*Divorce Corp.* as an investigative documentary that argues that the U.S. family-court system handles more money—over $50 billion annually—than all other American court systems combined. According to the documentary, this system is plagued by corruption, financial incentives, and a lack of regulation.
Through interviews with lawyers, judges, mediators, politicians, litigants, and journalists, the film claims that:
* Children are often removed from stable homes unnecessarily.
* Custody evaluators—many allegedly unlicensed—charge excessive fees.
* Judges behave with broad, unchecked authority, enabling abuses of power.
* Instead of resolving family disputes efficiently, the system financially benefits from prolonging conflict.
The documentary argues that these practices contribute to serious societal harms, including financial ruin, foreclosure, bankruptcy, suicide, and violence. It also contrasts the U.S. system with other countries that purportedly handle divorce in more holistic, less adversarial ways.
✅ A critical evaluation of *Divorce Corp.*’s claims
✅ A comparison with empirical research on family-court practices
✅ A connection between this documentary and the earlier text on custody interference
✅ A rewrite in academic, legal, or persuasive style
✅ Talking points, an opinion piece, or a rebuttal









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