Saturday

Family Court and the Right to Informed Consent



No parent could ever imagine the horror of not being able to raise their own child.  Yet, in today’s family court system, we are finding that more and more divorced parents are losing their rights to see their child and to act as their parent.  The reasoning behind this growing movement is equally horrific.  Divorced parents are disputing over the administration of psychotropic drugs to their children. One parent wants to drug the child and the other one does not. Mental health has become insinuated into today’s Family Court and the right to Informed Consent is surpassed by vested interests.  Hear one parent’s tale and how he continues to fight for the right to say “NO” to mind-altering drugs for his child. 


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Family Court and the Right to Informed Consent

Show number 1
Walter Davis, Andrew Thibaud and Laurie Anspach (Executive Director of CCHR Florida) Guest Call in Number (310) 861-2349 
(Participants call in 10 Minutes Early)  Click on the link below to join the show or listen to the archived version.  

    


Citizens Demanding Justice Upcoming Internet Radio Shows



Saturday 15 Feb. 2014, 5 PM Eastern, 2 PM Pacific

Guest Call in Number (310) 861-2349
 (Participants call in 10 Minutes Early)


Click on the link below to join the show or listen to archived version.http://www.blogtalkradio.com/sdcommunitycoalition/2014/02/15/family-court-and-the-right-to-informed-consent-part-2

We continue to look at the issue of mental health and the family courts, we talk with another parent who spent his time, money and all his heart to fight for the rights of his son and himself, only to be met with constant road-blocks, put in front of him by family court-appointed psychologists who were vested in drugging his child. We look at what parents can do to assert their rights, how they can work together to push through one of the toughest fights of their lives.



 Walter Davis, Andrew Thibaud, Michael Potts and Laurie Anspach (Executive Director of Citizens Commission on Human Rights Florida).
 















4 comments:

  1. Dedicated to the proposition that children are best served by having unfettered EQUAL access to BOTH parents and to the proposition that fathers are indispensable. Improve the lives of children and strengthen society by protecting the child’s right to the love and care of both parents after separation or divorce. We seek better lives for children through family court reform!! The Google+ Page is about the human rights of children with particular attention to the rights of special protection and care afforded to the young, including their right to association with both biological parents.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. #StandUpForZoraya #ILoveAndNeedMyDaughter #EndParentalAlienation

      Delete
  2. Hey Bio-Mom,
    I see you have found our little club here and you've decided to troll around for a bit. I first would like to say "welcome" on behalf of the men and women who suffer daily inside and outside these pages. We are glad you are here.
    Feel free to take your time and peruse the stories of men and women who have lost everything. Take in the agony and the pain, read the horror stories of men who havn't seen their children in 6 weeks, 6 months or 6 years. You will notice that all the stories share a familiar tone. The pain is real. The disbelief is palpable. The constant barrage of men ready to give up is unfortunately true. They may give up and stop fighting vindictive exes for their children and just move on, only to be later called a deadbeat loser from the same woman that deprived him of his children. They may give up and eat a bullet, jump from a bridge or tie a noose around their neck and say their final goodbye. You win, they lose. You are now an accessory to murder.
    Stick around and look at the pictures of the children that are left behind. These are the other victims. The victims without a voice in all of this. Had they had a choice they would almost always choose to have a loving caring father by their side. You deprive them of that. Not only do you assist in the murdering of fathers, but you're also a child abuser. Congratulations.
    Be sure to keep coming back to our little club here. Make jokes about how we are all domestic abusers who feel we have some ghastly privilege of fathering our children. Keep your kids close to you, be sure you cash that child support check and keep the children from Daddy if he misses a payment. It's only a fair punishment for him. Make him suffer. Make him hurt so bad he stays awake at night crying because he misses his kids so badly. Make him out to be the deadbeat you just know he is. Make his feel the depths of depression and despair by keeping his kids from him. Threaten to have him arrested and thrown in jail for inability to pay child support. You're cruising now bio-mom. You show them who is boss. Don't allow him to talk to his kids on the phone. Don't allow him to have one extra minute of "visitation". Marginalize him and make him feel what a scumbag he truly is. Don't tell him of your children's accomplishment or how they are doing in school. Keep any and all medical records from him. Keep him guessing who is with his children and where they are living. Keep doing what you are doing bio-mom. Now we all know who the boss is. It was never the judges or lawyers who caused all this. It was you. Now look down at your children and realize everything you have done to your ex has also been done to them. See, you are a child abuser after all.
    Sleep tight,
    Joe Makem

    ReplyDelete
  3. The NJ-AFCC Special Projects Committee reviewed many different Children's Bill Of Rights from organizations across the United States. The Children's Bill of Rights developed by the American Bar Association, Section of Family Law, came closest to elaborating all of the conflcit issues that can arise for children in divorce and family dissolution cases. The NJ-AFCC Special Projects Committee used that Bill of Rights as a model, and revised and extended it to better meet the needs of children in New Jersey, and around the world.

    We invite all professionals working with families in conflict, and those working to assist children in their efforts to cope with the parental conflict that often arises during divorce and family dissolution, to adopt this Bill of Rights for Children in Divorce and Dissolution Actions. We do ask that you give NJ-AFCC credit for developing this Bill of Rights, in any reprinting or distribution of the bill.

    BILL OF RIGHTS FOR CHILDREN IN DIVORCE AND DISSOLUTION ACTIONS

    1. The right to be treated as important and separate human beings with unique feelings, needs, ideas, and desires, not existing solely to gratify the needs of their parents.

    2. The right to not participate in the painful games parents play to hurt each other, or be put in the middle of their battles.

    3. The right not to be a go-between or a message courier for their parents.

    4. The right to a continuing, relaxed, and secure relationship with both parents.

    5. The right to express love and affection for, and receive love and affection from, both parents.

    6. The right to know that expressions of love between children and parents will not cause fear, disapproval, or other negative consequences.

    7. The right to know that their parents decision to divorce is not their fault.

    8. The right to know that it is not their responsibility to keep their parents together.

    9. The right to continuing care and guidance from both parents.

    10. The right to age appropriate answers to questions about the changing family relationships, without placing blame on either parent.

    11. The right to know and appreciate what is good in each parent.

    12. The right to be protected from hearing degrading or bad comments about either parent.

    13. The right to be able to experience regular, consistent, and flexible shared parenting time with both parents, and the right to know the reason for changes in the parenting schedule.

    14. The right to have neither parent interfere with, or undermine, parenting time with the other parent.

    15. The right to not be forced to choose one parent over the other.

    16. The right to express their feelings, concerns, and ideas about the divorce.

    17. The right to remain a child without being asked to take on parental responsibilities or to be an adult friend or companion to either parent.

    18. The right to the most adequate level of economic support that can be provided from the best efforts of both parents.

    19. The right to continue ongoing positive relationships with the people (friends, neighbors, grandparents and extended family) who were an important part of their lives before parental divorce.

    ----------------------------
    This Bill of Rights was adopted from "The Children's Bill of Rights" developed by the American Bar Association, Section of Family Law, and was modified and expanded by the NJ-AFCC Special Projects Committee (Jeannette DeVaris, Sam Forlenza, Donald Franklin, Sandra Saul, Phil Sobel, Frank Weiss.)

    Website Hosting provided by Lisa Tomasini, Ph.D.
    Contact lisatomasini@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete

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