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‘If I do really well in school, maybe my daddy will come back’

A reader recently reminded me of a story I told on His Side with Glenn Sacks a couple years ago, one of the saddest I’ve ever heard: “The secretary at another radio station where I used to do the show told me a story about her son. The father and the mother broke up when the boy was about four or five, and the father soon disappeared from the boy’s life. “When the boy started school, he always worked very hard and did all his homework and got good grades, even though his mother never pushed him to do well in school or to do his homework.
She didn’t have to push him–he always did it on his own. “One day when the boy was about nine the mother got curious about this. After all, most boys don’t take to school so well, and aren’t as conscientious about their studies. I know–I’ve lived it with my son for many, many years. “So at one point the mom asked the boy, ‘Why do you work so hard at school and do so well?’ “The boy looked at her and replied, ‘Well, I think if I do really well in school, maybe my daddy will come back.'”

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‘Send more money right away / is pretty much all she has to say’-Trace Adkins’ ‘I’m Tryin’ (Music Video)

This gettin’ up early, pulling double shifts / Gonna make an old man of me long before I ever get rich / But I’m tryin’ / It’s been two years since we’ve finalized / I still ain’t used to puttin’ ex in front of wife / But I’m tryin’ / Send more money right away / is pretty much all she has to say when she calls these days / and don’t you be late Another good divorced dad song is Trace Adkins’ I’m Tryin’–to watch the music video, click here. The lyrics are below. In the picture, the father has just spent some nice time with his son, the ex-wife is coming to pick the son up, and she’s ripping him away from his father and angrily criticizing her ex. We’ll put it in our divorced dad song collection,
along with Toby Keith’s Who’s That Man?, Tim McGraw’s Do You Want Fries With That?, and Sting’s I’m So Happy I Can’t Stop Crying, which was also later recorded by Toby Keith. I’m Tryin’ Written by Chris Wallin, Jeffrey Steele and Anthony Smith Sung by Trace Adkins This gettin up early, pulling double shifts, Gonna make an old man of me long before I ever get rich. But I’m tryin It’s been two years since we’ve finalized, I still ain’t used to puttin ex in front of wife. But I’m tryin. Send more money right away, is pretty much all she has to say when she Calls these days and don’t you be late But all I can do, is all I can do and I keep on tryin And all I can be is all I can be and I keep on tryin There’s always a mountain in front of me, Seems I’m always climbin and fallin and climbin But I keep on tryin I remember daddy sayin keep your eye on the ball, run like hell, play to win, Get up when you fall I’m tryin Don’t say nothin that you can’t take back Never do anything you might regret No don’t do that Daddy I’m tryin Know the difference between heaven and hell Go easy on the bottle be hard on yourself And I know he meant well But all I can do, is all I can do and I keep on tryin And all I can be is all I can be and I keep on tryin There’s always a mountain in front of me, Seems I’m always climbin and fallin and climbin But I keep on tryin There’s always a mountain in front of me Seems I’m always climbin and stumblin And then fallin’ And then climbin’ But I keep on tryin’ This gettin up early pullin double shifts Gonna make an old man of me Long before I ever get rich But I’m tryin’ [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNS8Svz8gTY]

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How can we best live our lives when we and our children have suffered injustice?

Dr. Ned Holstein addressed the ancient question of how best to live one’s life after suffering serious injustice. Ned’s remarks were offered at the September 24 meeting of Fathers & Families near Boston. Over 80 people attended to hear Dr. Amy Baker on the subject of parental alienation, to honor Dan Hogan for his service to the fathers’ and children’s movement, and to hear Ned. His attempt to answer the question of injustice in human affairs follows. The meeting was lively, with good energy and high resolve to end injustice to our children.

The Answer to an Ancient Question

September 24, 2007

About five years ago, the Boston Globe ran a headline story claiming that the leading cause of death of pregnant women was murder at the hands of their male partners. The story was occasioned by a Massachusetts Department of Public Health special report, accompanied by a press release. As a doctor, I was dubious about this claim, so I looked up the DPH report. It did not surprise me to find that medical causes of death far outnumbered any other cause, and that motor vehicles and drugs came next, with domestic violence making a modest contribution. The Massachusetts DPH never distanced itself from the Globe story, despite its own research report that contradicted the Globe.

Two years ago, PBS ran a so-called documentary called “Breaking the Silence.’  Its central claim was that two-thirds of fathers who seek the custody of their children, even shared custody, are secret batterers. There is no research basis for this claim whatsoever. I know, because I asked the authors of this travesty for their sources, and then I studied the papers they cited, and I found that this slander was a complete fabrication.

About the same time, I learned that Australia Airlines and New Zealand Airlines will not seat unaccompanied children next to men. Instead, they will ask the men to switch seats. This is profiling, and it occurs in the absence of any data whatsoever showing that men have ever molested children on an airplane.

Recently, the state of Virginia erected billboards showing a picture of a grown man holding the hand of a child. It instructed citizens to report men holding the hands of children to the child abuse agency, since, apparently, if you hold hands with a child, you are likely to be a sexual pervert.

And, about a month ago, Steve Patterson of Fathers & Family alerted me to the fact that an esteemed organization, the Massachusetts Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children  —  or MSPCC – was running an ad on television intended to inspire the public to support the fight against child abuse. Its style was that of a trailer for a horror movie. Filmed in creepy black and white, the camera angle was that of a child hiding under her bed, and then in a spooky garage, and then in a frightening basement. Every ten seconds or so, the screen dissolved to black, and titles appeared in stark white:  “Where would you hide . . . . if you were ten years old . . . . and your father was coming home  . . . . and he was angry. . . . . very angry . . . and he was looking for you . . . . like he did last night . . . .  and the night before. . . and the night before that…’  I”m sure the average viewer now mistakenly believes that fathers commit most child abuse, whereas the opposite is true.

The fathers” movement targeted three of these outrages and got them taken down.

But we cannot escape the larger point:  We live in a society in which respected institutions such as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Globe, the State of Virginia, two international airlines, the MSPCC and PBS are content to stereotype fathers as vicious villains, stereotypes that are unfounded lies.

And when we are not vicious, we are foolish, egotistical, narcissistic idiots. Just watch prime time television, and you will see a parade of male buffoons far more offensive than the ditzy females served up in the fifties. At least Lucy was a lovable ditz, not a repugnant narcissist. This is well documented on Fathersandhusbands.org and by a study several years ago by the National Fatherhood Initiative.

Does this slander matter, or is it harmless fun? Yes, it matters. We need to remember that family court judges are ordinary human beings. They watch the same shows and read the same newspapers that everyone else does. Few of them are intellectuals, and they were never trained in child development, or how to understand research data, or how to identify a good study vs a bad one. That doesn”t seem to stop them from considering themselves experts on these topics, taking their “wisdom’ from the corrupted images of men perpetrated in the media.

So it should not surprise us that the treatment we receive in family court as fathers and men reflects the ugly stereotypes we are seeing from respected authorities such as PBS or the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. It is little wonder that we are treated as selfish, dangerous, indifferent to our children, cheaters, workaholics, or philanderers, since that is how we are widely portrayed. Most crucially, we are treated as a stereotyped class of underlings, not as individual human beings to be judged on our merits. Why is it surprising, then, that so many loving, caring and wise parents, especially fathers, are deprived of their children?

At this time of year, we always read of those parents who take their first child to college. They carefully put the sheets on their kids” dormitory beds and neatly arrange their clothes  — a momentary nostalgic return to the childhood years that have fled. The new collegians are desperate for them to leave. They depart. They look over their shoulders at their beloved child, overflowing with emotion.  They arrive home, open the door  — and the house is silent. The doors do not slam. The phone does not ring. No backpacks are plopped down on the floor. The cereal has not been devoured. And they feel empty. They gaze at the photographs of their boy when he was three.

And they know that what was, is no more, and can never be.

How much worse when this happens before its proper time, when the children are young, when it happens to a loving parent who has done no wrong, when it happens simply by order of an ignorant judge, influenced by degrading media portrayals of men, and empowered by blind laws. This we never read about.

And here is the ultimate wound: it is done, they say, because it is in your child”s best interest– to be torn away from you! These amateur psychologists have concluded that your child is harmed by your loving care.

Many of those who do this to us are haughty and arrogant. The haughty are worse than those who sin, because the haughty believe they are free of sin. And they are ignorant. They do not see that they are injuring children. They do not see that they are ruining lives. They do not see because they do not wish to see.

And I must tell you that these same people are feted —  they are celebrated. Dinners are held to honor them. They receive awards. They sit on distinguished panels, and respectful drivers are sent to pick them up. Their opinions are sought. They are full of honors.

And so this brings us to an ancient question:  Psalm 94 asks, “Lord, how long shall the wicked, how long shall the wicked triumph?’ And Job asks: “Why do the just suffer and the wicked flourish?

So there is nothing new about our dilemma. Show me one time in all of history when the wicked did not flourish!

Wise philosophers have struggled to answer this question for thousands of years. We tonight will not solve the question of why the wicked flourish.

Instead, we must struggle to repair our lives, to fill the gaping hole, just as millions of victims of injustice over the millennia have had to do. We are one with people of all ages who have suffered.

How do we do this? How can this be possible? The sorrow is too great. The anger intrudes into our thoughts every day.

It helps to remember that the past is gone  — for all of us, for every human being. No one can live in the past. It simply does not exist  — for anyone. It slides out of our grasp. We must stop trying to recover what once was.

And the future is equally elusive. We cannot grasp the future even though so many of us frantically pursue it.  If only we can get the next promotion, or work hard enough to get the next raise, or be elected to office, or buy just the right car, or make the furnishings perfect  —  or win the next court battle  —  then we will be happy.

But when the future comes, it is no longer the future  — it is the present. And it is still we who inhabit it. We have brought ourselves along, bearing all our inner conflicts.  And we are still pursuing the future, or trying to grasp the past.

The only place we can live is the present. Right here. Right now. No other time or place. What was, is no more, and can never be again. For any mortal human. We must be here now.

There is a story about the famous violinist Yitzhak Pearlman. He was the featured soloist at a very big, very important concert, attended by a huge crowd of those who glitter. He lurched out on the stage on his crutches  — he had suffered polio as a child  — made his way to his chair in the front, sat, picked up his violin, and nodded to the conductor that he was ready. The orchestra began to play, and after a few bars, Pearlman”s violin joined, soaring over the orchestra like a heavenly angel, the sound unbelievably sweet.

Suddenly, there was an unmistakable “ping’ as one of his strings broke. The audience expected the orchestra to stop, for everyone to wait while he re-strung his violin.  Instead, Pearlman nodded to the conductor to continue, and he played through the entire sonata with only three strings. Where he needed his fourth string, he improvised brilliantly, sometimes moving far up the third string, sometimes going down an octave, sometimes inventing an entirely new line as he went. It was as beautiful as anything the audience had ever heard.

Afterwards he was asked, “Why didn”t you replace your fourth string?’ He answered, “My heart demands to make beautiful music with however many strings I may have.’

And that is what we must do. We cannot try forever to recapture a past that is gone. We cannot be the captive of an imagined future when we will have four strings. We must play our lives with what we have. We must make music with however many strings we have, we must sound the trumpet we have, and we must ring whatever bells remain in the tower.

And there is something else that we must do. We must help others. There is no more certain way to heal ourselves than to devote ourselves to helping others. A woman of 96 years had lost her parents, her husband, all her brothers and sisters, three of her four children and even two of her grandchildren. She had outlived her money, and she had lost most of her hearing. Her friends were amazed that every morning she arose promptly, dressed and went out in good humor.

They asked her where she went. She answered, “To the soup kitchen to serve soup to the homeless. I have many friends there, and my life is rich.’

That is why we must unite together to help others. The greatest beneficiary will be you. You can help those who will go down the same road as you unless we do something about it. To be perfectly honest, I do not know for sure how long it will take to revive the angel of justice. Perhaps it will be in time to help you, and perhaps it will not.

But I do know that you can help those innocents who do not yet know what will befall them if we do not help. I do know that we will right the scales of justice. I do know that the little children will not forever have their hearts broken by a judge ordering that they need not see one of their parents; that the one they love will be there to protect them from the neighborhood bully; that he will wrestle with him, letting him win, and then tuck him into bed; and that he will secretly let him steer the snowmobile like a big boy.

You can help these victims of the future, prevent them from re-living what you and your child have lived in the past. Let us live together today, in the present. Let us be here now. Together we will clear a path, make the rough way straight, and remove all obstacles. Together we will sweep away injustice. We can do this. We will do this. We will win. Help others today and tomorrow, and God bless you.

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Havana’s View of the ‘Elian Gonzalez II’ Custody Case

Background: The “Elian Gonzalez II” case in Miami is a battle over a 4-year-old Cuban immigrant girl which pits her Cuban father, Rafael Izquierdo, against wealthy Cuban-American foster parents Joe Cubas, a well-known sports agent, and his wife Maria. Just as Elian’s father Juan Gonzalez faced numerous unfair hurdles to get his son back, Izquierdo has been manhandled by the child welfare system, in part because of the system’s anti-father bias.

In 2005, the girl’s mother brought the girl to Miami from Cuba. The Florida Department of Children & Families removed the girl from her mother’s custody in 2006, after an investigation found that the woman’s mental illness rendered her an unfit parent. She was placed with a foster family, and Izquierdo came to the US to bring his daughter home.

Izquierdo has spent months in the US and has been denied custody of his daughter–an outrageous violation of fathers” rights. Izquierdo should not have to fight to raise his own child. He is a fit father–how and where to raise his daughter is his decision.

Last week, Judge Jeri B. Cohen faced down the angry Cuban-American community and did the right thing, ruling that Rafael Izquierdo is a fit parent who did not abandon his daughter, and should be permitted to take the girl back home to Cuba. Outrageously, the Florida Department of Children & Families has done everything it could do to malign Izquierdo and wrest custody away from him, spending over a quarter million dollars to do so. To learn more, click here.

Havana journalist/professor Manuel E. Yepe Menendez’s article Twisted Justice in Miami (The Cuban Nation, 9/27/07) gives the Cuban government’s view of the “Elian Gonzalez II.” I’m not familiar with the Atlanta case Menendez discusses near the end of the article, but I believe his view of the Elian II is more or less accurate, though somewhat exaggerated.

Twisted Justice in Miami
The Cuban Nation, 9/27/07
By Manuel E. Yepe Menendez
Havana’s Higher Institute of International Relations.

Similar to the kidnapping of the Cuban boy, Elian Gonzalez, seven years ago, a five year-old Cuban girl is today the center of an international dispute over her custody in the only place in the world where something like this could happen: the U.S. city of Miami, in south Florida.

Like the Elian case that won world notoriety, the plaintiff is the father of the child and the arguments of the kidnappers are mostly based on the irrational policy of the United States against Cuba.

In this case, the alleged kidnapper is a wealthy entrepreneur involved in human trafficking called Joe Cubas who, under the façade of a sports agent, has made a fortune in the illegal dealing of Cuban athletes using intelligence logistics and US subversion against the island and the support of Cuban-American extremist groups which have transmuted hatred of the Cuban socialist project into a money-making business which includes political wheeling and dealing directly involving top-ranking government officials of the state of Florida in the United States.

Bob Butterworth, secretary of the Department of Children and Families in the State of Florida (DCF in its English acronym) whose lawyers are battling to prevent the Cuban father from obtaining custody of his daughter, told the Miami press that this “unusual” case is the costliest he has ever seen.

The little girl is daughter of the Cuban campesino from Cabaiguan in the central region of the island and Elena Perez a 35-year-old woman who left Cuba legally and arrived in the United States in December 2005 with the daughter in question and her son. Shortly after her arrival in the Miami, her new husband, Jesus Melendres, abandoned them.

According to reports in the Miami press, Elena, evidently disturbed because of the economic situation she faced for several months, tried to commit suicide. This was the reason her children were taken from her. The DCF took her children from her in March of 2006 and placed them in the care of Joe Cubas.

When Rafael Izquierdo found out, he decided to assume his duty and his right as a father, and was able to travel to the United States to bring his daughter back.

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Appeals Court Blocks Visit Between Husband-Killer Mary Winkler and Her Children

Background: Mary Winkler–who shot her husband in the back and then refused to aid him or call 911 as he slowly bled to death for 20 minutes–walked away a free woman last month after serving a farcically brief “sentence” for her crimes. She is currently in a custody battle with Matthew Winkler’s parents, who have been raising their three daughters for the last 18 months. The Winklers seek to terminate Mary Winkler’s parental rights and adopt the girls. I support their position. Last week, Mary Winkler was granted supervised visits with her daughters–an important step towards getting custody of them. To learn more about this horrendous injustice, see my co-authored column No child custody for husband-killer Mary Winkler (World Net Daily, 9/14/07), or click here. A Tennessee appeals court yesterday blocked a supervised visit between Mary Winkler and her children, in response to an appeals by Dan and Diane Winkler, the children’s grandparents.
The Associated Press story is below. Mary Winkler Visit With Children Blocked Associated Press, 9/30/07 JACKSON, Tenn. (AP) — An appeals court Friday blocked a supervised visit between a woman convicted of killing her minister-husband and their children. The court issued a stay against the Saturday visit after a last-minute application from the children’s paternal grandparents, who have had temporary custody of the three young girls since Mary Winkler went to jail after the March 2006 shotgun shooting. Winkler, 33, was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in April for shooting Church of Christ minister Matthew Winkler at their residence in Selmer. “It’s very devastating to Mary and I’m sure to the children,” said Winkler’s attorney, Kay Farese Turner. The stay is only temporary pending an investigation of Dan and Diane Winkler’s accusations that the judge who originally granted the visit ruled erroneously, Turner said. A call to the office of William R. Neese, Dan and Diane Winkler’s custody attorney, late Friday was not immediately returned. Winkler has said the grandparents will not let her see or talk to her children, who are now 10, 8 and 2 years old. They are seeking to terminate her parental rights and adopt the children while Winkler is attempting to regain custody. Her former parents-in-law also have filed a $2 million wrongful death lawsuit against her.

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Woman Hits Husband with Car, Drives 1/2 Mile with Him Clinging to Roof, Injures Him-but Don’t Call It ‘Domestic Violence’

When there’s domestic violence and it’s committed by a woman, it’s not domestic violence. Here a woman allegedly hit her husband with her car, drove a 1/2 mile with him on the roof, fractured his leg, and drove off–and she says she’s the victim. She is being charged with some appropriate crimes–at least until her “I was afraid” shtick gets some traction and the prosecutors cave–but there’s no mention of “domestic violence.”

Woman Allegedly Drives With Hubby on Car
Associated Press, September 27, 2007

HASTINGS, Minn. – A Farmington woman accused of driving for half a mile with her husband on the hood of her car and her 9-year-old child in the front passenger seat now faces criminal charges.

The Dakota County Attorney’s office filed a felony criminal complaint this week charging Jill Ann Miller-Cooper, 34, with two counts of criminal vehicular operation resulting in substantial bodily harm and one count of child endangerment.

Miller-Cooper is accused of hitting her husband on Aug. 15 in the parking lot of the restaurant he owns. The complaint said the impact tossed Randall Cooper onto the car’s hood and Miller-Cooper drove off. The complaint said she eventually stopped and her husband fell off the car, then she drove away.

However, Miller-Cooper told the St. Paul Pioneer Press that her husband climbed on the car while it was parked.

“He was very threatening, and I wanted to leave,” she said. “I stopped two times. He put his leg down, and I slammed on the brakes. … It’s been an ugly situation.”

Cooper suffered a fractured knee.

Thanks to Mike Saucedo, a reader, for the story.

[Note: If you or someone you love is being abused, the Domestic Abuse Helpline for Men and Women provides crisis intervention and support services to victims of domestic violence and their families.]

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Fathers & Families News Digest, 10/1/07

Below are some recent articles and items of interest from Fathers & Families’ latest News Digest.

Ex-tended clans: Divorce often leaves some family ties intact (USA Today, 10/1/07)

DHS program helps noncustodial parents (Tulsa World, 10/1/07)

Helping hand for single dads (Rocky Mountain News, 10/1/07)

Child Support Payments More Accessible (North County Gazette, 10/1/07)

Divorced from Reality (New York Times, 9/29/07)

Duke Apologizes to Lacrosse Players (Associated Press, 9/29/07)

Proposal on domestic violence policy angers FOP (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 9/26/07)

San Mateo Co.: Governor Signs Child Support Bill into Law (CBS5.com, 9/26/07)

Judge grants father custody in state’s longest divorce case (Boston Globe, 9/25/07)

Centers For Disease Control Finds Women Commit Half Of Domestic Violence, Reports National Coalition of Free Men (EWorldWire, 9/24/07)

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‘Even in divorces where a mother has been the family breadwinner and the father has stayed home, a lot of women insist on fighting for sole custody’

I first noticed the article The Daddy Track (Boston Globe, 7/8/07) because there’s a nice quote in it from Dan Hogan of Fathers & Families about the anti-father gender bias of our family courts. However, there are several other items of interest in it: 1) “Donna Booth, a Saugus divorce lawyer, says that…Even in divorces where a mother has been the family breadwinner and the father has stayed home, a lot of women who come into her office, Booth says, insist on fighting for sole custody.”
And most of the time they get it. The feminists have abdicated all responsibility on this issue–for decades they’ve harangued men to put aside their careers so they can spend more time on child care and to support their wives’ careers. Yet when a father who did exactly as the feminists wanted loses custody of his children, you’ll not hear a peep from the National Organization for Women. In fact, they’ll often support the mother. 2) “‘Society is really changing,’ says Rosanna Hertz, a Wellesley College professor of sociology and women”s studies. ‘What we”re seeing is more and more men stepping up to the plate.’ At the same time, those dads are discovering what single mothers have long known: Along with offering rewards, the job requires sacrifices.” I’ve criticized Hertz’s work on numerous occasions–see my co-authored column Are Single Mothers the ‘New American Family?’ (World Net Daily, 9/28/06)–and I won’t repeat the argument here. In the above quote, Hertz is trying to be nice, I suppose, and I guess I should appreciate that. However, I disagree with her premise–common among feminists–that the only parenting that counts is child care. Whatever it is that privileged men go off and do 60 hours a week that seems vaguely connected to the house, cars, necessities and luxuries the wife and children enjoy doesn’t count. For thousands of years, Ms. Hertz, men have “stepped up to the plate” by working hard at dangerous, demanding jobs in order to support their families. (To hear me gripe about this more, see my column Hate My Father? No Ma’am!, World Net Daily, 4/8/02). 3) “When he divorced, [Jay] Portnow enjoyed something of a national reputation for his work in rehabilitative medicine and was routinely invited on the paid lecture circuit. After one son came to live with him full time and he gained half-time custody of the other, he started turning down out-of-town engagements because being home ‘was the more important job to do.’ Portnow says he is obligated to continue child support to his former wife for another four years. In addition, he is paying almost $100,000 a year for his sons to attend New York University and Yeshiva University in Manhattan. “I consider it ransom,” he says. “Twelve years ago, it was much harder for men who wanted to be a part of their children”s lives.” Indeed, Portnow says, to make it happen back then, he bought a house not far from the marital home, where his former wife still lives. His sons see and always have seen their mother. Of his relationship with his ex-spouse, however, he says, “I send the checks, and if I”m late, she calls. That”s it.” This is very common. In my co-authored column Not the Era of the Deadbeat Dad but the Era of the Hero Father (Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, 6/19/05), I wrote: “While divorced dads are unfairly stigmatized as stingy, some noncustodial fathers raise their children in their homes but still pay child support to the children”s mothers. Many others never ask for child support. In the face of a family court system which usually grants mothers a monopoly of power over children, these fathers must buy or rent their children back. When mothers allow their children to live with their fathers–or send them there because they”ve become unruly or inconvenient–fathers often won”t challenge custodial and financial arrangements because they fear doing so will mean they”ll be pushed out of their children”s lives.” 4) I’ve often pointed out that while fathers are often slammed as “deadbeat dads,” men actually have a far better record of paying child support than women do. When women do pay it, it’s usually minimal. According to the article: “With his children”s mother living in Canada, [Keith] Mochida, too, is left mostly to do everything – shopping, cooking, cleaning, chauffeuring, chaperoning – ‘and that doesn”t include the surprises.’ His former wife, who has remarried and has a new son, pays him $300 a month in child support. She comes down every three months or so and takes their son and daughter to a hotel for a few days to visit, and the children go to Canada for a good part of the summer.” And I bet she complains about her bum ex-husband sucking $300 a month out of her…

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Miami Judge Gets It Right, Rules for Embattled Cuban Father in ‘Elian Gonzalez II’ Case

Background: I’ve previously covered the “Elian Gonzalez II” case in Miami–a battle over a 4-year-old Cuban immigrant girl which pits her Cuban father, Rafael Izquierdo (pictured), against wealthy Cuban-American foster parents Joe Cubas, a well-known sports agent, and his wife, Maria. Just as Elian’s father Juan Gonzalez faced numerous unfair hurdles to get his son back, Izquierdo has been manhandled by the child welfare system, in part because of the system’s anti-father bias.

In 2005, the girl’s mother brought the girl to Miami from Cuba. The Florida Department of Children & Families removed the girl from her mother’s custody in 2006, after an investigation found that the woman’s mental illness rendered her an unfit parent. She was placed with a foster family, and Izquierdo came to the US to bring his daughter home.

Izquierdo has spent months in the US and has been denied custody of his daughter–an outrageous violation of fathers” rights. Izquierdo should not have to fight to raise his own child. He is a fit father–how and where to raise his daughter is his decision.

Judge Jeri B. Cohen faced down the angry Cuban-American community and did the right thing today in the Elian Gonzalez II case, ruling that Rafael Izquierdo is a fit parent who did not abandon his daughter, and should be permitted to take the girl back home to Cuba. Outrageously, the Florida Department of Children & Families has done everything it could do to malign Izquierdo and wrest custody away from him, spending over a quarter million dollars to do so. The Associated Press story is below.

Judge Rules for Cuban Father
By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ
Associated Press, 9/27/07

MIAMI — The father of a 5-year-old Cuban girl at the center of an international custody battle did not abandon or neglect her, so he should get her back, a judge ruled Thursday.

Circuit Judge Jeri B. Cohen said she would not immediately return the girl to her father, Cuban farmer Rafael Izquierdo, who wants to take her back to Cuba.

The girl went into foster care after her mother brought her to the U.S. in 2005 and then attempted suicide days before Christmas. She has been living with foster parents in Miami for the past 18 months and they want to keep the girl here.

The Florida Department of Children & Families said Izquierdo abandoned the girl and officials want the girl to stay with her foster parents, Joe and Maria Cubas, a wealthy Cuban-American couple. The state’s attorneys said removing the girl after such a long time would cause her serious emotional trauma.

Cohen said she would hold a follow-up hearing to listen to the state’s arguments, but urged the department to “take the blindfold off and see the forest for the trees.”

Izquierdo has denied that he abandoned his daughter and has professed his desire to return with her to Cuba.

“The court cannot deny Izquierdo custody of his child,” Cohen said.

The father, foster parents and mother were all in court as the judge read her 47-page ruling over several hours. The judge said Izquierdo’s efforts to regain his daughter once she was put in foster care “were not marginal for a man of his circumstances.”

“He has diligently participated in what must seem to him a mysterious and daunting legal process. While geographically, Cuba is only 90 miles from the United States shores, the two countries are philosophically and politically worlds apart,” Cohen said.

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From ‘Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome’: ‘The primary alienation strategy was over-reacting to minor incidents that occurred at dad’s house’

Amy J.L. Baker’s book Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome: Breaking the Ties that Bind details the stories of adult children of divorce–voices we need to hear much more often. One of the cases she details is that of David, whose parents divorced when he was six.

David’s father worked long hours but he had positive, loving feelings towards him. He and his two siblings visited their father regularly and enjoyed and valued the experience.

However, as so often happens, after David’s father remarried, his mother’s attitude changed, and she began interfering with the visits. According to Baker, “The primary alienation strategy used by his mother was over-reacting to minor incidents that occurred at David”s father”s house, building a case for the fact that his father was careless and/or dangerous.”

David explains:

“Something would happen at Dad”s house like even the littlest thing like I remember one time we were at Grandma”s house and my sister had some jacks and we were playing jacks and we went off to do something else and we came back into the room and we were kind of running around and she fell on one of the jacks and one of them kind of hit her thigh and went in a little bit. I remember it wasn”t that big a deal but when we got home you would have thought someone had beat her. I was seven or eight at the time and my sister was five. I remember thinking at some point after this happened several times that…on my way home and it was about a 30-40 minute drive I remember just dreading it and thinking what will it be…what is going to be the thing that upsets her this time.’

Baker says:

“David”s mother had a way of finding out about what happened during visitation and then zeroing in on the most negative aspect of the visit to the exclusion of everything else. She would inquire about the visit until she heard something negative.”

Another of the mother’s alienation tactics was to invoke a rule that if any of the three children did not want to visit, then none could. When David”s younger sister “decided” that she didn’t want to visit her dad’s house, this gave mom the pretext she needed to cut off all visitation.

A third tactic was to try to paint the father as stingy or financially selfish. According to David, the mother would use a meaningless one day delay in the child support check coming as an excuse to malign the dad. David explains:

“There were things with the support checks. The checks came once every two weeks through the court. It was always a big deal when the check arrived. We had to check the mailbox and call Mom as soon as we got home from school and let her know that the check was there and if it wasn”t there it was a big deal. I remember it always showed up the next day if it was late so it was not like it was late.

“There was one incident…one year we went to camp…I can”t remember if it was next summer or two summers after that and we called Dad up and asked him to pay for camp and I remember I got on the phone and my brother got on the phone and my mom got on the other phone and it was real quick and dirty ‘Dad can you pay for camp?’ and either he said no or I”ll think about it or something and then Mom blurted in…there was no negotiation at all. ‘If you can”t pay for camp then forget it.” and we hung up and it was like wow that was fast and it was a big deal, one of those things where there was zero negotiation and no details. I was even crying after the conversation was over and my brother and sister were just balling.’

Eventually the mother moved away with the three children, and tried to prevent the father from finding where they had moved, and the children were denied any access to their father. David turned against his father, and did not realize the way he had been misled until many years later.