Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Site stuff

Join our Innovation Panel to try new features early and help make Mumsnet better.

See all MNHQ comments on this thread

If Fathers for Justice invade again

468 replies

Nyac · 07/03/2012 14:57

will they still be welcome?

I'm referring to the thread in the Feminism/Women's Rights section -

www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/a1419965-Agenda-much

where Justine said:

"an invasion - ie let's go on and tell those mumsnetters why they've got it all wrong - isn't necessarily the same as trolling tbh (ie deliberately misleading/antagonising). I think we ought to be able to be robust enough to be able to debate the issue, with the caveat, of course, that if visitors turn out merely to be here to wind up or hear to spread hatred then they are not welcome"

It appears that as long as they promote their agenda in PARD then no harm done. Is that a fair assessment?

OP posts:
spydiii · 10/03/2012 21:07

Couple of things guys... and meant with respect. First, I'm seeing my comments misrepresented repeatedly which I'm not sure is by accident. This in turn makes any reasoned debate impossible since it's like negotiating with lawyers trying to catch you out. I'd much rather be open and honest and not fearful that anything I say will be taken out of context. Second thing, all said and done it's time I need to get some food, drive home and get some sleep. Been a very long week... Hope you all have a good weekend, and don't assume we are all bad. Some of us might be otherwise. :)

runningforthebusinheels · 10/03/2012 21:07

Spydiii, please can you explain to me where the stats come from in you 'children4justice' literature?

Your campaign states that "during 2012 thousands of children will be silenced by the family courts.' Are you counting the children taken into care by court order in those figures?

Can you also explain why F4J published a campaign ad targeting CAFCASS - and then changed it to target Gingerbread? Why do F4J call Gingerbread child abusers and why F4J instructed their followers to troll them? Do you not think F4J are the ones being defamatory in this instance?

StewieGriffinsMom · 10/03/2012 21:07

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

runningforthebusinheels · 10/03/2012 21:07

Ah, gone.... if you can't stand the heat...

swallowedAfly · 10/03/2012 21:07

spy: - Again, my view is an amount of time with each parent such that they can each form a good and strong bond with the child - assuming we are talking time. Otherwise, jointly making decisions and discouragement of behaviours that are not in the child's best interests. e.g. Moving to other end of country to be with new love interests meaning child loses one parent. I'll probably be hated by some for that last comment but I see it as working either way and not applied unreasonably, which it is currently.

spy for that to have any meaningful parity there would have to be a law saying fathers cannot move to the other side of the country away from their children - would you be up for that? making it illegal for men to abandon their children? because the vast majority of 'fatherless' children are so through the choice and actions of the father.

NarkedPuffin · 10/03/2012 21:08

Numbers are meaningless without a clear definition.

1 in 3? 1 in 3 children don't live full time with their fathers? 1 in 3 have no contact at all with their fathers? 1 in 3 don't have regular contact with their fathers (including a definition of regular)? 1 in 3 of all children or of those whose parents have been through court proceedings about contact? etc etc

ThisIsExtremelyVeryNotGood · 10/03/2012 21:09

"Moving to other end of country to be with new love interests meaning child loses one parent. I'll probably be hated by some for that last comment but I see it as working either way and not applied unreasonably, which it is currently."

To use my own experience again (sorry!), this is what my ex did. I had no power to stop him. had I chosen to do this (with the children) he could have taken me to court to try and prevent it. There is a legal means to do so, even if it doesn't always find in the NRP's favour.

I really would advise you check the stats out. 3.8 million children (a 3rd of the UK's children) live in single mother households. This does not make them all fatherless. Of those that don't have their father actively involved, not all will be due to the court system.

According to a survery of people who have been involved in family separation over the last 20 years, 1 in 3 children whose parents split lose contact with their father. However, this is a survey of 4000 people so cannot really be extrapolated to the whole population. 20 years is also a very long time, it doesn't necessarily mean that this is what's happening now.

Even if you take the survey stat at face value, this means that in fact 1.27 million children have no contact with their father. This is closer to about 10% of Britain's children. This could be for many, many reasons, not just court decisions or baseless contact denial.

Until you have the breakdown for the stats you're using I think you need to stop using them.

swallowedAfly · 10/03/2012 21:10

you're not being misrepresented - what you say is not being agreed with because you don't seem to have the facts and are therefore assuming things to be true that others more informed know not to be.

you're being questioned and challenged but not misrepresented.

if you want to have reasoned debate about these issues then you need, with all due respect, to educate yourself about the issues you are talking about - the reality of the facts and stats and causes etc. and for suggestions you make as to changes you have to actually think through the implications and shortfalls as well as the strengths you feel in them and realise the impact they'd have that you haven't thought about (because there always are far reaching implications to changing laws or practice).

you really, if you are serious about this area and want to be positive in it, NEED to educate yourself.

AyeRobot · 10/03/2012 21:11

hehehehehe

Bye!!

Glad you've answered some questions, although I think perhaps you are projecting a little with your little dig about reasoned debate. We're just trying to help Smile

swallowedAfly · 10/03/2012 21:12

and nothing is being 'taken out of context' that you say - it's that you are unaware of context - you haven't thought about the context that the things you are saying are situated within and people are pointing out the realities of the context and implications etc.

TeaJennie · 10/03/2012 21:12

The 1 in 3 figure comes from the ONS (Office of National Statics)

1.9 million lone parents with dependent children in the UK
In 2011, women accounted for 92% of lone parents
One million lone parents have one child
621,000 single parents have two children
238,000 lone parents have more than two children
3.8million children live with only one of their biological parents
2.7million who live with a single mother and 200,000 with a lone father.
500,000 are in cohabiting step-families, and 400,000 in married step-families.

NarkedPuffin · 10/03/2012 21:14

So it's not about contact or the child having a relationship with the father at all?

ThisIsExtremelyVeryNotGood · 10/03/2012 21:14

But TeaJennie, being in a single mother family does not in itself make a child fatherless. I am not disputing that 3.8million children live with single mothers, I am disputing F4J's extrapolation that they are therefore fatherless.

NarkedPuffin · 10/03/2012 21:15

I'd suspect their fathers would be very angry at theat suggestion too!

ThisIsExtremelyVeryNotGood · 10/03/2012 21:16

Thank you for answering questions Spydiii. It was interesting to be able to hear a more balanced view than we have over the past few days and I hope we've given you some food for thought in return :)

AyeRobot · 10/03/2012 21:16

How many of them are fatherless, Jennie?

ThisIsExtremelyVeryNotGood · 10/03/2012 21:16

I agree NP! I think even my ex, with his once a week phone call, would be rather affronted that his children are now considered fatherless.

spydiii · 10/03/2012 21:18

Ok, ok, one more comment as so many questions...

(But then I have to go!)

"If men put in the effort beforehand (etc...) they would stand much better off after the split."

Have to say, that's a nice thing to believe but bears 'almost' no water in the real world. I was my child's main carer, and played second fiddle to a much higher income of partner. All of this counted for nothing when the false allegations and victim-hood thing switched on. I've seen first-hand how the system can be manipulated in totality. It doesn't matter that the truth latter emerges, it doesn't matter if the acuser later admits they lied, it's now too late and little Johnny is used to a step-dad. Run along father and leave her and Johnny alone.

Now, I know NOT everyone does that but too many do. I've seen numerous such cases myself. You only have to read through various threads on women's networks to find examples of mums stating they intentionally withhold access. So, please, don't assume that behaving correctly before (or after) makes much difference if there's no credible mechanism to measure or address that, in place. That in part is what we are asking for. That is not meant to offend or take rights away, but that is the reality of equality. If we want men to step up and deliver the goods then there has to be some protection for the child and them if the relationship ends. Otherwise, why should any bloke ever bother - which is what I've seen being asked here repeatedly. I'll leave you with that thought. Appreciate the discussion, really do. Goodnight all.

swallowedAfly · 10/03/2012 21:19

3.8million children live with only one of their biological parents

yes and of those some live with their fathers, some have regular contact and an important relationship with their fathers, some will have been conceived at clinic via donor sperm, for some the father will have died, for many the father will have fecked off and chosen to have no contact with them and for a teeny tiny minority (as in 0.and a lot more norts to follow before you get to a 1%) will be the children of fathers denied contact by the family courts.

runningforthebusinheels · 10/03/2012 21:19

3.8 million is the accepted figure for children affected by parental separation, regularly used by Gingerbread and other reputable organisations. This actually includes all children who have shared/co-parenting agreements in place - so can hardly be described as 'fatherless'.

spydiii · 10/03/2012 21:19

runningforthebusinheels

No, I'm tired and have a lot yet to do tonight. I am not running away and would appreciate you respecting that.

MamaMaiasaura · 10/03/2012 21:20

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by Mumsnet.

spydiii · 10/03/2012 21:20

ThisIsExtremelyVeryNotGood

Thanks too, I have taken on board much of what was said. :)

runningforthebusinheels · 10/03/2012 21:20

Ironically enough, the 3.8m figure also includes children resident with a single father.

swallowedAfly · 10/03/2012 21:21

false allegations and 'victim-hood'? and you were investigated and the courts believed those not to be false and to be serious enough to merit denying you contact with your own children?