Alienation and Gatekeeping- Men’s Rights- in a Left world!
Attending NSW Parliament to raise concerns about men’s rights within the Family Court system was more than symbolic — it was a call to action.
The theme was “Reform or Revolt” — and while reform is always the preferable path, it requires courage, evidence, and public participation.
One Nation is the only oarfy with the policy and consistency in this area.
Attending NSW Parliament to raise concerns about men’s rights within the Family Court system was more than symbolic — it was a call to action.
The theme was “Reform or Revolt” — and while reform is always the preferable path, it requires courage, evidence, and public participation.
One Nation is the only oarfy with the policy and consistency in this area.
The largest minority in any society is the individual. When individual rights are eroded — whether through delay, bias, or procedural imbalance — confidence in the justice system suffers. Law reform must be grounded in data, accountability, and fairness, not ideology.
The conversations were real, raw, and confronting. That’s a good thing. Democracies don’t evolve through silence — they evolve through principled debate and practical solutions.
My recent trip to the United States to study comparative approaches to Family Law reinforced that reform is possible. There are models, mechanisms, and safeguards that can be adapted to strengthen procedural fairness and judicial accountability in Australia.
The conversations were real, raw, and confronting. That’s a good thing. Democracies don’t evolve through silence — they evolve through principled debate and practical solutions.
My recent trip to the United States to study comparative approaches to Family Law reinforced that reform is possible. There are models, mechanisms, and safeguards that can be adapted to strengthen procedural fairness and judicial accountability in Australia.
From that research, we have developed practical reform proposals, including:
• The 3 Strikes Bill — introducing structured accountability mechanisms where systemic or repeated procedural failures occur.
• The “Time Taken – Time Back” Bill — addressing excessive delays by recognising that justice delayed is justice denied, and creating consequences for unreasonable time burdens imposed on families.
• The 3 Strikes Bill — introducing structured accountability mechanisms where systemic or repeated procedural failures occur.
• The “Time Taken – Time Back” Bill — addressing excessive delays by recognising that justice delayed is justice denied, and creating consequences for unreasonable time burdens imposed on families.
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Important Family Law update-
This is not legal
Advice
This is not legal
Advice