While most men might crumble at the mere thought of trying to contend with serious world issues while at the same time dealing with unprecedented media scrutiny and a very enviable career in the movies business, but it's all just a day in the life for former Batman, George Clooney. According to the latest gossip news updates, his marriage to Amal Alumuddin is as strong as ever despite the reports that they are nearing divorce. In fact, the ER star just co-authored an op-ed to the New York Times bringing attention to the horrors still raging in Darfur --hardly the actions of a man trying to keep his new wife from leaving him.
Week after week there are reports in the tabloids that George Clooney and Amal Alamuddin are constantly taking issue with something the other is doing, whether it be partying with the Hollywood A-list or refusing to get pregnant, but the truth may be far less exciting.
A source close to the couple told Closer Weekly, that when Amal and George are lucky enough to get some free time together they certainly don't spend it dickering over a bunch of non-sense that doesn't really matter:
"Amal says absence makes the heart grow fonder.
"She and George really anticipate being together, and they don't argue as much because they know that their time together is limited."
Of course, explains the spy, it not like when they aren't in the same country that they go incommunicado or anything like that:
"They're always on Skype when they're on different continents -- that makes them feel closer."
And in the meantime, Clooney knows just what to do to keep the human rights lawyer amorously thinking about him while he's away -- combat international injustice.
In an op-ed to the New York Times co-written with activist-author John Prendergast and Sudan policy analyst Akshaya Kumar, Clooney reminded the world that things didn't magically improve in Darfur just because America stopped thinking about them (via NY Daily News):
"After collecting more than 130 eyewitness and survivor testimonies over the phone, researchers concluded that at least 221 women had been raped by soldiers of the Sudanese Army over a 36-hour period last October.
"The 'torture rapes' in Tabit are a reminder to the world that the same conditions that led the United States' declaration of genocide in Darfur are still firmly in place, with devastating human consequences."
Now if that won't make Alamuddin randy than nothing will.
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