Life Changing Injury

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Parental Alienation Syndrome

(as per a request from Jason Thompson on the fathers4equality list)
Paul... make sure you put this post of your on your blog. It reads
eloquently, and stright to the point.

Thanks,

Jason


Parental Alienation has been defined for a decade or more. The story is well documented.
What this woman is doing is just illegal. It's not really Parental Alienation Syndrome. (Although it may be part of the end game for it.)
She is just doing something illegal because she knows she won't be punished for it.
That's not PAS, necessarily, it's just opportunism.

Women have been identified in the law and the popular mystique as an underprivileged social and ethnic class. That's the problem. How can a whole sex be an ethnic class in a society? It's irrational, but it then so is all that has followed.

For some reason, people tend to think it is the word of the law that is the problem. It isn't. It is the propoganda that has redefined ethnicity in terms of sex. That madness has turned morality and ethics on its head.
It has produced a guilt complex amongst men for being male. -- And that is the reason PAS has evolved from what was once called the "Battle of the Sexes" to a legal structure.
This stuff should have been kept over the dinner tables and in private. Nearly everything that is not becoming the domain of the courts and police, -- The reality of these things anyway. -- was once considered normal human family conflicts.
I'm not talking about violence here.

The law has forgotten a basic principle: You cannot legislate morality.
You can legislate against actions -- murder, theft, assault, even abuse -- but if you try to legislate the morality of the person performing the actions, the law will fail.

PAS is a moral issue. It is when one parent attempts to destroy the relationship between the children (or other family members) and the other parent. It cannot be defined accurately within the law to legislate against it.
The same is true for family responsibility and love, love for children or spouses.
The more the law attempts to define these things in order to legislate them, the more foolish and unfair the law becomes.

--Paul

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