Submitted by anthony on Sat, 2008-08-02 19:56
Story here. Excerpt:
'FOX13 has learned that Mary Winkler has gotten her three daughters back. Winkler picked up her children Friday afternoon. The girls had been living with their paternal grandparents since Winkler killed her husband Matthew in 2006. Now it appears the bitter custody battle is coming to a close.
...
Winkler was convicted of manslaughter in 2007 and has been fighting for custody of her children since her release from a mental facility.
Matthew's parents, Dan and Diane Winkler, have had custody of the girls since 2006 and have been trying to adopt them.
"These young ladies have not expressed any desire to be with their mother or her family," said Dan Winkler in 2007.'
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Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2008-08-01 21:43
Story here. Excerpt:
'House Democrats pushed through legislation Thursday that would give women new tools to combat pay discrimination.
The pay equity measure, which passed by a 247-178 vote, would treat gender discrimination involving pay in the same as race, disability and age discrimination. The bill would allow for compensatory and punitive damages, ban employers from retaliating against workers who share their salary with colleagues, and force employers to prove that paying a women less than a man is job-related and necessary.'
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Submitted by Matt on Fri, 2008-08-01 15:17
Article here. Excerpt:
'With the advent of no-fault divorce (before which divorces required cause, and fault could be assigned proportionately), "the fault that was ostensibly thrown out the front door of divorce proceedings re-entered through the back." Working from the "therapeutic" (read: morally relativistic) premise that both parties must be equally to blame -- which is to say, not at all to blame -- for a marriage's failure, divorce courts begin with an "automatic outcome" and then set out to find or manufacture evidence to support it.
How is that evidence obtained? Via "extensive and intrusive governmental instruments whose sole purpose is intervention in families." Having quit the marriage-enforcement business, government has turned the full weight of its resources and coercive powers to the divorce-enforcement business.
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Submitted by Matt on Fri, 2008-08-01 15:12
Article here. Excerpt:
'Two out of five male South African students say they have been raped, according to a study published yesterday suggesting sexual abuse of boys is endemic in the country's schools.
The survey published in BioMed Central's International Journal for Equity in Health showed that boys were most often assaulted by adult women, followed closely by other schoolchildren.
"This study uncovers endemic sexual abuse of male children that was suspected but hitherto only poorly documented," Neil Andersson and Ari Ho-Foster of the Centre for Tropical Disease Research in Johannesburg wrote.'
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Submitted by AngryMan on Fri, 2008-08-01 10:37
Story here. Excerpt:
'The farmers and miners who joined the Rural Network dating agency got a lot less than they wished for. Some fell in love with women who did not exist. Others lost up to A$20,000 (£9,500) as the agency tempted them into parting with more and more cash with the lure of love.
...
The dating site, whose director Leanne McDonald was also known as Leanne Viney, Lana Viney and Lana McDonald, had various ploys to cajole men into paying ever higher membership fees.
...
Justice Jeffrey Spender said at the time that the agency's conduct was “not only serious but calculated and quite callous” — although he stopped short of closing it.
...
Yesterday the agency was back in court, with the commission accusing it of failing to honour any of the undertakings.'
Note: This is in the Women's section of the newspaper.
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Submitted by Matt on Thu, 2008-07-31 21:26
Story here. Excerpt:
'SANTA FE—A court battle over whether a sperm donor should pay a higher rate of child support has ended with a ruling that the man is liable because he has taken an active role in raising the children.
Kevin Zoernig had argued he was not required to pay child support because he is a sperm donor and is protected under the state's Uniform Parentage Act.
But the state Court of Appeals noted in its July 25 opinion that this was not a case involving an anonymous donor or a known donor who provided sperm to a licensed physician under an agreement in which he agreed to have no parental rights.'
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Submitted by AngryMan on Thu, 2008-07-31 16:25
Story here. Excerpt:
"A hateful mother killed her five year old son to spite his father before taking her own life, an inquest has heard.
Emma Hart, 27, force-fed Lewis Dangerfield a lethal cocktail of pain killers and antidepressants at their home then fled to her mother's flat nearby and slashed her wrists.
In a note to the little boy's father, Shaun Dangerfield, which she left by his body, she wrote: 'I told you I would make you pay, enjoy your life now, nothing is stopping you, ha ha ha. Just remember it's your fault.
...
Her mother told the inquest: 'She is not a horrible person, she was a loving mum.'"
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Submitted by AngryMan on Thu, 2008-07-31 11:14
Story here. Excerpt:
'Last year 87,200 women and girls were arrested for attacks – the equivalent of 240 every day. It is the first time in history that violence has been the most common crime among women and girls, taking over from theft.
The category includes every violent offence from street brawls and assault to grievous bodily harm and murder.
...
The Ministry of Justice report, released quietly on to the internet yesterday after MPs had left for the summer recess, also includes alarming figures on the scale of violence by children.
...
Robert Whelan of the Civitas think-tank blamed a breakdown in society's values.
He said: 'There are now so many children growing up in broken homes or with disruptive backgrounds that the self restraint taught to previous generations is no longer there. They think when they are angry they can just lash out.'
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2008-07-31 02:26
Story here. Excerpt:
'Barack Obama met privately Tuesday with a group of women leaders, seeking their endorsement and also raising a sore point -- the issue of gender bias in his Democratic primary fight with Hillary Rodham Clinton.
...
"He talked about his concerns about some of the sexism in the course of the campaign," said Ellen Malcolm, president of the political group EMILY's List and a key Clinton supporter. "But essentially the meeting was forward-looking."
...
Obama mentioned that "he knew there had been frustration with stuff directed at Sen. Clinton by the media," said Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women.'
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2008-07-31 00:47
Story here. Excerpt:
'A 28-year-old Philadelphia [woman] has admitted repeatedly burning two young boys she was babysitting — with a lit cigarette, a lighter and in one case, an iron.
...
Johnson pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and possession of an instrument of crime.'
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Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 2008-07-30 23:21
This growing international coalition of local groups in less than 3 days of existence will soon be listed on Meetup Alliance's Top 10 Largest Alliances List.
Please place your group into the Parental and Civil Rights Alliance. It is a great way for new people in your area to find you.
32 Local groups/organizations and growing! By tomorrow night the Parental and Civil Rights Alliance will most likely be listed in the Top 10 Meetup Alliance Listing!
If you run a local group you can join.
Only those who want to start a group or already have one (via Meetup, Facebook, Google, Yahoo, active website, etc.) can join the Parental and Civil Rights Alliance right now. If you don't want to be a group organizer, you can find an existing group on the internet, Meetup, Facebook, MySpace, etc and ask them to join the alliance. Or start your own group right here in the Parental and Civil Rights Alliance.
If you have a leadership role in a local group or organization you should join the Parental and Civil Rights Alliance for the following benefits:
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2008-07-30 22:26
Seems like Larry Summers and the recent math-and-girls dust-up just go together far too well to be ignored. So some mainstream and not-so-mainstream news sources have run with the ball. This from the National Post editors, with this from the City Journal. Excerpt from the Nat:
'Unfortunately, journalists of both sexes tend to not be math geniuses. Few of them anywhere on the continent noticed that Ms. Hyde’s data actually come a lot closer to supporting Mr. Summers’ hypothesis than they do to refuting it.
The study certainly does confirm that there is probably no difference between males and females in math ability, on average. This means that, if one were to plot out the observed mathematical proficiency of a large number of male and female individuals, the resulting graphical pattern would produce two sex-segregated bell curves centred on roughly the same average point.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2008-07-30 22:21
Story here. To think, one can embezzle millions from an employer and walk with a slap on the wrist. Corporations can fail to pay billions in taxes without so much as a fine. But a man behind on "child support" payments either willfully or by force of circumstance moves to a different country and it's a no-holds-barred effort to track the rat-fink down! I mean, he had the temerity to do what women with custody of their kids do all the time-- move to a new country-- and that's all that needs saying for yet another search-and-destroy law. Excerpt:
'THOUSANDS of deadbeat dads are fleeing to New Zealand to escape paying child maintenance.
More than 20,000 Australian parents have escaped overseas to avoid paying child support, with figures revealing NZ is a favourite haven, the Herald Sun reports.
These parents owe around $90 million in unpaid child support, but the Australian Government is about to crack down on them.
...
Human Services Minister Senator Joe Ludwig said parents who avoided financial obligations to their children would be tracked down.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2008-07-30 22:15
Story here. Excerpt:
'WASHINGTON - July 24 - The American Civil Liberties Union today urged the House Education and Labor Committee to pass H.R. 1338, the Paycheck Fairness Act, with no weakening amendments. This important legislation would update the Equal Pay Act, one of the primary laws addressing pay discrimination.
Court decisions and loopholes have chipped away at the Equal Pay Act over the years, making it less effective in combating pay discrimination. The Paycheck Fairness Act, with 228 cosponsors to date, would strengthen and improve protections against workplace discrimination.'
If you want to read it, track it, learn about committee membership (including contact info), etc., go here.
Some commentary by Carrie Lukas challenging the underlying assumptions is here. Excerpt:
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2008-07-30 22:08
Article here. Excerpt:
'Judges in Michigan now can order domestic violence suspects - even before they go to trial - to wear global positioning system (GPS) devices, which monitor their whereabouts to ensure that they stay away from their alleged victims. If a suspect comes near a victim, the system sends out an alert. Not only are authorities notified, but the victim gets a cell-phone call letting them know that the suspect is nearby.'
Wonder if female suspects will get the same treatment as male ones?
A mere three days before that article went to print, this one was published. Excerpt:
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