Reader comments: FLDS women petition to have kids returned
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Nice attempt at setting up a strawman, but when religious beliefs include raping underage girls, those beliefs are no longer protected beliefs and people practicing those beliefs deserve to have their children taken away.
I've been reading comments on this ever since it happened, the Deseret News and most of the people who comment need to get some morality to them and quit standing behind "religious beliefs" for the purpose of excusing immorality, perversion, physical, mental, spiritual (of the soul of an individual) abuse. You want to stand behind wrong under the guise of right! One day the Lord will explain to you whats right! But then again it may be too late for you to learn that.
God bless Texas and "right"
This is not about religious rights or the infringement thereof; this about the possible human rights abused existing under the guise of religious practice. Religious rights don't include protection again possible abuse.
I do not see where the State had provided any significant evidence of "immorality, perversion, physical, mental, spiritual" abuse. One all those points, the FLDS people would seem to be better than the Texas and US population as a whole.
Texas could have learned something from them.
*sigh* I don't know how many times the same debate has to be re-hashed and re-fought on these comment boards.
There is a DIFFERENCE between teenagers who CHOOSE to be sexually active, and those who are forced into 'spiritual' marriages and sexual relations, often with close male relatives, and given no choice of their own.
This is about sexual ABUSE, and incest, and rape, not sexual freedom of choice.
2. A plea from a teenaged girl within the compound asking for help to escape from a forced marriage. (now assumed to be a hoax - but, still probably cause to investigate)
3. Numerous teenagers (over 30) 14-17 year-olds who were pregnant or already had children.
All signs, to any reasonable person looking at the whole picture, that there was possible abuse happening at the YFZ Ranch.
Finally. The FLDS refusing to provide proper identification of the children and their parental relationships, making it impossible for CPS to separate out individuals who might be responsible for abuse.
The FLDS are solely responsible for creating a situation in which all of the children had to be taken into protective custody.
"
This is about sexual ABUSE, and incest, and rape, not sexual freedom of choice. "
What percentage of teenage pregnancies (12-14) in the US do NOT involve incest and/or rape (including statutory) and which 14 year olds are old enough to legally have "freedom of choice"?
There it is again. You claim along with the rest that every person in that compound was guilty by association. I'm not saying DON'T punish the guilty, but remember that in this country, you are considered innocent until PROVEN guilty. And that does not go for GROUPS or COMMUNITIES, mind you. American citizens have a right to be dealt with as individuals.
Re: realitycheck60
When it has been admitted that there were homes in that community that consisted of a man and his wife, both adults from before the time that they were married, with children born to the two of them, and no others living in the home, your argument is shown to be erroneous. These 464 children were NOT the occupants of ONE HOME, but only one community. Only a person with a very warped view of what a family is would argue beyond that point. I say it again: you CANNOT take children from their homes and their parents simply because they are "guilty by association."
They don't have marriage licenses, birth certificates, or other records to show relationships.
They won't identify which pregnant girls belong to which family.
Then they expect CPS to be clairvoyant enough to know that some families have only one father, one mother, a few kids, and no underaged pregnant girls.
Maybe if they'd been more cooperative, all of the kids wouldn't have had to be removed.
No charges have been brought against anybody for child abuse. Yet!
Since the FLDS refused to identify the parents of each child, Texas was forced to determine parent-child relationships through DNA tests.
The FLDS created the confusion, so stop blaming CPS.
It's just sad that all of the children have to suffer because of the actions of their parents.
"Protective custody" sounds like Newspeak for punitive kidnapping. As in, "we'll teach you polyggers to move to Texas".
Don't try to change the subject or point to another group. Let's talk strictly about the FLDS practice of FORCING young girls to marry older men.
It is sexual abuse.
I totally second the Newspeak comment!!! Hey, and while we're at it, let's walk into any of these High Schools with high teen pregnancy rates and take all of the children into "protective custody" for a few months until we can figure out who the bad parents are. And in the meantime.....the state is to be explicitly trusted with the safe handling of our children, right?
What this all comes down to is the fact that we have allowed the government to put itself supreme to the family. THEY can decide who they think are good parents and who aren't. Sure, there are cases when children are not safe with their parents. No arguments. But unless you have dang good proof for each individual case, the ABUSE is perpetrated by the government in taken children from innocent families. FAMILIES are the central unit of society, supreme to the government, and the government should NEVER overstep the family boundaries unless it is proven in specific cases to be absolutely necessary and unavoidable. PERIOD.
Look at what the U.K. did on Pitcairn Island. The British authorities made it abundantly clear that child marriage was illegal and a serious offense. A number of men, including the mayor, was found guilty and imprisoned. They did this while minimizing damage to Pitcairn's economy and culture and without creating a media circus. They even built a prison on the island specifically for those charged.
Not everybody there is happy with the result, the locals feel like faraway London has made impositions upon their culture. But they went about it the right way.
Texas could learn from that.
One peice of property-
One warrant-
It matters not the number of buildings (indiviual homes) on this one peice of property. The families were not seperate according to the law.
If you have a weird uncle who lives in the attic over your garage and he (name an illegal activity involving children) if the children are at risk then ALL the children in your home can be taken into protective custody. This can happen even if he is not really your uncle. ALL the children living on that one peice of property in Texas were at risk because child abuser(s) OBVIOUSLY live there too.
FYI... If a child watches abuse of any other person that is child abuse. How many of the children knew the young girls were "married"? How many know all females must have sex with whomever they are assigned a sexual relationship?
One owner - a city
One piece of property - a low income housing project
One warrant, allowing arrest / removal / detention of all residents under 18 -- No way! That logic doesn't fly, even in our new Homeland.
Legally teenagers can not choose to be sexually active. All sexual activity by 14 year olds with 19 year olds is statutory rape.
There is not a legal difference between when it is done in spiritual marriage or in some other context. However, I am not sure why I am saying this, because it seems those who want to justify promiscuity and 12-year-olds being pregnant will do so no matter what.
The basis of consent laws is that children under a certain age are incapable of giving consent to sexual relations. There are studies that show that many of the 14-year-olds in the US who give birth are giving birth to babies whose fathers are over the age of 20.
The scary thing is that you are not up in arms about this situation. Fortunantly the Attorneys Generals in Kansas and Indiana are, and they have tried to force open Planned Parenthoods records to find these rapists. Unfortunantly the courts have ruled against the AGs and stopped these efforts.
I do not support polygamy or marrying underage girls. However, I think there are other problems that are as pressing.
On the other hand there are organizations that seek to overturn the statutory rape laws.
However my main issue is no charges have yet been brought in Texas.
To quote you back at yourself, "Nice attempt at setting up a strawman" by conflating beliefs and acts.
Beliefs are protected. Period. America doesn't punish "thought crimes" (at least, not officially -- yet).
For example, the Bible says that, under certain circumstances, forcible rape is a marriage ceremony (Deuteronomy 22:27-29), yet there has never been an attempt to remove all children whose parents believe the Bible is the word of God. Belief that includes raping is a protected belief. However, practicing that belief in America today would result in serious consequences, probably including having one's children taken away.
Acts are what our laws attempt to regulate. Not beliefs.
You can have a mother-in-law apartment in your home but you cannot rent it out as a seperate apartment UNLESS you legally divide the apartment from the house.
If the city you mention is sued, the "housing project" can be sold to pay the debt but they are counted as single family dwellings. The same cannot be said about the Texas compund. It would be sold as one property with several structures included.
The mothers allowed their underage girls to engage in sexual relationships with men, they abandoned their male children. They entered into polygamous relationships which perpetuate these two forms of abuse. The behavior of these women is criminal.
Certainly there are prevalent and obvious forms of abuse within the FLDS compound. That women are unable to protect their children from these kinds of abuse, opens up the children to more victimization in the form of other less common forms of abuse such as physical abuse. CPS has not completed its investigation. It is finding other forms of abuse such as an excessive number of broken bones, that most likely came from physical abuse.
The FLDS wants children returned to homes in which no abuse has yet occurred due to solely the ages of the children or the parents. That should not occur.
Did DFPS respond?
What did they say?
What is the status of the suit?
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