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Angelina Jolie - “Marie Claire” July 2007

Angelina Jolie - “Marie Claire” July 2007

Actress and UN goodwill ambassador Angelina Jolie looks her flawless self in the July 2007 issue of Marie Claire magazine.

On when she’s most talkative: “I don’t know how he does it, but … I talk a lot in the bath. It’s easier to talk when you’re naked … Get naked with me, and I’ll talk!”

On her growing relationship with Brad Pitt: “I think we both went on a lot of faith – we really did. Our family has grown very quickly, and we have a lot of responsibility together, and we acknowledge that we are lucky we turned out be for each other everything we’d hoped. We could have been very wrong, but every challenge we hit has brought us closer. It has been that kind of relationship.”

On good dad Brad: “It’s hot. There’s nothing sexier than a man who is a great father.”

On being especially happy for son Maddox: “I’m so happy for my children – especially Mad. I didn’t know if he was ever going to have a dad. So when I watch them having real strong father-son time, or even when Mad tells me, ‘This is a boy thing, Mom’ – it’s just really beautiful to see.”

On Pax’s underwear trouble: “I’m still having trouble convincing Pax that underwear and pants go together - underwear is not pants!”

On Zahara undoing her hair: “You do her hair; She takes it out. It’s like everybody just starts to undress once you’ve gotten them dressed.”

Oh Shiloh recently learning how to walk: “So she’s falling and trying to eat everything in the place.”

Angelina Jolie’s July 2007 issue of Marie Claire hits newsstands Tuesday, June 12.

A couple more pictures inside of Angelina’s Marie Claire photo spread…

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Jolie-marie-claire angelina jolie marie claire july 2007 07
Jolie-marie-claire angelina jolie marie claire july 2007 08
Jolie-marie-claire angelina jolie marie claire july 2007 09
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Jolie-marie-claire angelina jolie marie claire july 2007 12
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JJ Links Around The Web

  • ANTM's Miss J is the co-father of a 7-year-old boy - Dlisted
  • Nicole Richie and Harlow grab coffee - PopSugar
  • Tracy Morgan fans didn't like his strong language - PopEater
  • Twilight tops People's Choice nominations - JustJaredJr
  • Britney Spears is a bikini babe - TheSuperficial
  • Holly Madison's not a Girls Next Door fan - Celebuzz
  • Emily Blunt and John Krasinski are adorable together - LaineyGossip
Photo: Amy Sussman/Getty

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UPDATE:

Angelina will appear on BOTH the Larry King Show AND on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, THURSDAY, JUNE 14.

Today’s Parade article is fantastic. Whoever’s arranging the interviews is doing a great job of showing Angelina’s different facets.

Reader’s Digest: Conversation with Angelina & Mariane
Esquire: her humanitarian/philanthropic/political work, celebrity
Marie Claire: family, Brad & home, Marcheline dying
Parade: A Life That Matters - How I Found My Way

EXCERPTS FROM PARADE:
(entire article on PARADE.com on June 12):

Bertrand managed time for others. “From a very young age, I saw her doing aid work,” Jolie recalls. “She took me to an Amnesty Internaational dinner when I was about 9. She was very involved in Native American issues.”

“I think that when I was in my early 20s, I knew, innately, that I wasn’t living an important life…I hadn’t found my way. i wasn’t giving very much…I like film. But at the end of the day, you wonder about your worth as a person.

“…the first place I went ended up being the worst place I’ve ever been Maybe it was meant to be, because it changed me. I remember being at the airport, on the phone with my mom, just in hysterics. I was shaken by Sierra Leone. I met little kids with their arms and legs cut off. That kind of brutality just shocked me.”

To her credit, she stoutly resists any temptations to get on a soapbox or a high horse.

This is the article which Angie is so proud of since it didn’t refer to her as an actress. It was published as an op-ed piece in the Washington Post. This is just one part of how worthy Angelina was to join the Council on Foreign Relations.

Justice for Darfur

By Angelina Jolie
Wednesday, February 28, 2007; Page A19

BAHAI, Chad — Here, at this refugee camp on the border of Sudan, nothing separates us from Darfur but a small stretch of desert and a line on a map. All the same, it’s a line I can’t cross. As a representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, I have traveled into Darfur before, and I had hoped to return. But the UNHCR has told me that this camp, Oure Cassoni, is as close as I can get.

Sticking to this side of the Sudanese border is supposed to keep me safe. By every measure — killings, rapes, the burning and looting of villages — the violence in Darfur has increased since my last visit, in 2004. The death toll has passed 200,000; in four years of fighting, Janjaweed militia members have driven 2.5 million people from their homes, including the 26,000 refugees crowded into Oure Cassoni.

Attacks on aid workers are rising, another reason I was told to stay out of Darfur. By drawing attention to their heroic work — their efforts to keep refugees alive, to keep camps like this one from being consumed by chaos and fear — I would put them at greater risk.

I’ve seen how aid workers and nongovernmental organizations make a difference to people struggling for survival. I can see on workers’ faces the toll their efforts have taken. Sitting among them, I’m amazed by their bravery and resilience. But humanitarian relief alone will never be enough.

Until the killers and their sponsors are prosecuted and punished, violence will continue on a massive scale. Ending it may well require military action. But accountability can also come from international tribunals, measuring the perpetrators against international standards of justice.

Accountability is a powerful force. It has the potential to change behavior — to check aggression by those who are used to acting with impunity. Luis Moreno-Ocampo, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), has said that genocide is not a crime of passion; it is a calculated offense. He’s right. When crimes against humanity are punished consistently and severely, the killers’ calculus will change.

On Monday I asked a group of refugees about their needs. Better tents, said one; better access to medical facilities, said another. Then a teenage boy raised his hand and said, with powerful simplicity, “Nous voulons une épreuve.” We want a trial. He is why I am encouraged by the ICC’s announcement yesterday that it will prosecute a former Sudanese minister of state and a Janjaweed leader on charges of crimes against humanity.

Some critics of the ICC have said indictments could make the situation worse. The threat of prosecution gives the accused a reason to keep fighting, they argue. Sudanese officials have echoed this argument, saying that the ICC’s involvement, and the implication of their own eventual prosecution, is why they have refused to allow U.N. peacekeepers into Darfur.

It is not clear, though, why we should take Khartoum at its word. And the notion that the threat of ICC indictments has somehow exacerbated the problem doesn’t make sense, given the history of the conflict. Khartoum’s claims aside, would we in America ever accept the logic that we shouldn’t prosecute murderers because the threat of prosecution might provoke them to continue killing?

When I was in Chad in June 2004, refugees told me about systematic attacks on their villages. It was estimated then that more than 1,000 people were dying each week.

In October 2004 I visited West Darfur, where I heard horrific stories, including accounts of gang-rapes of mothers and their children. By that time, the UNHCR estimated, 1.6 million people had been displaced in the three provinces of Darfur and 200,000 others had fled to Chad.

It wasn’t until June 2005 that the ICC began to investigate. By then the campaign of violence was well underway.

As the prosecutions unfold, I hope the international community will intervene, right away, to protect the people of Darfur and prevent further violence. The refugees don’t need more resolutions or statements of concern. They need follow-through on past promises of action.

There has been a groundswell of public support for action. People may disagree on how to intervene — airstrikes, sending troops, sanctions, divestment — but we all should agree that the slaughter must be stopped and the perpetrators brought to justice.

In my five years with UNHCR, I have visited more than 20 refugee camps in Sierra Leone, Congo, Kosovo and elsewhere. I have met families uprooted by conflict and lobbied governments to help them. Years later, I have found myself at the same camps, hearing the same stories and seeing the same lack of clean water, medicine, security and hope.

It has become clear to me that there will be no enduring peace without justice. History shows that there will be another Darfur, another exodus, in a vicious cycle of bloodshed and retribution. But an international court finally exists. It will be as strong as the support we give it. This might be the moment we stop the cycle of violence and end our tolerance for crimes against humanity.

What the worst people in the world fear most is justice. That’s what we should deliver.

The writer is a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees.

she’s a beautiful person!

veryyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy gooooooooooooooood.thanks

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