Oreslag
Member
...the man who is the subject of this article: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/05/1...women-cant-pay-child-support/?test=latestnews violates no criminal code for having thirty children he cannot support by eleven different women, but would violate criminal code if he married, supported, and led them? Indeed, I find it ridiculous that he's even permitted to petition the court to give him a break on his child support. Examples like this one demonstrate the ineptitude of modern governance.
When I consider the likelihood that taxes collected by the same government are being used to support the eleven mothers as well, thus compelling the rest of us, in effect, to condone behavior we might vehemently oppose as morally repugnant; I'm ashamed to be part of the corrupt governing process (this being a dysfunctional constitutional republic and all). I find it even more foolish that the same society which condones this mess considers it a greater sin for this man's 'civil rights' to be infringed than for him to be incarcerated or become a ward of the state himself. Indeed, were it up to me he would have two choices: (1) incarceration, or (2) state employee doing whatever job he was assigned, like it or not. Unfortunately (2) is not an option, but might serve as a deterrent if the jobs so assigned were sufficiently undesirable and failure to comply resulted in (1) as the alternative.
When I consider the likelihood that taxes collected by the same government are being used to support the eleven mothers as well, thus compelling the rest of us, in effect, to condone behavior we might vehemently oppose as morally repugnant; I'm ashamed to be part of the corrupt governing process (this being a dysfunctional constitutional republic and all). I find it even more foolish that the same society which condones this mess considers it a greater sin for this man's 'civil rights' to be infringed than for him to be incarcerated or become a ward of the state himself. Indeed, were it up to me he would have two choices: (1) incarceration, or (2) state employee doing whatever job he was assigned, like it or not. Unfortunately (2) is not an option, but might serve as a deterrent if the jobs so assigned were sufficiently undesirable and failure to comply resulted in (1) as the alternative.