T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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275.2 | of course | WMOIS::B_REINKE | As true as water, as true as light | Thu Sep 15 1988 11:01 | 8 |
| Of course the mother should pay child support if she is employed
and is the non custodial parent (unless they have equally split
joint custody). I know women who do so.
The man in question can go to court and get them to decree child
support.
Bonnie
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275.3 | Not a fair system,, at all... | JAWS::PELKEY | ALL-IN-1 aint slow, it's stopped | Thu Sep 15 1988 11:20 | 27 |
| I hope that once the entire divorce is finalized (This seems to
take a very long time) and the custody rights settled, that
something will happen. Hopefully she will have supervised custody
rights only (she as flakey as a bowl of rasin bran) and will be
responsible for some kind of financial aid....
She's been responsible for black eyes, cut lips (throwing books
and other hurlable objects at them) falling asleep while the children
are in her care, which once resulted in the little girl getting
quite badly burnt on the forehead with a lighter and hair spray..
(there's other horror stories, and too upsetting to continue at
this point) But yet, my brother-inlaw was issued a restraining
order at one time,, why, I still don't know.... he's never
raised a hand to her, and he's great with his kids. Right now,
they're all he's got in the world...
Just seems that the 'system' is in the mothers favor in this state.
You'd basically have to prove, beyond any reasonable shawdow of doubt
(like a video taping of the mother throwing a kid infront of a truck)
that she was unfit. She currently has legal custody of the youngest
one, but has not once, enforced that custody. Which in the long run is
better for the kids, but adds a ton of pressure to my brother-inlaw.
We all try to pithc in and help out, but this guys got one long road in
front of him..
She seesm to be content with being able to use the kids as leverage
to get to my brother-inlaw. Problem is, he lets her....
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275.4 | Let's not have a kangaroo court here | QUARK::LIONEL | In Search of the Lost Code | Thu Sep 15 1988 12:52 | 10 |
| I sympathize, but would ask that you not try to use this conference
to put the mother on trial. It's very hard to give objective
advice when one only hears a single side to a story.
Your basic question was simple - should a non-custodial mother
be liable for child support, and the answer, as Marge and Bonnie
have suggested, is "yes". However, the ability to actually make
that happen varies from state to state, and even from case to
case.
Steve
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275.5 | The Way It Works | GRECO::ANDERSON | Home of the Convoluted Brain | Thu Sep 15 1988 12:55 | 33 |
| Check the note on Custody in this file.
The way it works is this. According to the constitution of this state
and country, it is illegal to discriminate on the basis gender. Now,
when courts face the problem of with whom and when will children of
divorce go, they rely on precedence or some other "rational basis" for
making a decision. In the United States, this basis was established
and formalized in the early 1900's as the "tender years" theory which
presumes that the maternal instinct far and away makes females better
parents than the paternal instinct makes males. Moreover the flip side
of the coin, the one we hear and read about most often, concluded that
females are not suited and consequently may be excluded from economic
responsibility, military service, smoking, voting etc., etc., etc.
Unlike the discrimination which women encounter which expresses itself
in a variety of venues and can be attacked with a variety of tools
(law, union contracts, strikes, consumer boycotts, bra burning
demonstrations) just about the only time that paternal rights come up
is is when the family has disintigrated and has entered our advesarial
(sp?) court system, where to our surprise, judges have full and
complete discretion (I've over stated their discretion somewhat, but
not by much). When faced with dealing with a child, a judge, who has
no relationship with any of the parties and who is also ill equipped to
see much less interpret the psychological and emotional issues falls
back on judicial precedence to deal with this individual crisis.
Consequently, women are awarded custody in excess of 95% of the times,
a rate which would be per se violation and grounds for a law suit
charging discrimination if the situation involved hiring practices of
women and minorities.
Thats just the way it works right now.
Craig
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275.7 | Numbers lie... | JAWS::PELKEY | ALL-IN-1 aint slow, it's stopped | Thu Sep 15 1988 13:49 | 56 |
| First off, Steve, I understand where you're comming from, I'll
refrain from the negative statements in the future.
<< I guess what I'm looking for is a number where there really was
<< discretion used on the part of the judge and where the woman won
<< custody. (if available)
Marge, just ask any lawyer. In a custody case, the father has a better
chance of ice skating in hell, then winning custody. Unless there's
sufficent proof that the mother is unfit, and not even DSS gives a damn
until something bad happens, and even then, it's questionable as
to how effective they are...
and in this case, nothing really happens until the case history is too
obvious to ignore...
But should the father mess up once,, the guy is done for. Trust me on
this When Casandra got burned, they didn't seem to be too concerned.
However the mother reported a small bruise on the sons arm, (probably
from a fall, the kids pretty rugged) My brother in-law was almost
immediately halled in for an investigation... They wanted to know how
that bruise got there, who did it, and why, then informed him that
they would be furthering the investigation, and comming to his home to
"Check everything out!!" They did.... and what they got was an
eyefull of a fine, clean, perfect environment. When the daughter
was burned severly enuff to have been hospitalized for two weeks
whwile in the mothers care,,, where was DSS ? (Department of Social
Sevices for thos who are asking, "What is DSS...")
My point is,
1: It's not always the mother who needs the courts and financial
support
2: When it's not, and the father holds sole custody, the
mother should be held equally as responsible as the father.
3: When determining custody, there should be NO preestablished
precedent as to who gets custody.
4: The kids saftey and well being can be in just as much jeopardy with
the mother as with the father if they're incapable of insituting the
porper care.
I don't feel that their is an unbias, impartial ear in todays court
system. Perhaps it's just Mass.... The mother is appeared as the
innocent, abused one. And while I wont deny that happens at an
alarming rate, it's not exclusive to mothers.
I know my note started of in a different vain, but this just seems
to be evolving in to a differnet discussion...
Good one though...
/ray
|
275.8 | | SUCCES::BURTON | | Fri Sep 16 1988 10:06 | 21 |
|
In the state of Mass the courts do favour the woman in a custody
suit. New Hampshire decides who is best able to care for the child.
A freind of mine has had custody of his two girls for two and a
half years. His ex wife litterally walked out on them. He was living
in NH at the time and was awarded full custody. The mother was supposed
to provide finantial support but never did. Well, here it is two
and a half years later, they all live in Mass and the mom takes
the case to court. She won full custody and the court has authorized
his paycheck to be garnished.
This isn't an isolated incident either. I have another friend that
had the same thing happen to him a couple of years ago.
There's nothing either of them can do or so their lawyers have told
them.
In Mass the system falls short of protecting the interests of the
children and anyone else involved. Not only are the fathers in these
cases affected so are the grandparents whose visitation "rights"
are greatly reduced or completely eliminated.
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275.9 | WOW ! | JAWS::PELKEY | ALL-IN-1 aint slow, it's stopped | Fri Sep 16 1988 12:19 | 4 |
| She was supposed to be paying custody, never did. She decides
she wants custody, gets it, and HIS paycheck gets garnished !
Amazing... but completely believeable !
|
275.10 | WOMEN NEVER PAY CHILD SUPPORT | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Sep 16 1988 12:57 | 15 |
| Let's face. The guy gets ripped off every time. A woman pay child
support! Ha!!! What a laugh. That will NEVER happen if the woman
does not want it to. EVERY COURT IN THIS FREAKING STATE WILL FAVOR
THE WOMAN OVER THE MAN. The ought to be a way to sue the court
system for discrimination. What about the federal agency that handles
hiring discrimination cases? I can't remember the name of it.
They should be handling these cases also, shouldn't they?
Please pardon the anger early on. I get VERY angry when I think
how women have cried discrimination only when it suits them and
have almost never tried to assist the men when they are being
discriminated against.
Ed..
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275.11 | | COMET::BRUNO | Outlaw Kitty Porn! | Fri Sep 16 1988 13:03 | 5 |
| RE: .10
You tell 'em, big Ed.
Greg
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275.12 | All women don't feel that way! | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Heisenburg might have been here | Tue Sep 20 1988 22:01 | 8 |
| Re .10 (Ed)
This woman thinks that if everything she is hearing about the Mass.
Family Court is true (and I *do* know that women get custody in
the overwhelming majority of custody cases), that men are being
discriminated against, and something should be done about it.
Elizabeth
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275.13 | Colorado, California, Alaska, Ohio, Nebraska... | COMET::BRUNO | The happiest man on earth! | Tue Sep 20 1988 22:30 | 5 |
| Re: .12
Unfortunately, it isn't just Massachusetts.
Grog
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275.15 | remember the B.C. cartoons? | COMET::BRUNO | The happiest man on earth! | Tue Sep 20 1988 23:14 | 5 |
| Re: .14
Nope, just an old nickname.
Grog
|
275.16 | ooooo you neanderthal you..... | SALEM::AMARTIN | WE like da cars, Da cars dat go BOOM! | Wed Sep 21 1988 03:33 | 3 |
| You got big feet to Grog??
GEESH MIKE! I knew that!
|
275.17 | Size 12's, big fella. | COMET::BRUNO | The happiest man on earth! | Wed Sep 21 1988 10:19 | 8 |
| Anyway, we are deviating from the topic.
After having seen and heard horror stories from around the
country, I think the courts are sexually discrimanatory around the
entire country. Unfortunately, not enough people are making enough
noise to force a change.
Greg
|
275.18 | Mass. family court is the pits for men | VINO::KSTEVENS | Everyone is lonesome for someone else | Wed Sep 21 1988 12:22 | 12 |
| > Re .10 (Ed)
>
> This woman thinks that if everything she is hearing about the Mass.
> Family Court is true (and I *do* know that women get custody in
> the overwhelming majority of custody cases), that men are being
> discriminated against, and something should be done about it.
>
> Elizabeth
>
Yes, (Not knowing everything you have heard)... but Men are MOST definitely
discriminated against in Mass.
|
275.19 | I HAVE ACTUALLY HEARD people say this! | SALEM::AMARTIN | WE like da cars, Da cars dat go BOOM! | Wed Sep 21 1988 13:56 | 9 |
| They (the minorities if you will) are just making up for the past.
HEY, Why shouldn't I pay for my great grandfathers acts of
discriminations. Its only F>A>I>R> right?
Noone is screaming cause thats the deal. The (Majority if you will)
is getting the butt end?? so what! They have alway had the upper
hand before....
Yeah, right.
|
275.21 | All for one and one for all | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Sep 21 1988 18:07 | 24 |
| I wish that more women who believed, like Elizabeth, that the courts
are not being fair to men would speak up. It has been my opinion
that unless the father is shown to be totally unfit he should be
given AT LEAST joint custody. The living arrangements would have
to be worked out, but that only seems fair to both the father and
the children.
Until we get a more mixed voice (men AND women) shouting to the
stupid judges and lawmakers, then I don't think that things will
be changed. After all, look at the suffragettes (sp?) (woman's
right to vote), civil rights (blacks rights to everything), etc.
It was only when EVERYONE was shouting that things were changed.
Even the issue of the women's right to vote was supported by many
men, I am sure. Otherwise, they would never have succeeded in their
cause.
I pray that I am never in a position to have to depend on the family
courts to determine how I will live the remainder of my life, but
if I am, maybe I will be in front of a modern judge who understands
the hurt that will be going around on ALL sides of the issue (mother,
children, AND father).
Ed..
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275.22 | Truth hurts.... | SALEM::AMARTIN | WE like da cars, Da cars dat go BOOM! | Wed Sep 21 1988 18:16 | 2 |
| May be bogus Mike, but thats how it is and how people think it SHOULD
be.
|
275.23 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | still here | Wed Sep 21 1988 18:39 | 23 |
| > Until we get a more mixed voice (men AND women) shouting to the
> stupid judges and lawmakers, then I don't think that things will
> be changed.
if they're stupid, what difference is shouting going to make...
this is a pretty negative outlook on my behalf, and it really BUGS me that I
think this way...The way the courts are set up now, you and I, Mr. and Ms.
Average Citizen, have to take our place in a line that lasts for three years or
more to see any kind of justice, to see any kind of change. Those judges and
lawmakers are feeding power in to themselves and away from us in ways that are
subtle as well as blatant. They like things this way. Why should they want to
change. Grrrr.
> It was only when EVERYONE was shouting that things were changed.
That was a long time ago. Now, people don't even vote. Now, the people who
run the nation have tightened the reins...
> I pray that I am never in a position to have to depend on the family
> courts to determine how I will live the remainder of my life,
A-MEN!!!
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275.26 | F.A.I.R. is aware! | CIMNET::LUISI | | Mon Oct 03 1988 12:12 | 14 |
|
F.A.I.R. A national father's organization is gaining strong support
in their lobbying efforts to abolish these discrimintory laws and
attitudes. Their principle focus is awareness with the goal of
providing equal and fairness for the family in divorse situations.
Understanding that this is not true today F.A.I.R. is working hard
to make legislators and the judiicial systems aware of the short
comings.
You can get more info on F.A.I.R. by calling 800-722-FAIR
Bill
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275.27 | EX WIVES DONT PAY | COMET::PAPA | | Tue Oct 04 1988 02:33 | 2 |
| I KNOW OF THREE FATHERS WITH CUSTODY AND NONE ARE RECIEVING
ANY CHILD SUPPORT FROM EX WIVES WHO CAN AFFORD IT
|
275.28 | my .02 worth | PARITY::MCBRIDE | | Tue Oct 04 1988 16:25 | 21 |
| Hi,
Not to cause ruffled feathers, but just to add my 2 cents.
I am a divorced mother of two teenagers. I have never received
support nor do I chase it. Reason being is I have seen too many
mothers say, "You need new shoes...go ask your father....he doesn't
give me enough money....." The kids that I have seen basically
think they are with their mother for the support money alone. The
mothers who chase also become obsessed with it causing anger, grief,
their kids tippy toes and head games begin. "Your father can buy
his girlfriend gifts, but he can't buy you new coats!!!!" In my
case, he skipped state to avoid support. How do I feel? What goes
around comes around. Because of the new Mass law however, I did
receive his IRS return. It wasn't expected so therefore we treated
it as a luxery.
I firmly believe that if the father has custody, the mother must
according to the laws, pay support as well as help with 1/2 of stuff
like braces, medical (what insur does not pay), etc. After all
it did take two.
|