Vox

Musings, rants, rambling, general nonsense

The Incentive

Posted on | October 17, 2005 | 1 Comment

Found more proof that the state is intentionally supporting paternity fraud in order to line their pockets.

Paternity fraud can no longer be tolerated or funded with federal taxpayer money. When considering the technicalities of paternity fraud, it is a form of repackaged prostitution supported and enforced with the police power of the state. Suggesting that there are “common law traditions” for this, as some courts have, is a fallacy. It is little more than an ignorant, or worse yet, intentional misconstruing of maxims of law to promote the fraudulent and immoral collection of taxpayer money at the expense of families and especially children.

Retaliation against those lawyers who would dare challenge the corrupt system has become routine practice by the Court run bar systems all across the country. For example, Barbara Johnson of Massachusetts is in the midst of disbarment proceedings for daring to publicize the corruption of the Massachusetts courts, …[snip] …Bob Hirschfeld of Arizona was disbarred many years ago for daring to challenge the legal establishment and aggressively represent fathers in custody actions…

UPDATE: There’s more

The problem here is a very fundamental question of fairness. No matter what happens, someone is going to lose. On the one hand, it certainly isn’t fair for a man to be forced to pay child support for a child who isn’t his. If a DNA test can be used to establish paternity and force a man to make such payments, why can’t it be used in the reverse?
On the other hand, it would certainly be a serious loss for the child if such payments are allowed to stop. Child support payments can be crucial when it comes to the health, education, and welfare of a child. That, however, is a poor argument – yes, the child may need financial help, but that doesn’t mean that the help must come from a man who isn’t the child’s father. If the aid is so important, why not track down the actual father and make him pay? We don’t grab random men off the street and force them to make child support payments for kids that aren’t theirs merely because the aid is important.



Comments

One Response to “The Incentive”

  1. Anonymous
    October 18th, 2005 @ 7:48 am

    Good job, and thank you!!