brawny male actor using her as a dishrag. Do these men even have ethics? Of course not. They exist to make money and their agents tell them who to screw. Unfortunately, Aniston is heartbroken and trusting, just like Nancy. Well, perhaps not, but this is the snake oil I'm selling this evening.

Aniston, as "Nancy," has nothing but Sluggos and Rollos to deal with as she navigates an unsure terrain full of social climbing male stars. So many of them have crawled over her to reach respectability, I'm wondering if they have left footprints on this poor lady.  (celebritydisaster)