[…]a free procurator against the party’s will (to serve as the party’s alter ego). Consider, for example, a woman in Southeastern United States who feels she was aggrieved by the local tribunal. She is challenging that the local tribunal had no right to start any investigation whatsoever. The document they […]
[…]and has different editors. In an e-mail, I was told, “the decision was made here at Cleveland.com to remove the piece because of possible misinterpretation of the divorce laws.” Google Search shows the column’s title with the Plain Dealer, but the link goes nowhere. http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2016/10/husbands_are_victims_of_injust.html The editor’s contact us information is here. I’d […]
[…]even though she had been a widow for many years. I am not supposed to have good memories of my husband and our life together. I am not supposed to still have feelings for him. The secular message is that I am supposed to have moved on and have only anger […]
[…]encourages fatherlessness, because divorced fathers in particular are often devalued, disparaged, and forcefully disengaged — curiously, frequently due to “family courts” — from their children’s lives. Researchers have found that for children, the results of such fatherlessness are nothing short of disastrous, along a number of dimensions: Diminished self-esteem and […]
[…]issue of finding a place to live and not having access to his or her home, while the accuser is comfortably moving on to further stages of the custody battle.” (source). Another attorney, John MacDonald from Rhode Island, says “ 32 states laws don’t require any physical assault. Someone can […]