by Sherry Palmer | Jun 4, 2014 | Child Custody, Children's Rights, Divorce, Divorce Advice, Divorce Laws, Family Court, Parental Rights, Parents Resources, TYDA, Unmarried Child Custody
BREAKING THE CHAINS CREATED BY THE FAMILY COURTS… So many people are suffering from being forced into more family studies/home studies, more therapy, and more attorney bills and have no idea how to make it end…don’t let this happen to you! So many people are suffering...
by Ron B Palmer | Oct 31, 2013 | Child Custody, Children's Rights, Divorce, Divorce Advice, Family Court, Parental Rights, Uncategorized
Right to Stability So many people attempt to manipulate our emotions in child custody issues. They get us stoked up and emotionally tied to their often false arguments. One of these false arguments is that children have a “right to stability.” I routinely...
by Ron B Palmer | Oct 20, 2013 | Child Custody, Divorce, Divorce Advice, Family Court, Parental Rights, Parents Resources, Uncategorized
Sadly, many attorneys and divorce court judges use this excuse to take on power that is NOT theirs by right. The idea that a right can be eliminated just because it conflicts with another right would make rights themselves meaningless. Religious rights guaranteed...
by Sherry Palmer | Oct 13, 2013 | Child Custody, Children's Rights, Divorce, Divorce Advice, Divorce Laws, Family Court, Parental Rights, Parenting Plan, Parents Resources, Uncategorized, Unmarried Child Custody
Children Can’t Choose Not to go to School, Why do they get to Choose a Parent in Divorce? Response to Nicole Nenninger’s comment. Nicole Nenninger brings up several very important issues around child custody battles. She gets right to the point and we get to the heart...
by Sherry Palmer | Jun 5, 2013 | Divorce, Uncategorized
I found an article called “What do Divorce Lawyers Do In Their Own Divorces” written by J. Richard Kulerski, attorney and partner in the Law firm of Kulerski & Cornelison published on February 6, 2012 at Huff Post Divorce[1] particularly interesting. There were...