I couldn't read the article becuase the WP site was apparently down, but I find it sad that her parents won't talk to her. I'm a big advocate unconditional love.
Her side of the story (from the article):
"As long as I was quiet about being gay or my politics, we got along," she says. "Then I went to the Counterinaugural," last month's protests in Washington against President Bush. "My father didn't like that."
Maya returned from the demonstration to find that she had been let go from her job at her father's political organization.
She says she was told to leave her father's apartment and not to expect any money toward attending Brown University, where she was admitted but deferred matriculation to spend a year teaching in southern India. "In my father's view, financing my college would be financing my politics, in a sense," Maya says, "because I plan to be an activist after college."
She wrote to her parents to tell them about tomorrow's speech, but says she got no response.
Dad's side of the story (again, from the article):
On what basis, and how practiced?
So you would say Ted Kaczynki's brother David should have loved Ted, unconditionally?