A “single `no’ vote” by the Idaho Legislature disrupted “the finely crafted choreography” behind a UN child support treaty, laments the New York Times. Unless this is reversed in a special legislative session, the paper tremulously informed its dwindling band of readers, the legal architecture of international child support enforcement could collapse.
This prospect is treated as an incipient
catastrophe, rather than an outcome greatly to be desired.
Threatened with the punitive withdrawal of federal funding, Idaho Governor
Butch Otter called
for a special legislative session on May 18 to “correct” the previous
action. Ratifying the UN child support treaty, Otter predicts, should take “hours,
not days.” Regrettably, Otter’s prediction will probably be validated.
Shortly before the end of the regular legislative session, a
group of nine Republican legislators voted to table a measure designated SB 1067. That
bill would have reconfigured Idaho’s child support enforcement (CSE) practices
to conform with the dictates of the 2007 UN Convention
on the International Recovery of Child Support and Other Forms of Family
Maintenance (hereafter called the Hague Convention).
Rep. Nate. |
Rep.
Ronald M. Nate, who was among those who voted against
releasing the bill from the House Judiciary Committee, objected that under the
terms of the agreement, “Idaho could be stuck enforcing unfair and ill-gotten
CSE orders made in foreign countries.” That much is incontestable: Article 28
of the Convention does specify that “There shall be no review by any competent
authority … of the merits of a decision” handed down by judicial bodies
overseas. This would be done for the benefit of bureaucracies, not the children
whose interests they supposedly represent.
The Hague Convention identifies parties to child support
disputes as “creditors” – those to whom payments are due – and “debtors” –
those from whom payments are to be extracted. Article 36 (1) of the instrument
expands the term “creditor” to include a government entity “acting in place of
an individual to whom maintenance is owed.” Section (2) of that provision
decrees that “The right of a public body to act in place of an individual to
whom maintenance is owed … shall be governed by the law to which the body is
subject.”
Under those terms, CSE judgments made in foreign
jurisdictions would indeed be enforceable within states that ratify the
compact. This led opponents of the bill
to denounce its impact on “state sovereignty,” reflecting the widely held and
morally unsupportable belief that it is entirely appropriate for government to
intrude in private disputes as long as the entity doing so is geographically
proximate.
Such intrusion is unthinkable when carried out by officious,
unaccountable bureaucrats with unfamiliar names and accents who live overseas –
yet it is somehow appropriate when done by functionaries of that kind who share
the same ZIP code, or at least live within the same national tax jurisdiction.
The Hague Convention is evil not because it would import
foreign law, but rather because it exports and universalizes a hideous and
tyrannical social engineering scheme. America’s
child support enforcement system follows the familiar formula: Find a policy
that doesn’t work, subsidize it lavishly, connect it to a huge and expanding
constellation of constituencies, and enforce it ruthlessly.
Presiding over this Hydra-like
syndicate of extortion and state terror is the federal Office of Child Support
Enforcement (OSCE), with state-level affiliates acting as its tentacles. To
understand the scope of the Regime's war on non-custodial parents, this
comparison is useful: In 2007, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the point
of the spear in the "war on drugs," employed a total of 4,600 armed
field agents; the OSCE at the time boasted more than 60,000 enforcement agents,
all of whom are permitted to carry firearms under the "Deadbeat Parents
Enforcement Act."
In his horrifying study Taken
Into Custody: The War Against Fatherhood, Dr. Stephen
Baskerville examines what he calls the “Divorce Regime.”
"It is no exaggeration to say that the existence of
family courts, and virtually every issue they adjudicate -- divorce, custody,
child abuse, child-support enforcement, even adoption and juvenile crime --
depend on one overriding principle: remove the father,” writes Dr. Baskerville.
When a family is broken up, each child "becomes a walking bundle of
cash" -- not for the custodial parent, but for a huge and expanding
population of tax-devouring officials who "adopt as their mission in life
the practice of interfering with other people's children."
"A parent [usually – but not always -- a
father] whose children are taken away by a family court is only at the
beginning of his troubles,” elaborates Dr. Baskerville. “The next step comes as
he is summoned to court and ordered to pay as much as two-thirds or even more
of his income as `child support' to whomever has been given custody. His wages
will immediately be garnished and his name will be entered on a federal
register of `delinquents.' This is even before he has had a chance to become
one, though it is likely that the order will be backdated, so he will already
be a delinquent as he steps out of the courtroom. If the ordered amount is high
enough, and the backdating is far enough, he will be an instant felon and
subject to immediate arrest."
Dr. Baskerville’s assessment is neither partisan nor
particularly controversial.
“The problem begins with child support orders that, at the
outset, can exceed parents’ ability to pay,” acknowledged
the New York Times shortly before the paper condemned the Idaho
Legislature for impeding efforts to globalize the CSE system. “When parents
fall short, the authorities escalate collection efforts, withholding up to 65
percent of a paycheck, seizing bank deposits and tax refunds, suspending
driver’s licenses and professional licenses, and then imposing jail time.”
Sarah Geraghty, an attorney with the Southern Center for
Human Rights, explained to the Times that parents “who are truly destitute go
to jail over and over again for child support debt simply because they’re
poor…. We see many cases in which the person is released, they’re given three
months to pay a large amount of money, and then if they can’t do that they’re
tossed back in the county jail.”
In many jurisdictions, notes the Times, “support orders are
based not on the parent’s actual income but `imputed income’ – what they would
be expected to earn if they had a full-time, minimum wage or median wage job.”
In one case that is probably not unique, a man spent more than a decade making
court-imposed child support payments for the supposed benefit of someone else’s biological daughter.
For thirteen years, Houston
resident Willie Carson endured wage garnishments despite the fact
that a DNA test proved he wasn’t the father of the child in question.
Notwithstanding
recent judicial recognition of that fact, Carson is still liable under what
Texas calls the “law” for $21,000 in overdue payments and accumulated interest
– not to the teenage girl, whom Carson has never met, but to the state agencies
supposedly representing her interests.
That story presents the reality of the CSE system in microcosm.
It exists to sustain itself; the children are useful as assets – and, where
necessary, as hostages. After Idaho legislators refused to play their scripted
role by ratifying Idaho’s involvement in the UN child support treaty, the
Regime in Washington threatened to withhold $46 million in CSE program subsidies. According
to some calculations, this would deprive “Idaho’s children” – or at least the
bureaucracies who supposedly represent their interests -- of up to $200 million
in child support transfers
Press coverage dutifully recites the claim that 155,000
Idaho families would suffer because of the intransigence of a handful of
“extremists” at the statehouse – without sparing a moment to contemplate the unreasonable
stubbornness of the extremist in the White House. After all, according to the
official narrative, the
Obama administration is willing to inflict suffering on children to punish the
state for its political deviationism. This assumes that the
children in question actually benefit from the system – which, as we’ve seen,
isn’t the case – and that the system is morally supportable – which it
manifestly is not.
The CSE system, as Janelle T. Calhoun documented in the Mercer Law Review, is a
“Juggernaut of Bureaucracy” that grew out of the welfare system. Prior to the
enactment of the Aid for Families with Dependent Children program eighty years
ago, there was little government involvement in child support matters, and no
federal involvement whatsoever.
The AFDC program (now known as Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families, or TANF) enshrined in federal policy the principle of parens patriae – the State as father. Through
AFDC, “the government became a provider for America’s children,” commented
litigator Daniel Robert Zmijewski, casually endorsing the proposition that
children are a collective “asset” of the nation-state.
While this began with children in households receiving
federal transfer payments, that claim was quickly expanded to encompass all
children residing within the United States. As GK Chesterton observed,
describing how this process unfolded in Great Britain a few decades earlier,
the State appointed itself “not the guardian of some abnormal children, but the
guardian of all normal children.”
There’s nothing new in that arrangement, nor is it a recent
discovery that it cannot possibly work. In Book II of his Politics, Aristotle condemned the idea that children are in some
sense “community” property: “Each citizen will have a thousand sons who will
not be his sons individually, but anybody will be equally the son of anybody,
and will therefore be neglected by all alike.”
In keeping with the iron law of social engineering – “Each
intervention will create an indefinitely self-sustaining cycle of failures and
`reforms’” – the welfare system created during the New Deal underwent several
refinements, each of which resulted in more deeply entrenched poverty and a
corresponding expansion of an intractable bureaucracy.
Like Stalin-era agricultural commissars blaming “Kulaks” or perversely
consistent bad weather for their perennial harvest shortfalls, those presiding
over Washington’s welfare bureaucracy indicted “deadbeat Dads” for the
predictable failure of a system that encouraged and subsidized the destruction
of family commitments. This led to creation of the federal CSE apparatus, which
amplifies the misery of single parents and neglected children while acting as a
major tributary feeding the vast river of misery that is the American prison
system.
This brings up a transgressive question at least one
“mainstream” legal commentator was willing to ask: Why do we allow the
government to pretend that being a “deadbeat Dad” is an offense that falls
within its jurisdiction?
Failure to pay child support “is not a crime,” writes
defense attorney and CNN legal analyst Danny Cevallos. Although
some states criminalize delinquency in child support payments, this is “rightly
a civil matter. Skipping child support court should similarly not be a crime
either.” The current approach is “bill collection, only with a collection
agency bristling with lethal and other weapons, and acting under color of law.”
Writing in 1992, prior to the most recent enhancement of the
federal CSE system and the attempt to globalize it via the Hague Convention,
Janelle Calhoun reported that the default rate for child support payments “is
nearly 50%” compared to “a default rate of only 3% for car loans….”
She offered that comparison without fully appreciating its
significance: Lenders who underwrote automobile purchases enjoyed a 97%
compliance rate without threatening
borrowers with imprisonment or death as punishment for default. The penalty
for failure to make car loan payments is repossession of the vehicle, coupled
with a stain in one’s credit history.
For someone who is suited by character and disposition to be
a parent, no conceivable punishment is worse than being deprived of the company
of his or her child.
For those who treat marriage in covenantal terms, preserving
that union – where possible -- for the benefit of the children is a responsibility
dictated by honor and enforced through the intangible but effective pressure of
solemn commitments made in the presence of honorable people. The State – a fictive
entity devised to justify violence and plunder -- cannot compel honorable
behavior.
For most of our nation’s history, marriage was treated as a
commercial contract. In my view, that derogates from the true meaning of the
institution – but even that arrangement was preferable to the one that
currently prevails.
“Thirty years ago, with no public discussion of
consequences, no-fault divorce laws effectively ended marriage as a legal
contract and precluded couples from entering binding agreements to raise
children,” points
out Dr. Baskerville. “Deception was involved from the start. Laws
advertised as allowing divorce by mutual consent actually created unilateral
divorce, permitting one spouse to dissolve a marriage without accepting any
liability for the consequences.”
Rather than recognizing marriage as a private contract, and
removing it entirely from the purview of government, the “no-fault” enactments
“created a public-private complex of judges, lawyers, psychotherapists,
mediators, counselors, social workers, child support agents, and others with a
vested interest in perpetuating divorce,” Dr. Baskerville continues:
“Whatever pieties these practitioners voice about the plight
of fatherless, poor, abused, and violent children, the fact remains that their
livelihood depends on a steady supply of such children. The children of divorce
fill government coffers, fuel political patronage, expand police powers,
justify surveillance of citizens, and create a host of problems for officials
to solve – to which [has been] added the problem of creating more healthy
marriages.”
The “child support enforcement” system helps sustain this
vast and ever-metastasizing population of privileged parasites – which is why
demolition of that system is an urgent necessity.
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If you can, please donate to help keep Pro Libertate online. Thank you, and God bless!
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http://www.suijurisforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=3413
ReplyDeleteAnother most excellent writing Will.
I am surprised that you've included the (in)famous photo of Elián González during the (in)famous raid. That action, however poorly performed, was taken to return Elián to his father, rather than let distant relatives with huge chips on their shoulders permanently hold him captive.
ReplyDeleteWould it have been more just to have flipped off the father? Wouldn't that have been treating him with the same disregard that non-custodial fathers in the U.S. are treated?
This is the single example of the US government employing overwhelming force in defense of father's rights, and I find that fact to be quite telling.
ReplyDeleteThe Elian Gonzalez case was an outlier that revealed a home truth about the Divorce Regime: Elian was returned to Cuba where he would live with his biological father under a regime that claimed all Cuban children as its property.
This was done by the same Janet Reno who did everything she could as a prosecutor in Florida to separate children from their fathers, and who as US AG just a few years earlier authorized the use of tanks and poison gas to assault children at Waco whose parents would not surrender them to the state.
The family dynamics at play in the Elian Gonzalez case were worthy of a Faulkner novel. I believe that he should have been reunited with his father, preferably in a fashion that didn't involve the gratuitous and life-threatening use of an einsatzgruppe.
It doesn't surprise me at all that the same Regime that makes paupers and felons out of non-custodial fathers was willing to carry out a pre-dawn SWAT raid to seize a child and return him to the effective custody of the Cuban government.
No argument from me regarding Janet Reno being an evil murderess and the enemy of fathers. Or that the way the Elián case was handled, with Imperial storm-troopers on steroids, was ridiculous, yet perfectly typical, overkill. Or, certainly, that Cuba is run by a regime even worse than the U.S. is saddled with.
ReplyDeleteNone of these is, of course, a reason to assert a right to kidnap a child. I am troubled that many with whom I otherwise almost universally agree, hold up the Elián story as another example of the government gone wrong. Maybe the father could have asserted his rights without any government force, but in the end, somebody had to physically transport the boy back to his father, against the wishes of the people who held him.
The notion that the government seeks to "build" healthy families, while at the same time doing everything within its power to tear them apart, only goes to show just how demented these institutional parasites truly are. It's sick
ReplyDeleteI always thought it was evil that the powers that be would charge someone with whatever purported "crime" they were supposedly guilty of, toss them in the can, and somehow magically these poor folk are to manifest cash on the spot when everyone knows they can't. Simply evil.
ReplyDeleteWhat about the "recovery act" that the state started unilaterly collecting a few years ago? How does having sex with a women now obligate me to pay $25.00 annualy to the federal debt?
ReplyDeleteThey were pretty slick about it.First,they just started
to add it to your monthly statement, just under what was described as your obligated amount.
So I say to myself "I am not paying this? What is this?
This was not in my divorce decree?"
Now they just take it from your principle amount owed to child support. If you don't make concessions in the planing it makes your in arrears.
Than they have all the provocation to do as they will. Garnishments at work, unemployment ect ect.
But thank god for living in a free country
You know !?Apple pie,mom baseball and bullshit.
Thats why they call it the american dream!!
Because you have to be asleep to believe it!!!
Great story William!!!!!!I think
In the April 30th Nampa Tribune Article:
ReplyDelete"Otter calls lawmakers back to work over child support" the last paragraph states that there is:
"155,000 child support cases, with 97 involving
foreign countries." So is this about the 46 million or the 97 chiiiiildren????? Or is Otter and his boy bitch Brad Little just whores for the fed???
A "Man" would tale
the feds to keep there candy! Start logging on all federal land and hold all federal receipt/taxes.
But.. I guess what can you expect from a boy who has ate a mile of shit just to kiss someones ass?
Do you Think Jack (Simplot) wondered "Where did
my daughter find this opportunist SOB from?"