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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!uchinews!machine!ddsw1!karl
- From: karl@ddsw1.mcs.com (Karl Denninger)
- Subject: Re: Male Choice Revi (1)
- Message-ID: <By1sut.D30@ddsw1.mcs.com>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1992 04:08:53 GMT
- References: <1e8urpINNkjl@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com> <Bxv81E.39s@ddsw1.mcs.com> <1ee74rINNpm7@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com>
- Organization: MCSNet, Chicago, IL
- Lines: 248
-
- In article <1ee74rINNpm7@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com> regard@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com (Adrienne Regard) writes:
- >In article <Bxv81E.39s@ddsw1.mcs.com> karl@ddsw1.mcs.com (Karl Denninger) writes:
- >>Ok, how about this as a proposal? (for the second time)
- >
- >As a general comment, I think that you proposal makes some basic assumptions
- >and statements that don't necessarily reflect reality, but that's neither
- >here nor there as we get into the specifics of the proposal.
- >
- >I don't see the first two points as being particularly related, so
- >I'll go on:
-
- (I do)
-
- >>3) Provides a declaration that in custody cases, and in the event of
- >> a split of a present-case family unit, that both parties will be
- >> presumed to be equally capable of parenting, and that the split
- >> shall be 50-50 with regards to custody. Further, the default
- >> support award shall be >zero< (since both parents have the
- >> responsibility half the time, they both inherently bear half the
- >> costs). In particular, repeal the "tender years" doctrine at
- >> the federal level and require proof by preponderance of the
- >> evidence that a parent is >unsuitable< -- not "less suitable" --
- >> before the default custody split of 50-50 is modified.
- >>
- >> Further, should one parent choose to move away from the original area
- >> where the divorce took place, the parent which decides to move shall
- >> bear the cost(s) of transporting the child(ren) involved to comply
- >> with the custody decision. In no case shall this movement be
- >> grounds for modification of custody.
- >
- >So, we cart kids cross country twice a year, changing schools, etc., to
- >accomodate this plan. Is this plan to be implemented even if the parents
- >agree otherwise, that is to say, even if they make a different plan that
- >suits their needs better? I'll presume not.
-
- No, you presume falsely.
-
- The >default< award of custody and child support can be one thing, and not
- prevent two parents from agreeing to something else. However, there is then
- >no< basis for child-support laws which confiscate 40% of a man's >pre-tax<
- earnings -- or more -- and then attempt to assign an "earnings potential" to
- that same person so when they lose their job they STILL are on the hook for
- the original amount!
-
- If either party to a divorce is pigheaded enough to move across the country
- KNOWING FULL WELL that this will cause custody problems for the other parent
- then they should damn well pay for the privilege.
-
- Note that this isn't sexist. I'll even go so far as to suggest that such
- an arrangement isn't in the best interest of the kids most of the time. But
- that's neither here nor there -- the point is, if you want to do something
- for hedonistic reasons when you have kids to support (like move away from
- the area where you were living before) and can't get your ex to agree to
- move with you, then you, as the one who initiates the move, should be the
- one who pays for the consequences to your kids' lives.
-
- And that, in a shared parent environment, means you pay for the plane
- tickets.
-
- Of course it's easier to say "well, we'll just modify custody so that nasty
- b$@#@$#" doesn't have it any more. But that's not in the best interests of
- the kids -- it's in YOUR best interest. And once you have children to
- support, like it or not, your family MUST be your primary responsibility.
-
- >>4) Provide a declaration that any allegation of abuse made by one
- >> parent or another which is proven false and baseless shall be:
- >> 1) A class X felony (similar to dealing narcotics)
- >> 2) Immediately cause the accusing person to be ineligible to
- >> receive further custody of children in said dispute.
- >
- >Ah. A disincentive for a parent to report suspected abuse. Gee, great
- >idea. Really serves to protect the child, huh.
-
- Nope. Note the >proven< false and baseless above.
-
- Child abuse allegations are the "nuclear weapon" of custody disputes. They
- are used all too often. This will make certain that they aren't used where
- they should not be. Note that this also means that a person with the
- government (aka "Guardian ad Litem") who wants to persue an abuse agenda had
- better be able to prove that something went on before going in front of a
- judge to get custody modified.
-
- In this country, suspicion is NOT conviction, nor should it be treated as
- such. Today, in child custody cases, an accusation is as good as a
- conviction. Today, a woman can accuse a man of abuse in a custody battle,
- have the entire accusation found baseless, malicious and false, and face
- no criminal sanction for the malicious act -- an act which is as damaging
- to the kids and the accused as selling narcotics 20' from the door to a school.
-
- This must end.
-
- >>5) Provide that interference with custody arrangements of any kind
- >> by a parent is grounds for immediate loss of custody of the child(ren)
- >> affected, and is additionally a federal felony. This is intended to
- >> prevent situations where parents "impound" their children against a
- >> court order or in the hopes of "swinging" a custody dispute.
- >
- >Now, I know that this, and 4 before it, are in response to current abuses
- >within the current system. But don't you feel that they open their own
- >doors for abuses in the new system? I don't think these two proposals do
- >anything to serve the best interests of the child.....
-
- I do. How much damage is done to a child when he or she heard that "Daddy's
- an asshole, and you'd rather spend the time with me than go visit him,
- right?" Or "we're just going away on a little vacation" -- that involves
- moving halfway across the country where the kids can't see their other
- parent. Or any one of a number of other excuses.
-
- The damage done to kids through this kind of psychological abuse is
- unbelieveable. Psychological abuse is just as damaging as physical
- abuse to a kid.
-
- How can you abuse the above paragraph (5) if you're a parent? Unless, of
- course, you consider that complying with split custody is an abuse? Or
- unless you feel that one parent has a >right< to withold shared custody and
- parental time from the other.
-
- Need I say that such a claim is preposterous?
-
- >>This package of legislation would provide the following:
- >>
- >>2) It would >guarantee< the right of a man to choose whether or not to
- >> become a father, while insuring that the woman (who is the ultimate
- >
- >I don't believe that we have established whether anyone has a right to
- >become a parent. And this series of legislation doesn't provide that in
- >any case. It gives the man veto power on supporting a child he fathers,
- >but it doesn't provide any right to *become* a father. I sincerely hope,
- >since the implications of that kind of law would be pretty scarey!
- >
- >But the major problem I see is how to implement these rules, and how to
- >deal with the inevitable fall out. And, of course, how to adjust these
- >rules so they do what they are intended to do.
-
- I have posted a follow-up which addresses a large part of this, and some of
- the ambiguity in the proposal. I don't believe that either (4) or (5) has
- much room for interpretation.
-
- >What *are* they intended to do, Karl? The current series of rules in place
- >are intended to serve the best interests of the *children*, not the parents.
- >Now, granted, there are flaws in the original set, and they don't always
- >accomplish this objective, but it is nonetheless true that at least they
- >are aimed at the best interests of the children as their object. Your rules
- >don't seem to be.
-
- No, they're intended to serve the best interests of the MOTHER. C'mon
- Adrienne, you don't REALLY believe that allowing a woman to hide her kids
- from the law, to pretend they're sick when they're not, to blatently
- ignore custody decisions, and to make baseless and false abuse allegations --
- and get away with it under the law -- are in the best interests of the
- children, do you?
-
- Do you REALLY believe that only a woman can properly raise children? Do
- you believe that men should pay for kids, and women should raise them? Do
- you believe that a man should be liable for a child which results from
- his decision to have sex, while a woman should have not one, but TWO
- distinct choices which do not involve parental responsibility -- AFTER
- gestation has taken place?
-
- >How does 'notification' *really* work? How does notice of "choice" *really*
- >work? How does carting the kids back and forth from house to house *really*
- >work? How are children served by these provisions? And does this proposal
- >solve more problems than it initiates?
-
- It works by people being honest and giving one another proper notification.
- It does not work if you find ingenious ways around it. But in that case,
- since you haven't complied with the requirements, the infringer pays --
- unlike today where the man pays and the woman chooses.
-
- You want proof in a potentially hostile situation? Send your notifications
- return-receipt requested with a notary's seal on them, or have a process
- server do it for you. That's legal proof if you feel you'll need it.
-
- >> Nonetheless, I believe
- >>that a >balanced< approach such as this, which can be supported by both men
- >>and women, is the only way both men and women will manage to guarantee their
- >>reproductive freedom >and< their rights and responsibilities with regards to
- >>minor children.
- >
- >Yeah, but it doesn't do much for the minor children, and therefore can hardly
- >be considered 'balanced'.
-
- It certainly does do a lot for children. It guarantees them equal parenting
- time from BOTH parents. It guarantees that they will not become pawns in a
- child custody battle based on false and damning abuse allegations. It
- guarantees that should a parent try to circumvent the law, and avoid split
- custody, that said parent will be punished just as heavily as any child
- abuser -- since that is what they are. And it guarantees that should a
- child be wanted by >either< parent after birth, yet not the other, that
- a means exists to guarantee that the parent which wants the child can
- take care of and raise same.
-
- >>Further, I will go so far as to suggest that there is a simpler solution to
- >>the problem of "fair" reproductive freedom that is now present in law:
- >> Remove a woman's right to choose whether or not to become a parent
- >> after a pregnancy occurs.
- >>I think it is obvious to both men and women that this is a less desirable
- >>alternative than the proposal above. Nonetheless, I believe it is a
- >>defensible position for men should women decide not to permit equality,
- >>within the limits of biology, in this process.
- >
- >But my original complaint, Karl, is that you are ignoring the limits of
- >biology in your analysis, and still do.
- >
- >How do you propose to deal with that limitation "fairly"?
-
- I'm not ignoring the limits of biology Adrienne. I acknowledge that men
- cannot become pregnant, and that they do not have the right to force ANY
- woman, at ANY time, to bear a child against her wishes.
-
- However, with choice comes responsibility. Since women want the choice to
- have or not have kids at any time, they should bear primary responsibility
- for that choice. Only through CONSENT should a man become a father.
- That consent is NOT at the sex act. Sex is for many purposes other than
- procreation. To suggest otherwise is to ask all men in the country to
- immediately withhold sex from their mate(s) unless they intend to
- produce children.
-
- I dare say that women, and men, would find that unacceptable.
-
- Today a woman can easily end up pregnant. The >only< birth control
- methods available to men are condoms and sterilization. Condoms have a 5%
- failure rate per year. Sterilization has a near-zero failure rate, but is
- considered permanent.
-
- Therefore, if a man EVER wants a child he must risk being called "father",
- and being on the hook for support, every time he climbs into bed -- WITHOUT
- his consent. NO WOMAN IN THE UNITED STATES FACES THIS REALITY TODAY.
-
- This is sexist, wrong, and violates the equal protection clause of the US
- Constitution.
-
- >>Anyone want to join in on this one and see if we can get some legislative
- >>action on this proposal at a federal level?
- >
- >I'd like to see an economic analysis first. Is that available at the net
- >address you posted earlier, or does that reply only contain the contents of
- >this proposal as posted here? I'll pick it up if it does.
-
- An ECONOMIC analysis? I thought that the children were the important issue
- here? Or is this another way to find that since women would have to bear
- more of the cost of raising children, and yet would have less >control< over
- same (they'd have to split it 50-50!) that it is unacceptable?
-
- --
- Karl Denninger (karl@ddsw1.MCS.COM, <well-connected>!ddsw1!karl)
- Data Line: [+1 312 248-0900] Anon. arch. (nuucp) 00:00-06:00 C[SD]T
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