From Football Jokes to Family Court Realities: The Marriage Problem America Won’t Talk About

At a Cabinet meeting, Secretary of State Marco Rubio jokingly suggested prohibiting Saturday weddings during college football season, reflecting cultural priorities. However, this humor masks the more serious issues in America’s family courts, where biased decisions and financial motives drastically affect families, highlighting the need for reform rather than frivolous distractions.

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Justice in Name Only: Veterans Expose Abuse in Summerville and Dorchester Family Courts

Two South Carolina veterans say they faced not justice, but systematic torture in Summerville and Dorchester family courts. William Sewell and Lee describe the same pattern: crushing fees, intimidation, and jail threats under Judge Mandy Kimmons and attorney Jason Wheeler. What should have been custody hearings became, in their words, an assembly line of punishment and profit. Their stories raise a chilling question: if men who once defended American freedom are now stripped of their own rights in family court, what does that say about the state of justice in South Carolina?

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A Generation Raised in the Shadow of Violence: Guns or Family Breakdown?

Another school shooting. This time, two children dead and seventeen others injured in Minneapolis. Politicians are already tweeting the same slogans about “stopping gun violence,” but for over two decades those words have meant nothing. The deeper truth is harder to face: America’s epidemic of mass shootings isn’t just about guns—it’s about the collapse of family, the destruction caused by corrupt family courts, and a political class too invested in power and profit to fix the systems tearing children apart.

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Why Are Judges So Protected From Public Accountability?

Judicial misconduct remains obscured by a veil of secrecy, allowing judges to evade accountability unlike police or teachers. This lack of transparency undermines public trust in the justice system. To restore integrity, reforms are needed, including public records of misconduct, independent oversight, and real consequences for violations, ensuring judges are held accountable.

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Passport to Nowhere: How Child Support Enforcement Blocks Parents from Working

A Virginia parent faced barriers to employment due to bureaucratic hurdles related to child support enforcement. Despite a job offer contingent on obtaining a passport, an unexpected demand for a $5,000 payment plan arose. This illustrates systemic issues in child support agencies that perpetuate poverty through inflated arrears and lack of due process.

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Punishing Poverty: Georgia’s Foster Care System Is Sending Parents the Bill for Losing Their Kids

Georgia’s DFCS has forcibly removed children from low-income parents for inadequate housing, charging them for foster care costs, effectively punishing poverty. Annalinda Martinez’s lawsuit highlights the harmful financial burden on destitute families, arguing for systemic reforms. The case challenges policies that criminalize poverty rather than support family reunification and stability.

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Shadows on the Bench: Maryland’s Judicial Campaign Finance Transparency Problem

Judicial integrity in Maryland is compromised by lack of transparency in campaign financing, especially from lawyers and dark money groups. Current laws allow special interests to unduly influence judges, diminishing public trust. Proposed reforms aim to enhance transparency, limit donor contributions, and ensure a fair judicial election system, restoring confidence in the judiciary.

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Two Years Without My Son: How Montgomery County Circuit Court Refuses to Enforce Custody Orders

The author laments nearly two years of estrangement from his son due to the Montgomery County Circuit Court’s failure to enforce custody orders. Despite providing evidence of parental interference, judges dismissed his pleas, resulting in instability for the child and alienation for the father. The author calls for systemic reform to ensure accountability.

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Seven Ways Montgomery County Circuit Court Enables Custodial Interference

The author describes their experience with Montgomery County Circuit Court, highlighting systemic failures in enforcing custody orders. Key issues include treating violations as disputes, failing to enforce contempt, prioritizing mediation, and ignoring parental alienation. These practices harm both children and parents, necessitating accountability and transparency in family courts to protect children’s rights.

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Why Family Court Judges Can Break the Law and Get Away With It

Family courts, intended to serve justice, often operate beyond the law, relying on a vague standard of “best interests of the child.” Judges wield unchecked power, enjoying immunity from accountability. Parents face significant disadvantages, lacking essential rights during proceedings. Urgent reforms are needed to ensure fairness and transparency in family law.

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