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Fathers Rights Means Demanding Constitutional Rights Currently Denied to Fathers

Many of you may think fathers groups are asking for new rights when ‘fathers rights’ are mentioned. They’re not! They’re just demanding the constitutional rights guaranteed to all, but denied to them under present divorce or paternity actions. This article explains what’s denied to them and why it’s unconstitutional.

Under divorce and paternity suits where custody of the child is at issue, family court judges assign custody of the children. This assignment is supposedly based on ‘the best interests of the child’. There are two types of custody – legal and physical. Both can be assigned jointly to both parents or only to one.

Having legal custody means you can determine your child’s religion, educational choices, and medical decisions. Physical custody allows you to determine the day-to-day ordinary living situations and, most importantly, the child lives with you. You share the constant companionship of your child and are perceive by him or her as the parent in control of them.

Not having physical custody means the child lives with you – typically for 2 days over every two week period. Your child ‘visits’ you. You have very little – or no control – over your child’s daily decisions. Children realize that quickly.

If you don’t have physical custody of your child, the court orders you to pay ‘child support’ to the physical custodian (i.e. the mother) of your child. This can be from 25 to 33% of your gross income – and more if the judge chooses to attribute more income to you than you actually earn. If you don’t pay it all, the judge will send you to jail.

What’s unconstitutional about these court orders is that the judge directly denies your constitutional rights without the necessary ‘constitutional due process’ required. He simply pronounces that for the best interest of your child, he’s denying you custody of your child and ordering you to pay the mother specific (and usually high) child support payments or go to jail. And the child support payments don’t have to be used for the child at all – by law!

Yes, you do have a constitutional right to parent your own child – and that includes the direct care of him under both legal and physical custody. Additionally, you have the right to determine your own working income and can’t be punished for not earning enough – as happens if you can’t pay all assigned child support. And, lastly, you have the right to enjoy all other fundamental rights as anyone else in society.

Constitutional rights are inalienable rights that government was formed (in the U.S.) to secure – if you remember the Declaration of Independence. The constitution made it difficult to take away constitutional rights from a person. The courts must use ‘constitutional due process’ when constitutional rights are at stake – unlike what family courts do. This means you can’t be denied your constitutional right to parent unless you are found unfit as a parent by clear and convincing evidence – generally by a jury – in a civil court. And to be unfit, you must present a serious danger – i.e. life threatening – to your child. The ‘best interest of the child’ is not an adequate reason for denying a fit parent his parental rights. In fact In Parham v. J.R. et al 442 U.S. 584 (1979), the Supreme Court declared the ‘best interest of the child’ resides in the fit parent – not in the state. The ‘best interest of the child’ excuse can only be used when there’s no fit parent.

Recognizing equal rights between fathers and mothers should mean that both parents would share both custodies or alternate between them at 50% time. Of course, parents can agree on any other arrangement if they – and only they – agree.

Fathers Rights Denied So today, fit fathers – never having done anything wrong – are routinely denied their constitutional rights in family court – their right to directly care for their children and are subjected to extort by the courts to pay the mother money for whatever purpose she wants to use it for.

And beyond the scenario of 2 day visit per two week period and high extortion payments under the threat of jail, many mothers alienate the children from the father – or just move away with the kids. Family courts do little or nothing to assuage this ‘motherly’ behavior.

The court doesn’t secure – as it should – the fathers rights. In fact he’s enslaved for money – a lot of money. All is controlled by these family courts judges and mothers. They have all the power. And, as always, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. I’ve written elsewhere on how the money and power is an enormous influence on keeping this unconstitutional family court system in operation against fathers.

To deny fathers rights is to deny constitutional rights to someone who’s done nothing wrong – not to mention denying children their real father.

Shane Flait gives you the capability you need to fight for your rights.
Get his FREE Downloads at http://www.FathersRightsLegalAid.com
Take his ecourse: How to Handle Your Family Court Case at http://www.FathersRightsLegalAid.com

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Find More The Constitution Articles

Would Ron Paul Be Endorsed by the Founding Fathers? Lawyer Says Yes

Would Ron Paul Be Endorsed by the Founding Fathers? Lawyer Says Yes










Washington D.C. (PRWEB) December 16, 2007

LawyerUCLA.com currently serves as a directory for over 6,000 lawyers across the United States. And when it comes to the 2008 presidential election, the website has decided not to keep quiet — making a firm case for Ron Paul.

Ron Paul, self proclaimed champion of the Constitution, is a 10-term congressman from Texas.

According to the statistics provided on their website, 61 percent of the mentions of the Constitution at the 2008 presidential debates were made by Ron Paul himself, despite being a candidate that has not been given a fair amount of time to speak.

Assuming 10 total candidates, 39 percent of the references to the Constitution would be divided among the nine other candidates. If the total number of references were to be split evenly across the rest of the candidates, each candidate would roughly only contribute to 4.3 percent of the Constitutional mentions. So this means that Ron Paul is 14 times more likely to utter the words of the Constitution than the average candidate.

Excluded from the statistics provided on LawyerUCLA.com were references to desired constitutional amendments such as those proposed to ban abortion and gay marriage. Also excluded were references made to state constitutions that have frequently been uttered by the two former governors running for president: Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney.

A list of quotes by Ron Paul at these debates were also provided in their article entitled “Empirical Proof That The Founding Fathers Would Endorse Ron Paul”.

The most highly publicized quote by Ron Paul occurred when Ron Paul challenged Mitt Romney’s statement regarding needing to consult lawyers. “This idea of going and talking to attorneys totally baffles me. Why don’t we just open up the Constitution and read it? You’re not allowed to go to war without a declaration of war,” said Ron Paul in a debate October 9 in Michigan.

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Related The Constitution Press Releases

A Father’s Right to Parent His Child and Constitutional Law That Says So

The Constitution
by wallyg

Fathers walk into family courts – generally hauled in under a wife’s complaint for divorce – and can’t believe the injustice they face. These courts deny them their children and other rights at the whim of the judge.

The fathers’ reaction is justified because we all have an innate understanding of what’s right and what’s wrong. And we all understand that we have fundamental rights that governments should uphold. This article gives proof of their parental rights and evidence of family court corruption.

The rights we expect are ‘unalienable rights’. It was these rights that the U.S. was formed to secure according to America’s Declaration of Independence: “the unalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”.

Included in such rights are your property and your parental rights as explained in the U.S. Constitution’s Bill of Rights and further amendments and U.S Supreme Court case law. Most important among those rights is the protection of those rights against unjust denials of them by government or anyone else.

To protect those rights, our judicial system is supposed to require a fair process before any fundamental right is denied or even limited. The Supreme Court long ago settled the detailed and fair legal process required – or ‘due’ – when fundamental right of a litigant is at stake. It’s the ‘due process clause’ and maps out the substantive due process necessary. But never is a right to be denied or limited unless a substantial wrong has been proven with clear and convincing evidence against the person to be denied.

It’s in court where the rubber meets the road; i.e. it’s through the legal process that you find out what rights you really have as opposed to what you think you have – or should have. Fathers are finding out that they’re being denied constitutional protection of their fundamental rights.

1. Your parental rights and other rights a father has:

Your right to life, liberty and happiness may seem somewhat vague, but the founding fathers and later Supreme Court case law has tried to enumerate what fundamental (i.e. unalienable) rights it implies. The right to property and your possessions was one and the right to a trial by jury was considered an essential right to help protect you from unjust laws, judicial processes, and judicial corruption.

Beyond those, you have the right to parent your children. That means you have the right to the care, custody, maintenance, and companionship of your child(ren) since this is recognized as one of the most fulfilling aspects to a purposeful and satisfying life. Since your children are your most precious possession, the state can only alter a parental right of he’s ‘unfit’ – and proven so by clear and convincing evidence.

In the 1978 case of Quillon v Walcott, the Supreme Court ruled: “If a state were to attempt to force the breakup of a natural family, over the objection of the parents and their children, without some showing of unfitness and for the sole reason that to do so was thought to be in the children’s best interest,” the Due Process Clause would clearly be violated.

Further, in Parham v. J.R. et al 442 U.S. 584 (1979), the Supreme Court declared the ‘best interest of the child’ resides in the fit parent – not in the state: “Our constitutional system long ago rejected any notion that a child is a “the mere creature of the State”.

In 2000, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Troxel v. Granville 530 U.S. 2000: “{S}o long as a parent adequately cares for his or her children (i.e. is fit), there will normally be no reason for the State to inject itself into the private realm of the family to further question the ability of that parent to make the best decisions concerning the rearing of that parent’s children.”

So, according to this Supreme Court case law, if you’re not proven unfit, then the state cannot interfere with your right to parent your child. The best interest of the child resides in you – as fit parent. In fact the ‘best interest of the child’ can only be used where there is not fit parent present.

The ‘equal protection clause’ of the 14th Amendment, requires that one fit parent must necessarily retain all of his fundamental rights to the extent that the other does. The minimum limitation of these rights must be 50% of time with each child. Doing otherwise would not only deny the fundamental right of parenting but abridging the equal protection clause too.

2. Other fundamental rights you have include:

* the right to follow any choice of lawful occupation without the state’s interference.

* the right to not have your private lives invaded by the state if you have not committed a crime.

* Not being jailed for not paying a debt incurred by you through your agreement, nor imposed on you by a state – if you can’t pay it.

* Not being jailed or restricted in where you can go without justifiable cause. 3. Injustice in the courts today

The founding fathers recognized that the weakest link in the preservation our unalienable rights was the judiciary. Its corruptibility would easily undermine the rights of persons or groups of persons while hiding behind its singular authority and only option for a person seeking justice under unjust accusations and claims.

‘Fathers rights groups’ recognize that our courts are now corrupted. No longer are their rights protected. Now is the time to join the revolution to bring back liberty and justice for all.

Shane Flait gives you the capability you need to fight for your rights. Get his FREE Downloads at http://www.FathersRightsLegalAid.com Take his ecourse: How to Handle Your Family Court Case at http://www.FathersRightsLegalAid.com

Article from articlesbase.com

The Tea Party loves to wrap themselves in the Constitution of the United States, but if you look beyond their displays of phony patriotism, you’ll see that most Tea Partiers actually want to rip the Constitution to shreds. They despise the fact that the Constitution grants citizenship status to the children of illegal immigrants, and they’ve even suggested that we limit the right to vote to only people who own property. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. talks with Michael Waldman, the executive director of the Brennan Center for Justice, who says that the Tea Party’s love for the Constitution could be the thing that finally tears them apart.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Family Courts Tyrannically Deny Fit Fathers Their Constitutional Right to Parent Their Children

Family courts routinely deny one fit parent – overwhelming the father- his parental right to raise his child. They tyrannically allege a right to deny father’s fundamental rights since they do so for ‘the best interest of the child’.

Such family court claims are tyrannical and directly conflict with constitutional rights and protections – as this article shows.

Fundamental or ‘Constitutional’ rights are enumerated in the Bill of Rights, the further Amendments, and rights raised to that level by Supreme Court Case law. Supreme Court case law overrides all lower jurisdictional laws including family courts procedures.

The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the state from depriving any person of “life, liberty, or property (i.e. any fundamental right), without due process of law.” Due Process Clause “guarantees more than [a] fair process.”Washington v.Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 719 (1997). It includes a substantive component to the process that “provides heightened protection against government interference with certain fundamental rights and liberty interests.” Id., at 720; see also Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 301302 (1993).

The Supreme Court consistently upholds parental right as a fundamental constitutional right. And that’s the right to determine what the best interest of the child shall be.

The Supreme Court asserted that the ‘liberty’ protected by the Due Process Clause includes the right of parents to “establish a home and bring up children” and “to control the education of their own.” Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399, 401 (1923). So parenting includes both legal and physical custody of your children.

To deny a parental right requires constitutional due process that proves he’s either unfit or a clear danger to his children – proven with ‘clear and convincing’ evidence. As such, Santosky v. Kramer 455 U.S. 745 (1982) emphasized to restrict a fundamental right of a parent to any extent, requires a showing of clear and convincing evidence that serious harm will come to the child.

Family courts ignore all constitutional due process when they daily deny a fit father his right to physical and legal custody of his child – a right that every other fit parent has.

Family Court claims to determining ‘best interests of children’ over fit fathers’ rights are illegal in a presumably free republic. Only if there are no fit parents can the court invoke the ‘best interest of the child’ doctrine to assign custody.

In Parham v. J.R. et al 442 U.S. 584 (1979), the Supreme Court declared the ‘best interest of the child’ resides in the fit parent – not in the state: “Our constitutional system long ago rejected any notion that a child is a “the mere creature of the State” and, on the contrary, asserted that parents generally “have the right, coupled with the high duty, to recognize and prepare [their children] for additional obligations.”

In the 1978 case of Quillon v Walcott, the Supreme Court ruled: “If a state were to attempt to force the breakup of a natural family, over the objection of the parents and their children, without some showing of unfitness and for the sole reason that to do so was thought to be in the children’s best interest,” the Due Process Clause would clearly be violated.

In 2000, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Troxel v. Granville 530 U.S. 2000: “[S]o long as a parent adequately cares for his or her children (i.e. is fit), there will normally be no reason for the State to inject itself into the private realm of the family to further question the ability of that parent to make the best decisions concerning the rearing of that parent’s children.”

Under divorce and paternity actions, the ‘equal protection clause’ of the 14th Amendment, requires that one fit parent must necessarily retain all of his fundamental rights to the extent that the other does. But two disputing parents can’t both exercise a few decisions – such as where a child goes to school simultaneously – but these are few.

Now the level of scrutiny required for a family court to infringe upon fundamental rights of either parent is “strict scrutiny”, which requires the court to show that the infringement serves a “compelling state interest” and that there is no constitutionally less offensive way for the state to satisfy this compelling interest.

The constitutionally least offensive way – by far – is an equal partition of time parenting their child. So, during one’s parenting time, that parent can control all decisions about the child which parenting implies, i.e. education, religion, medical, etc, as well as the typical day to day decisions.

The family courts deny a father’s fundamental rights in order to extort money from him and support a billion dollar industry based on such denials. They provably work to the ‘worst interests of the children’

Shane Flait gives you workable strategies to accomplish your goals in financial, legal, tax, retirement and protection issues. .
Read his ebook: ‘Wise Way to Financial Independence’ =>
http://www.SovereignU.com
Get his FREE report on Managing Your Retirement =>
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Is it absurd to literally apply the Constitution to situations the founding fathers could not have envisioned?

The Constitution
by Ewan-M

Question by Big Beautiful Man: Is it absurd to literally apply the Constitution to situations the founding fathers could not have envisioned?
Many people like to say they are for strict interpretation of the Constitution. Fine. However, there are many problems, issues, and situations that aren’t directly dealt with by the Constitution and/or were in fact totally inconceivable to the founding fathers.

For example, the internet. While it certainly affects interstate commerce and thus the Constitution would say that Congress has the power to regulate it, is that really what the founding fathers intended? How could we possibly know what they would have wanted or if they would have written the Constitution the same way if they had taken that into account?

Why should we assume the wisdom of a document at face value in any situation when the realities it is applied to could not have been predicted by its makers?

Best answer:

Answer by Liberal AssKicker
Is it that easy for liberals to cast aside the constitution?

What the hell kind of stupid excuse is that? Modernization = no more law?

What do you think? Answer below!