How the Failures of Welfare Reform Created Our Lawless Courts
(Part Three)
By Terri Lynn Tersak, Teri Stoddard and Dave Heleniak
When the United States
Congress wants to let us know what they really think about the state of an
issue (or what they want us to believe they think), what should be done about
it, and what legislation should be promulgated to effect the needed changes,
they do so through “sense
of” resolutions. We can also learn
by their actions what their sense of an issue really is.
Throughout this series we have been
revealing how the programs developed within our "welfare reform" of
the 1990's served as the major funding sources used by the states to promote
single-parent families. Clearly, the subsidizing of single parent
households through private child support systems has had an even greater
negative impact on marriage and children as our former publicly funded assistance
programs had.
Through various frauds,
abuses of funding systems, and blatant violations of the very federal laws that
funded promises of marriage protection and incentives, responsible fatherhood,
and safe families, our states unleashed a reign of terror on marriage and
against parents in general. In “Part One” of this series we outlined how
although the big money comes from the
programs under welfare reform, abuses of our domestic violence laws allow for
maximum returns on the states’ efforts, all done under the guise of protecting
women from abuse and the “best interest of the child.” The revelation “Part Two”
of the series brought us is that our state governments don’t care who pays
child support as long as someone does, even if the responsibility was
erroneously assigned to them.
This has now gone on
unchecked for over a decade, and the states are not the only guilty parties.
Given the state of family law today, maybe it is time to ask Congress what
their “sense of” the results welfare reform has had on protecting marriage, the
family and specifically fatherhood and what do they plan to do next?
We know the members of
Congress are very busy people and most likely don’t have the time or the desire
to answer this for us. So we will look at what they have been doing, and see by
their actions what the sense of Congress has been about the state of the
American family, marriage and fatherhood – they are just great buzz-words to
use at election time.

Joan Arehart-Treichel's
reports in, "Men Shouldn't
Be Overlooked as Victims of Partner Violence," findings from the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) regarding perpetration of partner violence.
The 2001 study shows that half of partner violence is reciprocally violent and
that more women than men were responsible for instigating nonreciprocal partner
violence, 71 percent to 29 percent respectively.
The CDC study's lead
investigator, Daniel Whitaker, Ph.D., states, "I think the most important is that a great deal of interpersonal
violence is reciprocally perpetrated and that when it is reciprocally
perpetrated, it is much more likely to result in injury than when perpetrated
by only one partner."
The study’s conclusion is: “The context of the violence (reciprocal vs
nonreciprocal) is a strong predictor of reported injury. Prevention approaches
that address the escalation of partner violence may be needed to address
reciprocal violence.”
The 2001 CDC study concurs
with other CDC
studies on partner violence and three decades of scholarly
studies. Despite overwhelming evidence that the majority of domestic
violence is reciprocal (mutual in nature, meaning neither party is acting in
self-defense) and that men comprise the larger victim group, there is not so
much as one cent allocated for service and support for male victims of partner
violence. Congress appears to have a sense that men are not entitled to equal
protection under the laws they promulgate and further, deserve to be abused, or
worse.
Among enforcement actions
reported to members of Congress, the use of physical torture to coerce
acquiescence to false claims of domestic violence is the most egregious. The
term “torture” has sadly become all but a catch phrase in our culture. Because
of this, we are required to be brutally specific in describing what we are calling
torture today: genital electrocution and hypothermic shock.
Torture victims have
described events during their imprisonment where they were stripped naked and
doused with cold water, and then "stun-gun/tasers" were applied to
their testicles by law enforcement agents. This was repeated until they
confessed/agreed to the fraudulent complaint filed against them. The cold water
is used to keep them awake during the process. This practice leaves permanent
scaring with distinctive patterns that can be forensically verified. Indeed,
the type of stun-gun/taser used in the assault can be identified. The residual
scaring is the result of the testicular tissue in the current path between
stun-gun’s prongs being completely cooked.
Other victims report being
exposed to cold so extreme it caused them to experience hypothermic shock
lasting as long as two days. For some individuals, this has resulted in
permanent paralysis and mental deterioration. Once fit, healthy citizens are
now disabled Americans solely because they refused to agree to a lie.
In a number of cases, the
hypothermic shock resulted in the destruction of the muscles in their pelvic
floor. These are the muscles that control your ability to evacuate your bowel
(those we “push” with during a bowel movement). These victims must use
mechanical means to remove the fecal material from their bowel for the
remainder of their lives, or they will die a slow, excruciating death.
Some victims with this type
of disability were provided with a medical device which resembles a parfait
spoon to dig the material out of their bowel manually. Others are able to use
high does of fiber and laxatives and then bounce on the toilet seat, causing
the fecal material to be ejected. This process is similar shaking thick ketchup
out of a bottle.
Over 800 cases of the prior
listed types of torture have been reported to the victim’s representatives in
the United States Congress. To date, only two members of Congress have made
contact to inquire about these heinous acts against US citizens. One Senator and one Congressman stand alone among the entire
US Congress.
Despite these atrocities,
members of Congress are preparing to present the “International Violence
Against Women” (I-VAWA),
which will fund the international deployment of this disastrous system through
programs such as the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW).
There must be
serious concerns with a program when the sitting judges in these cases state
that the filing of false claims of domestic violence in family court is
pervasive. That’s without even mentioning the commentary from judges abroad,
such as that of the Dean of Barcelona's judges, Maria
Sanahuja, who says the current domestic violence laws, "… has provoked a sort of madness in the law that generates abuse,
the elimination of the requirement of proof during the legal process, and the
absence of the presumption of innocence." She further condemns the
domestic violence laws as “characteristic
of totalitarian countries” and “a
repugnant violation of fundamental rights.”
Given the above
and the fact that there is not one cent in federal funding to aid male victims
of abuse, there are numerous federal offices dealing with the health issues of
women and not one for men, and in both of the prior matters men comprise the
larger numbers of, we may want to forget about asking Congress for their “sense
of” these issues and question whether there is any sense to the construct of
the relevant laws.
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Terri Lynn Tersak is the
President and CEO of True Equality
Network.
Teri Stoddard writes on issues
affecting today’s families and serves as True Equality Network’s Senior Equal
Parenting Analyst.
David
Heleniak is a civil litigation attorney in New Jersey and Senior Legal Analyst
for the True Equality Network.
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