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She's a cult hero here as well. During her current visit, she appeared on morning TV talk shows conversing fluently in Hebrew
-- one of the four languages she speaks. She said she raises the money for her documentary projects by promising donors "good sex for life." She still has a small practice in New York, teaches at Yale and Princeton universities, and her most recent focus revolves around the
Internet, warning that social networking and other online tools are replacing real intimacy. "It is a catastrophe, all of this virtual being together," she said. "I think there are people who get hooked on the
Internet. If they need to look at explicitly sexual material to be aroused, there is a problem ... I am worried that the next generation will not be able to have a real conversation." She said it was all part of a trend of "more openness but less intimacy." Still, she takes pride in her role of improving people's marriages by helping them improve their sex lives. "There are less woman who haven't heard the message that a woman has to take responsibility for her own orgasm," she said. ___ Online: http://drruth.com/
[Associated
Press;
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