Crisis magazine, November 2002.
The Politics of Family Destruction
By Stephen Baskerville
The debate on the family is becoming increasingly politicized. President
George W. Bush proposes federal programs to promote marriage and fatherhood and
to enlist churches. Liberals respond that government does not belong in the
family but then advocate federal programs of their own.
Yet the more polarized the issues become the less willing we are to look at the
hard politics of the family crisis. Family policy is still discussed in terms
set by therapists and social scientists: the rate of divorce and unwed
motherhood, the level of poverty, the impact on children, the social costs. As
if we don't know.
As a social scientist, I do not deny the value of data (I intend to marshal some
myself). But therapeutic practitioners have established such a hold over family
policy that they have paralyzed our capacity to act. Writing on single
motherhood in Commentary magazine, the eminent political scientist James Q.
Wilson grimly concludes, "If you believe, as I do, in the power of culture,
you will realize that there is very little one can do." Like many others
(including the Bush administration), Wilson is reduced to advocating counseling
and "education."
What seems missing here is old-fashioned politics, the kind that did not
hesitate to make moral judgments and even express outrage. The politics of the
prophets, for example.
The facts are well-established among social scientists, but a kind of
ideological correctness on both left and right seems to keep us from confronting
the full implications of what we know. We are afraid to challenge the accepted
clichés about marriage breakdown, even when it becomes clear that they don't
correspond to the evidence.
We should begin, therefore, with the uncontested but seldom-mentioned facts.
First, marriages do not simply "break down" by themselves. Legally,
someone-and it is usually one-consciously ends it by filing official documents
and calling in the government against his or her spouse. According to Frank
Furstenberg and Andrew Cherlin, the authors of Divided Families, some 80 percent
of divorces are unilateral. One spouse usually wishes to keep the family
together.
When children are involved, the divorcing parent is overwhelmingly likely to be
the mother. Scholarly studies by Sanford Braver, Margaret Brinig and Douglas
Allen, and others estimate that between 67 and 75 percent of such divorces are
instigated by the mother. Feminists and divorce attorneys report that the number
is closer to 90 percent. Few of these divorces involve grounds like desertion,
adultery, or violence. "Growing apart" or "not feeling loved or
appreciated" are the usual explanations.
The divorcing parent is likely to get custody of the children and coerced
financial payments from the divorced parent. Brinig and Allen even concluded
that of 21 variables, "who gets the children is by far the most important
component in deciding who files for divorce."
Clearly more is at work here than husbands and wives deciding to go their
separate ways. Under no-fault laws, divorce has become a means not only of
ending a marriage but of seizing monopoly control of the children, who become
weapons conferring leverage backed by penal sanctions. The devastating effects
of divorce and fatherlessness on both children and society are now so well-known
that there is no need to belabor them here. What is seldom appreciated is the
broader threat the divorce regime poses to ethical and constitutional
government. In fact, there is today no better example of the link between
personal morality and public ethics-between the fidelity of private individuals
and the faithfulness of public servants-or the connection of both with the
civilized order.
Significantly, as secular political sophisticates focus narrowly on the
sociological, it is Pope John Paul II who has come closest to the root of the
problem. In January, he issued what many saw as a surprisingly strong statement
against divorce that specifically singled out lawyers and judges for criticism.
For his pains he was attacked by lawyers, journalists, and politicians from both
the left and right. Yet his characterization of divorce as a "festering
wound" with "devastating consequences that spread in society like the
plague" is as accurate politically as it is socially.
Since the advent of no-fault divorce, a multibillion-dollar industry has grown
up around the divorce courts: judges, lawyers, psychotherapists, mediators,
counselors, social workers, and bureaucratic police. All these people have a
professional and financial stake in divorce. In fact, despite pieties to the
contrary, public officials at all levels of government-including elected leaders
in both parties-now have a vested interest in increasing the number of
single-parent homes.
The politics of divorce begins in family court, a relatively new and
little-examined institution. Family courts are usually closed to the public and
their proceedings are usually unrecorded. Yet they reach further into private
lives than any other arm of government. Though lowest in the hierarchy, they are
"the most powerful branch of the judiciary," according to Judge Robert
Page of the New Jersey family court. "The power of family court judges is
almost unlimited," Page writes.
Secret courts have long been recognized as an invitation to chicanery.
"Where there is no publicity, there is no justice," wrote British
philosopher and jurist Jeremy Bentham. "It keeps the judge himself while
trying under trial." Judges claim the secrecy protects family privacy,
though in fact it seems to provide a cloak to violate family privacy and other
protections with impunity.
Family court judges are appointed and promoted by commissions dominated by bar
associations. That means they are answerable to those with an interest in
maximizing the volume of divorce litigation. Though family courts complain of
being "overburdened," it is clearly in their interest to be
overburdened, since judicial powers and salaries are determined by demand. The
aim of the courts, therefore, is to increase their workload by attracting
customers, and the divorce industry has erected a series of financial and
emotional incentives that encourage people to divorce. "With improved
services, more persons will come before the court seeking their
availability," Page explains. "As the court does a better job more
persons will be attracted to it as a method of dispute resolution." Doing a
"better job" really means attracting more divorcing parents with
generous settlements.
A substantial body of federal and state case law recognizes parenthood as an
"essential" constitutional right "far more precious than property
rights" (May v. Anderson). In Doe v. Irwin, a federal court held that
parenthood "cannot be denied without violating those fundamental principles
of liberty and justice which lie at the base of all our civil and political
institutions." Yet such apparently unequivocal principles are never applied
in divorce cases, where judges routinely remove children from forcibly divorced
parents without providing any reason.
Once a parent loses custody, he or she no longer has any say in where the
children reside, attend school or day care, or worship. Worse, the parents who
have been stripped of custody are in many ways treated as outlaws. A
personalized criminal code is legislated around them by the judge, controlling
their association with their children, their movements, and their finances.
Unauthorized contact with their children can be punished with arrest.
Involuntarily divorced parents have been arrested for running into their
children in public places such as sporting events and church, for making
unauthorized telephone calls, and for sending unauthorized birthday cards.
Parents whose spouses want a divorce are ordered to surrender personal diaries,
correspondence, financial records, and other documents normally protected by the
Fourth Amendment. Their personal habits, movements, conversations, writings, and
purchases are all subject to inquiry by the court. Their home can be entered and
their visits with their children monitored in a "supervised visitation
center." Anything they say to their spouses, family, friends, counselors,
and others can be used against them in court. Their children, too, can be used
as informers.
Forcibly divorced parents are also ordered, on pain of incarceration, to hire
cronies of the judge. In what some see as little less than a shakedown, family
courts routinely order forcibly divorced and legally unimpeachable parents to
pay attorneys, psychotherapists, and other professionals with the threat of jail
for not complying.
Family law is now criminalizing constitutionally protected activities as basic
as free speech, freedom of the press, and even private conversations. In many
jurisdictions it is now a crime to criticize judges, and parents have been
arrested for doing so. Following his congressional testimony critical of the
family courts in 1992, Jim Wagner of the Georgia Council for Children's Rights
was stripped of custody of his two children, ordered to pay $6,000 to lawyers he
did not hire, and jailed when he could not pay.
The principal tool for enforcing divorce and keeping ejected parents away from
their children is a restraining order. Orders separating parents from their
children for months, years, and even life are routinely issued without the
presentation of any evidence of wrongdoing. They are often issued at a hearing
where the parent is not present; they are sometimes issued with no hearing at
all. "The restraining order law is one of the most unconstitutional acts
ever passed," says Massachusetts attorney Gregory Hession, who has filed a
federal suit on civil rights grounds. "A court can issue an order that
boots you out of your house, never lets you see your children again, and takes
your money, all without you even knowing that a hearing took place."
Hession's description is confirmed by judges themselves. "Your job is not
to become concerned about the constitutional rights of the man that you're
violating as you grant a restraining order," New Jersey Judge Richard
Russell told his colleagues at a training seminar in 1994. "Throw him out
on the street, give him the clothes on his back and tell him, see ya around....
We don't have to worry about the rights."
Elaine Epstein, former president of the Massachusetts Women's Bar Association,
wrote in a column in the association's newsletter that divorce-connected
restraining orders are doled out "like candy." "Everyone knows
that restraining orders and orders to vacate are granted to virtually all who
apply," and "the facts have become irrelevant," she reports.
"In virtually all cases, no notice, meaningful hearing, or impartial
weighing of evidence is to be had." Yet a government analysis found that
fewer than half of all orders involved even an allegation of physical violence.
It doesn't take much to violate such restraining orders. "Stories of
violations for minor infractions are legion," the Boston Globe reported on
May 19, 1998. One father was arrested "when he put a note in his son's
suitcase telling the mother the boy had been sick over a weekend visit."
Another was arrested "for sending his son a birthday card." Parents
are arrested for attending their children's worship services, music recitals,
and sports activities-events any stranger may attend. National Public Radio
broadcast a story in 1997 about a father arrested in church for attending his
daughter's first communion. During the segment, an eight-year-old girl wails and
begs to know when her father will be able to see her or call her. The answer,
because of a "lifetime" restraining order, is never. Even accidental
contact in public places is punished with arrest.
Restraining orders are in fact more likely to cause than to prevent violence,
since laws separating parents from their children can provoke precisely the
violence they are designed to prevent. "Few lives, if any, have been saved,
but much harm, and possibly loss of lives, has come from the issuance of
restraining orders," retired Dudley district court justice Milton
Raphaelson wrote last year in the Western Massachusetts Law Tribune. "It is
the opinion of many who remain quiet due to the political climate. Innocent men
and their children are deprived of each other."
Domestic violence has now been federalized in a legislative agenda whose
conscious aim is to promote easy divorce. Donna Laframboise of Canada's National
Post wrote that federally funded battered women's shelters in the United States
and Canada constituted "one-stop divorce shops" whose purpose was not
to shelter women but to secure custody for divorcing mothers. The Violence
Against Women Act, renewed by Congress in 2000, "offers abundant
rewards" for making false accusations, writes Professor Susan Sarnoff of
Ohio State University, "including the 'rights' to refuse custody and even
visitation to accused fathers, with virtually no requirements of proof."
The law's definition of domestic violence is so broad that "it does not
even require that the violence be physical."
Authorities bully some women into taking out restraining orders by threatening
to take away their children. The February 20, 2001, edition of the Massachusetts
News described how Heidi Howard was ordered by the Massachusetts Department of
Social Services to take out a restraining order against her husband and divorce
him, though neither parent was charged with any wrongdoing. When she refused,
the social workers seized her children. Reporter Nev Moore claims to have seen
hundreds of similar cases. Government officials can now impose divorce not only
on one unwilling parent but on both.
While the domestic violence industry is driven by federal funding, the main
financial fuel of the divorce machinery is "child support," which
subsidizes and encourages unilateral divorce. Bryce Christensen of the Howard
Center for Family, Religion, and Society argues for a "linkage between
aggressive child-support policies and the erosion of wedlock."
Those accused of failing to pay child support-"deadbeat dads"-are now
the subject of a national demonology. Yet a federally funded study by Sanford
Braver, published as Divorced Dads: Shattering the Myths, found government
"estimates" of nonpayment are produced not from any official
statistics but entirely from surveys of custodial parents. Braver concluded that
"the single most important factor relating to nonpayment" is
unemployment.
Braver is not alone. Columnist Kathleen Parker has concluded that "the
'deadbeat dad' is an egregious exaggeration, a caricature of a few desperate men
who for various reasons-sometimes pretty good ones-fail to hand over their
paycheck, assuming they have one." Deborah Simmons of the Washington Times
likewise found "scant evidence that crackdowns... serve any purpose other
than to increase the bank accounts of those special-interest groups pushing
enforcement."
Child support enforcement is now a massive industry, where revolving doors,
financial transfers, and other channels connect family courts with legislators,
interlocking executive agencies on the federal, state, and local level, with
private contractors.
To encourage divorce, child support must be set high enough to make divorce
attractive for mothers, and setting it is a political process conducted by
officials and groups that thrive on divorce. About half the states use
guidelines devised not by the legislature but by courts and enforcement
agencies. Yet even legislative enactment is no guarantee of impartiality, since
legislators may divert enforcement contracts to their own firms.
The ethical conflicts extend to the private sector, where collection firms also
help to decide the levels of what they are to collect. Not only does an obvious
conflict of interest impel them to make the burdens as high as possible to
increase their take in absolute terms (and to encourage divorce), but the firms
can set the levels high enough to ensure the arrearages on which their business
depends.
While working as a paid consultant with the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) during the 1980s, Robert Williams helped to establish uniform
state guidelines in the federal Child Support Guidelines Project. Predictably,
Williams's guidelines sharply increased support obligations in many states.
Economist Mark Rogers charges in Family Law Quarterly that they resulted in
"excessive burdens" based on a "flawed economic foundation."
Williams himself acknowledges that "there is no consensus among economists
on the most valid theoretical model to use in deriving estimates of
child-rearing expenditures." Donald Bieniewicz, author of an alternative
guideline published by HHS, writes, "This is a shocking vote of 'no
confidence' in the...guideline by its author"-a guideline used to
incarcerate parents without trial.
Governments also profit from child support. "Most states make a profit on
their child support program," according to the House Ways and Means
Committee, which notes that "states are free to spend this profit in any
manner the state sees fit." With substantial sums at stake, officials have
no incentive to discourage divorce, regardless of their party affiliation.
Notwithstanding rhetoric about strengthening the family, neither Democratic nor
Republican lawmakers are likely to question any policy that fills the public
coffers.
The trampling of due process in child support prosecutions parallels that in
domestic violence cases, since a parent may legally be presumed guilty until
proven innocent, and the parent will not necessarily have a lawyer or a jury of
his or her peers. "The burden of proof may be shifted to the
defendant," according to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL),
which approves these methods. "Not all child support contempt proceedings
classified as criminal are entitled to a jury trial," adds NCSL, and
"even indigent obligors are not necessarily entitled to a lawyer."
In the decades since the inception of no-fault divorce, family law has gradually
become an ethical cesspool. Attorneys such as Hession charge that tapes and
transcripts of hearings are routinely altered in family court. Hession's
forensic evidence was published last year in the Massachusetts News. When his
client, Zed McLarnon, complained about the tampering and other irregularities,
he was assessed $3,500 for attorneys he had not hired and jailed without trial
by the same judges whose tapes were allegedly doctored. "This is criminal
misconduct," attorney Eugene Wrona says of similar practices in
Pennsylvania, "and these people belong in jail." In May 1999, Insight
magazine exposed a "slush fund" for Los Angeles family court judges
into which attorneys and court-appointed "monitors" paid. These
monitors are hired by the court to watch parents accused of spousal or child
abuse while they are with their children.
The corrupting power of forced divorce now extends beyond the judiciary,
validating the pope's observation that its consequences spread "like the
plague." In 2000, four leading Arkansas senators were convicted on federal
racketeering charges connected with divorce. One scheme involved hiring
attorneys to represent children during divorce, a practice generally regarded as
a pretext to appoint cronies of the judge. In the April 29, 1999, edition of the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, John Brummett wrote that "no child was served by
that $3 million scam to set up a program ostensibly providing legal
representatives to children in custody cases, but actually providing a gravy
train to selected legislators and pals who were rushing around to set up
corporations and send big checks to each other."
The affair illustrates one reason legislators protect judges and their
associates in the courts. Divorce attorneys are prominent in state legislatures.
Tony Perkins, who sponsored Louisiana's celebrated "covenant marriage"
law, reports that similar measures have failed in some "seemingly
sympathetic legislatures" because of "opposition from key committee
chairmen who were divorce lawyers."
The potential of child support to become what one Arkansas player termed a
"cash cow," providing officials with "steady income for little
work," has been exploited elsewhere. The Washington Post reported in July
2000 that a top adviser to Prince George's County, Maryland, executive Wayne
Curry received contracts without competitive bidding for child support
enforcement within days of leaving the county payroll. In March 2002, Maryland
announced a criminal investigation of Maximus, which runs Baltimore's program.
The alleged misconduct included collecting money from parents even after their
children had reached adulthood and then refusing to refund it. The
whistle-blower expressed fear for her personal safety, according to the
Baltimore Sun.
Throughout the United States and abroad, child support enforcement has been
plagued with corruption. Kansas awarded a contract to Glenn and Jan Jewett, who
were involved in bingo operations in Las Vegas and spent time in federal prison
for drug trafficking, forgery, concealing stolen property, and writing bad
checks. The DuPage County, Illinois, child support system has been under
investigation for fraud. "A string of foul-ups plaguing Ohio's child
support system," included "millions of dollars worth of improperly
intercepted income tax refunds and child support payments," according to
the Cleveland Plain-Dealer and WHIO television in Dayton. In Wisconsin,
"Parents who owe nothing have been billed thousands of dollars,"
according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, including a man billed for children
in their 40s, who "was compelled to prove his innocence."
In October 1998 the Los Angeles Times investigated fraud and due process
violations in the L.A. child support enforcement system. Deputy District
Attorney Jackie Myers had left office in 1996 because, he said, "I felt we
were being told to do unethical, very unethical things." In December 1999,
Insight reported on the case of a father left by the district attorney's office
with $200 a month to care for a family of four. One month, the district attorney
"took all but $1 of his $1,200 paycheck."
Following the Times series, HHS was moved to investigate criminal fraud in the
city's system, but the General Accounting Office found the investigation
"consisted of just two phone calls"-one to "one of the DA office
employees who had engaged in misconduct." HHS apparently "did not
interview any of more than a dozen people who a confidential informant claimed
had firsthand knowledge of wrongdoing within the child support program."
The divorce industry depends on the widespread violation of what most people
still hold to be the most solemn promise one makes in life. It is no coincidence
that public officials whose livelihoods depend on encouraging citizens to betray
their private trust will not hesitate to betray the trust conferred on them by
the public. Likewise, a society where private citizens are encouraged not to
honor their commitments is a society that will not hold public leaders to their
promises. Maggie Gallagher's observation that marriage has become "the only
contract where the law now sides with the party who wants to violate it"
raises the question of whether we are willing to allow our government to be an
active party to deceit and faithless dealing.
Our present divorce system is not only unjust but fundamentally dishonest. For
all the talk of a "divorce culture," it is not clear that most people
today enter the marriage contract with the intention of breaking it. "If
the marital vows were changed to '...until I grow tired of you,' or '...for a
period of five years unless I decide otherwise,' and the state were willing to
sanction such an agreement, then divorce would not be such a significant event
from a moral point of view," attorney Steven L. Varnis writes in Society.
"But there is no evidence that the content of marital vows or marital
expectations at the time of marriage has changed." Varnis may be only half
right, but even so, the point is that the marriage contract has become
unenforceable and therefore fraudulent. Until this changes, it seems pointless
and even irresponsible to encourage young people to place their trust and their
lives in it.
One may argue that government should not enforce the marriage contract, or any
contracts for that matter (though the Constitution holds otherwise). But I am
not aware of anyone who suggests the government should be forcibly abrogating
contracts, let alone luring citizens into contracts that it then tears up. If we
truly believe our present divorce policy is appropriate, we should at least have
the honesty to tell young people up front that marriage provides them with no
protection. Let us inform them at the time of their marriage that even if they
remain faithful to their vows, they can lose their children, their home, their
savings and future earnings, and their freedom. Not only will the government
afford them no protection; it will prosecute them as criminals, though without
the due process of law afforded to formally accused criminals. And let us then
see how many young people are willing to start families.
It is one thing to tolerate divorce, as perhaps we must do in a free society. It
is another to use the power of the state to impose it on unwilling parents and
children. When courts stop dispensing justice, they must start dispensing
injustice. There is no middle ground.
Stephen Baskerville teaches political science at Howard University and is author
of Not Peace But a Sword: The Political Theology of the English Revolution.
http://www.justiceforfamilies.com
(MA group. Would you permit the government
to prosecute you for spanking your child?)
http://www.vocalny.org (NY site.
Vague laws on child abuse and neglect really
DON'T harm anyone, do they?)