The ACLU may get involved. They had a representative at the court hearings.
The age of puberty now is often girls at the age of 10 or younger as you have noted. Girls at the age of 10 years old are not ready to be mothers, to care for a child and be responsible for them. So how/where do you set the age of consent, knowing that a girl who engages in sex runs a risk of becoming pregnant. Age 16? How much different is that from age 15? Age 14-13? Not that far from age 10.
They made the choice to break the law. And if the state proves that children under the age of 16 were married in or living in the State of Texas and engaging in sex with an adult person, they will be prosecuted- whether the child consented or not. Because in the state of Texas, a child under the age of 16 cannot consent. [/COLOR]
So that begs the question of HOW would YOU do it differently, and still get the desired result?My only concern in all of this is HOW it is being handled. Not that it IS being handled.
I think that your first comment above is very interesting indeed. If we go back in history the age at which children reached puberty was fairly consistent. Now, due to hormones in food, pollution, or whatever, it seems as though SOMETHING in the environment is causing precipitous puberty. Like you mentioned, girls as young as ten! That is why it is good that laws are in place. In my personal opinion I think 30 is an ideal age to have a baby, but that is my personal opinion! My societal opinion is that it is good that we have laws to guide people since the biological lines as to when a person enters puberty seem to be blurring. Along with that, peoples moral compass seems to not be working very well either based on the number of crimes against women and children that we hear about each day. I also agree with you that people need to obey the law of the land they live in and the state has the right to prosecute them if they do not.
My only concern in all of this is HOW it is being handled. Not that it IS being handled.
Seemingly so.I may be incorrect but to be honest, the impression I am receiving is that you have a strong personal grievance with children's service's and that you might object to what happens no matter what they do.
So that begs the question of HOW would YOU do it differently, and still get the desired result?
I may be incorrect but to be honest, the impression I am receiving is that you have a strong personal grievance with children's service's and that you might object to what happens no matter what they do.
As controversial as they may be, the ACLU is involved to assuage the very objections that Glow keeps bringing up. So that the Govt/Courts et al cannot deny the CIVIL RIGHTS of the FLDS members. That is why I find it so amusing to see an argument that the "Govt" is perverting justice and acting on opinion or public pressure. In this country we have organizations like the ACLU - who are not controlled by religion, opinion, money or media...they act to even the playing field against judgments (and punishments) that rise not from the LAW or the constitution, but from opinion, prejudice, and personal feelings. It is the beauty of OUR COUNTRY that the ACLU and other organizations exist as public watchdogs on the courts and govt.
The ACLU may make ALL of us angry at times, but they do us all a service, they uncover and demystify the process of law and shine a spotlight on personal opinions and feelings that have NO PLACE in the system. Justice should be BLIND and it should be applied equally to FLDS members and Baptists and Athiests and Wiccans and Christians. Religion is merely the wrapping on the teachings - while it is the ACTING on the TEACHINGS that is criminal. The teachings have NOTHING to do with all of this - they are just words - it is the ACTIONS that are criminal, not the religion OR the Church. The ACLU will merely insure that the legal proceedings continue to be based on prosecuting ACTIONS - or removing children from an environment of abuse - not a "religion".
If the civil rights of the FLDS members are trampled under jack-booted feet carrying the banner of religion or even morality it will NOT help us free other victims from similarly abusive and dangerous situations. This situation has the eyes of the world, and we owe it to future victims to ensure we do NOT forget that GOD or the sex lives of ADULTS is not a part of this....and shouldn't be. ALL CITIZENS should be treated the same and have the laws applied the same, no matter WHAT faith they may or may not have or WHO (above 18 and with free-will and consent) they sleep with. We have LAWS, and if they have been violated, the perpetrators must be exposed, sanctioned or punished appropriately - we must MUST keep THAT goal - THAT outcome, held HIGH . That we may not like, understand or agree with ANYTHING ELSE the FLDS church stands for is irrelevant here. This is about the ABUSE and the PERJURY and the CRIMES that may have been committed under the banner of the church -not the church itself.
Our justice system isn't perfect - but it is still one of the BEST and FAIREST in the WORLD. Humans make mistakes - on BOTH SIDES of any issue but here in the USA, we TRY to mete out justice fairly. That innocent people have been imprisoned and even executed unjustly here is a FACT - but at least we know and acknowledge our flaws and continue to attempt to render "perfect" justice. And in this case, we (collectively) will once again make our best effort to do that again.
My Opinion
I dont have any impression of CPS other than what anyone would have if they took the time to check out their performance level.
quote:
"...the state of Texas has been criticized for not putting enough resources into child protective services. In 2006, following several headline-grabbing stories of deaths of children in abusive environments, the legislature approved additional funds for investigative caseworkers, but critics say it has not been enough. Additional conservatorship caseworkers are needed, according to Rebecca Lightsey, director of Texas Appleseed, a nonprofit social justice organization. The nationwide average is 25 children per caseworker, the Texas ratio is 43 to every one caseworker"
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1730471,00.html
The state of Texas creates it's own lost boys:
Foster children who “age out” of the system often lack a formal support system.
Statistically, they are at extreme risk of poverty and homelessness, victimization and criminal
involvement, illness, early childbearing, and low educational attainment. In addition, many have
emotional problems, fractured emotional and social attachments, and dysfunctional relationships
as a result of past experiences
http://www.texasappleseed.net/1HZ601!.pdf
"Although many of the problems with the Texas foster care system in 2004 have been improved, serious problems remain. In particular, the problem of increasing conservatorship caseloads and inadequate conservator caseworker staffing, which are closely related to the problem of inadequate funding, are simply getting worse, and the 80th Legislature’s efforts to address the caseworker and caseload issues were inadequate. Without a continued and much more significant effort by the state to address these problems, the children in Texas’ foster care system will suffer."
from the above link.
Before anyone from Texas gets angry/hurt or thinks that I am attacking Texas, please be assured that I am not. I live in Florida and our over burdened system is struggling also. My concerns and sympathies lay with the children. I am not going to defend a system that isnt working well. I am going to speak out accurately about what is really happening. If that makes me appear biased against CPS then what does that make most of the posters here appear as far as what has been posted about the FLDS's? Is there any bias there too perhaps?
I may be incorrect but to be honest, the impression I am receiving is that you have a strong personal grievance with children's service's and that you might object to what happens no matter what they do.
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