>>23923808 (pb)
>Most of you lost your motherfucking minds doing this all day.
Maybe we just reached another level, which you can't comprehend, because you love repeating what self-proclaimed authority told you.
>>23923808 (pb)
>Most of you lost your motherfucking minds doing this all day.
Maybe we just reached another level, which you can't comprehend, because you love repeating what self-proclaimed authority told you.
>D5
"He survived the pandemic, he must be a witch!!! burn the witch!!!"
Why not heal instead?
Nazis unironically are the (lying corrupt) deep state.
>Hilter would never do anything like this to any of you
T-4, retard.
We would be dead, by the hand of Nazi doctors.
Nazis literally poisoned children (as they still do), and then killed off the ones that couldn't take it.
Nazis also literally brainwashed children into thinking that CHILDREN could do jack shit in a fucking war. AKA THEY ARE CHILD MURDERERS.
Pure evil.
Weird that almost all of them walked, isn't it.
That would be bad for bible believers.
"If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall be put to death; their blood is upon them."
>kill the ones who just have parasites
>uh yes, I'm actually god, really, trust me
>Actually it meant something completely different
>sodomy also actually means something completely different.
>Phew, I just saved my bible
>my god is a loving god
>that just wants that certain people get killed
>loving
> and stayed together
Last time I checked, almost all divorces are initiated by women (tons even PRE-PLANNED).
Only a fool would play such a rigged game.
No golden parachute == less divorces
very surprising
now end no-fault divorce / make it so the one doing that gets NOTHING, good day sir
Also reminder: the state gets a cut
Also reminder the women gets more when she gets 100% custody, which is the reason LAWYER SCUM tells women to do anything to get 100% custody, including SMEARING the fucking father. And the corrupt family "judges" do not require any evidence. The woman screamed, that means it most be true.
https://www.wsj.com/us-news/law/the-equal-custody-experiment-41e1f7a6
Divorce Plunged in Kentucky. Equal Custody for Fathers Is a Big Reason Why.
A law setting 50-50 shared custody as the state’s standard was hailed as a victory for fathers, but critics say it puts mothers and children at risk
BOWLING GREEN, Ky.—The dads were not all right.
It was 2017, and across Kentucky, divorced fathers were coming together against a common enemy: a custody system they felt favored their ex-wives.
Although custody laws in Kentucky and elsewhere granted judges discretion to decide what split was in a child’s best interest, aggrieved fathers claimed that this typically meant relegating them to the role of every-other-weekend “Disneyland dads,” forced to cram two days of fun into what mothers had two weeks to create.
“You become like ‘Uncle Dad’ instead of a parent,” said Rob Holdsworth, 53. In 2014, he reluctantly uprooted his life and civil-service career in Dayton, Ohio, to relocate to Bowling Green, where his ex-wife had moved with their two sons. He took the only job he could find—working nights in a soap factory—to see the boys just a few times a month.
“It was very depressing to be here, a couple of miles away from my kids, and be told I’m not going to get to see them more than that,” Holdsworth said.
Alone in the house near his sons’ elementary school—wandering in and out of their empty bedrooms, staring at the “Daddy you are our superhero” crayon poster they gave him for Father’s Day—Holdsworth had more time than he knew how to fill. He resolved to spend it lobbying for legislation granting dads like him more rights in a divorce or separation.
Around the country, the fathers’ rights movement was gaining momentum. Dividing time and decision-making equally between parents, advocates argued, reduced children’s feelings of abandonment, promoted gender equality and lowered tensions between feuding couples.
“There is no law that affects more people other than taxes or traffic,” said Matt Hale, vice chair of the National Parents Organization, an advocacy group formerly known as Fathers and Families. “Giving kids equal access to both their parents is just common sense.” Dads like Hale and Holdsworth found a sympathetic ear in lawmakers including Jason Nemes, a Kentucky state representative whose own father was his primary guardian after his parents divorced.
In 2018, Kentucky became the first state to pass a law making equally shared custody the default arrangement in divorces and separations. Four other states—Arkansas, West Virginia, Florida and Missouri—have since passed their own versions of Kentucky’s custody bill. Around 20 more are considering or close to passing similar laws, according to an analysis by the National Parents Organization.
The law has become a model for other states, not least because Kentucky’s divorce rate has plummeted. Between 2016 and 2023 it fell 25%, compared with a nationwide decline of 18%, according to an analysis by the National Center for Family & Marriage Research at Bowling Green State University.
Hale calls the drop in the divorce rate an unintended bonus of the custody law. He suggested that parents are increasingly likely to stay together because they realize they’ll be in regular touch regardless, so “they might as well work it out.” He added that he’s heard stories of couples who decided not to break up because of the presumption of shared custody, and years later are glad they stayed together.
Yet some argue that these impressive numbers hide a far more complicated story.
“People think divorce rates going down is a good thing and that it indicates stability in marriages, when that’s not always the case,” said Bowling Green family and marriage center assistant director Krista Westrick-Payne. She explained that the divorce rate typically goes down when couples believe the costs of leaving outweigh the benefits.
Some people are staying married to abusive partners, critics of the law say, because they are terrified of leaving their children alone with a parent with a history of violence. “They know their kids are safer if they stay,” said Elizabeth Martin, chief executive of the Louisville-based Center for Women and Family, which provides services to victims of domestic violence (most but not all of whom are women). “Even if it means taking some beatings.”
…