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Tag: children's rights

  • Should we take more kids from their homes or fewer?

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    Some parents abuse their kids.

    Child welfare workers are supposed to stop that to protect the kids.

    But bad things often happen while they watch.

    “Children have a right to safety,” says Tim Keller. “If home is a danger, we as a society have to step in and protect those children.”

    Keller, legal director of the Center for the Rights of Abused Children, is a libertarian.

    “It’s surprising to hear a libertarian argue that government should do more,” I tell him.

    “We don’t like the state involved in family life,” he replies in my new video, but “they’re leaving children in dangerous situations.”

    Lots of parents abuse kids, even when they are on Child Protective Services’ (CPS) radar.

    Maybe it happens because child welfare workers are told, “Whenever possible, keep families together.”

    That’s U.S. policy, and Keller says it wrecks lives.

    But Columbia Law School professor Josh Gupta-Kagan wants welfare workers to take fewer kids from their homes.

    “The horror stories go in all directions,” he says.

    In Massachusetts, after parents brought their young son to the hospital with a fever and X-rays revealed an old, healing rib fracture, child welfare workers took both him and his brother away from their home. They returned the boys after four weeks, but those were a traumatic four weeks.

    It happens because American law requires social workers, doctors, nurses, teachers, and other professionals to report anything suspicious. Those who don’t report may be fined or even jailed.

    Gupta-Kagan says this leads health care workers to report too many instances of possible abuse.

    “See something, say something. It’s surveillance, investigatory, and sometimes it leads to an unnecessary separation.” Those can be as traumatic as abuse.

    “About 37 percent of all children are going to be the subject of a CPS hotline call. Fifty-three percent of all African American children.…Where my clients live…the CPS agency is a constant presence.…Folks are scared of them.”

    “We certainly don’t want a situation where we’re going to say, ‘We’re not going to protect this child because he is African American,’” replies Keller. “But 2,000 children a year are dying in their homes, and most of those are known to Child Protective Services.”

    Gupta-Kagan disagrees: “I don’t think I’ve seen any evidence that removing more children from parents saves lives. Child fatality numbers, unfortunately, have remained stubborn.”

    In 2023, more than 100,000 kids were taken from their homes. Still, about 2,000 die from abuse or neglect.

    Child welfare workers are overwhelmed.

    “Millions of CPS hotline calls coming in,” says Gupta-Kagan. “If you want to find the needle in the haystack, we have to stop putting so much hay on the stack.”

    Texas recently changed the definition of “neglect” to say that kids must be in “immediate” danger of harm before a child can be taken.

    As a result, Texas now has far fewer children removed from their homes.

    Keller calls that a mistake. “By the time a child is in imminent harm, they’ve already suffered so much trauma.”

    Keller, who has been a foster parent himself, wants more kids taken from their biological parents and put in foster homes sooner.

    “That child only gets one childhood. We need to make sure that that child is in a safe, loving, permanent home as quickly as we can.”

    That’s a noble goal. It’s horrible when kids are abused.

    But some foster parents are abusive.

    This is one conflict where I have no idea who is right.

    Government is best when it governs least.

    But when children are abused, we want government to step in.

    What do you think?

    COPYRIGHT 2025 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.

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    John Stossel

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  • The People Rooting for the End of IVF

    The People Rooting for the End of IVF

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    Updated at 4:10 p.m. ET on March 11, 2024

    Chaos reigns in Alabama—or at least in the Alabama world of reproductive health. Three weeks ago, the state’s supreme court ruled that embryos should be treated as children, thrusting the future of in vitro fertilization, and of thousands of would-be Alabama parents, into uncertainty. Last week, state lawmakers scrambled to pass a legislative fix to protect the right of prospective parents to seek IVF, but they did so without addressing the court’s existential questions about personhood.

    Meanwhile, those in the wider anti-abortion movement who oppose IVF are feeling hopeful. Whatever the outcome in Alabama, the situation has yanked the issue “into the public consciousness” nationwide, Aaron Kheriaty, a fellow at the conservative Ethics and Public Policy Center, told me. He and his allies object to IVF for the same reason that they object to abortion: Both procedures result, they believe, in the destruction of innocent life. And in an America without federal abortion protections, in which states will continue to redefine and recategorize what qualifies as life, more citizens will soon encounter what Kheriaty considers the moral hazards of IVF.

    In his ideal world, the anti-abortion movement would make ending IVF its new goal—the next frontier in a post-Roe society. The problem, of course, is that crossing that frontier will be bumpy, to say the least. IVF is extremely popular, and banning it is not—something President Joe Biden made a point of highlighting in his State of the Union speech last week. (A full 86 percent of Americans support keeping it legal, according to the latest polling.) “Even a lot of pro-lifers don’t want to touch this issue,” Kheriaty acknowledged. “It’s almost easier to talk about abortion.” But he and his allies see the Alabama ruling as a chance to start a national conversation about the morality of IVF—even if, at first, Americans don’t want to listen.

    After all, their movement has already won another unpopular, decades-long fight: With patience and dedication, pro-life activists succeeded in transforming abortion rights from a niche issue in religious circles to a mainstream cause—eventually making opposition to Roe a litmus test for Republican candidates. Perhaps, the thinking goes, pro-lifers could achieve the same with IVF.

    The typical IVF procedure goes like this: A doctor retrieves a number of eggs from a woman’s ovaries—maybe eight to 10—and fertilizes them with sperm in laboratory conditions. The fertilized eggs will grow in the lab for a few days, before one or more embryos will be selected for transfer to the woman’s uterus. A patient using IVF to get pregnant will likely have several embryos left over, and it’s up to the patient whether those extras are discarded, frozen for future use, or donated, either to research or to another couple.

    In the Alabama case, three couples were storing frozen embryos at an IVF clinic, where they were mistakenly destroyed. When the couples sued the clinic in a civil trial for the wrongful death of a child, the state supreme court ruled that they were entitled to damages, declaring in a novel interpretation of Alabama law that embryos qualify as children. The public’s response to the ruling can perhaps best be described as panicked. Two of the state’s major in-vitro-fertilization clinics immediately paused operations, citing uncertain legal liability, which disrupted many couples’ medical treatments and forced some out of state for care. Lawmakers across the country raced to clarify their position.

    But the ruling shouldn’t have come as such a shock, at least to the pro-life community. After all, “it’s a very morally consistent outcome” with what anti-abortion advocates have long argued—that life begins at conception—Andrew T. Walker, an ethics and public-theology professor at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, told me: “It’s the culmination of other pro-life arguments about human dignity, brought to the IVF domain.”

    The central criticism of IVF from Walker and others who share his opinion concerns the destruction of extra embryos, which they view as fully human. For some people, a degree of cognitive dissociation is required to look at a tiny embryo and see a human baby, which is a point that IVF defenders commonly make. (“I would invite them to try to change the diaper of an in vitro–fertilized egg,” Sean Tipton, the chief advocacy and policy officer at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, told me. More soberly, Kate Devine, the medical director of US Fertility, a network of reproduction-focused practices, told me that referring to an embryo as a baby “is unjust and inaccurate and threatens to withhold highly efficacious family-building treatments from people affected by the disease of infertility.”)

    To IVF critics, however, an embryo is just a very young person. “The only real difference between those frozen embryos and me sitting here having this conversation with you is time,” Katy Faust, the president of the anti-abortion nonprofit Them Before Us, told me. “If you believe that children have a right to life, and that life begins at conception, then ‘Big Fertility’ as an industry is responsible for more child deaths than the abortion industry.” Faust’s organization argues from a “children’s rights” perspective, meaning it also believes that IVF is wrong, in part, because it allows single women and homosexual couples to have babies, which deprives children of having both a mother and a father.

    This leads to the other major criticism of IVF: that the process itself is so unnatural that it devalues sex and treats children as a commodity. The argument to which many religious Americans subscribe is that having children is a “cooperative act among husband, wife, and God himself,” John M. Haas, a former president of the National Catholic Bioethics Center, has written. “Children, in the final analysis, should be begotten not made.” The secular version of that opinion is that IVF poses all kinds of thorny bioethical quandaries, including questions about the implications of preimplantation genetic testing and the selection for sex and other traits. When a doctor takes babies “out of the normal process of conception, lines them up in a row, and picks which is the best baby, that brings a eugenicist mindset into it that’s really destructive,” Leah Sargeant, a Catholic writer, told me. “There are big moral complications and red flags that aren’t being treated as such.”

    She and the others believe that now is the time to stop ignoring those red flags. The Alabama Supreme Court has offered a chance to teach people about IVF—and the implications they may not yet be aware of. Some couples who’ve undergone IVF don’t even consider the consequences “until they themselves have seven [extra] frozen embryos,” Faust said, “and now they go, ‘Oh, shit, what do we do?’” The more Americans learn about IVF, the less they’ll use it, opponents argue, just as Americans have broadly moved away from international adoption for ethical reasons. Walker would advise faith leaders to counsel couples against the process. “As I’ve talked with people, they’ve come around,” he said.

    The IVF opponents I interviewed all made clear that they sympathize with couples struggling with infertility. But they also believe that not all couples will be able to have biological children. “Not every way of pursuing children turns out to be a good way,” Sargeant said; people will have to accept that “you don’t have total control over whether you get one.”

    None of these arguments is going to be an applause line for anti-IVF campaigners in most parts of the country. “I know that my view is deeply unpopular,” Walker told me, with a laugh. The Alabama ruling left Republicans in disarray: Even some hard-line social conservatives in Congress, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, have tried to distance themselves from it, arguing that they oppose abortion but support IVF from a natalist position. Democrats, meanwhile, are already using the issue as a wedge: If, in the lead-up to the 2024 election, they can connect Republicans’ support for Dobbs to the possible end of IVF, they’ll have an even easier job painting the GOP as extreme on reproductive health and out of touch with the average American voter.

    Even so, the anti-IVF people I interviewed say, at least Americans would be talking about it. Talking, they believe, is the beginning of persuasion. And they’re prepared to be patient.

    Earlier this week, Kheriaty texted me with what he seems to take as evidence that his movement is already making progress. He sent a comment he’d gotten from a reader in response to his latest column about the perils of IVF. “This troubling dilemma wasn’t on top of mind when we embarked on our IVF path,” the reader had written. The clinic had explained what would happen to their unused embryos, the woman said, but she hadn’t realized the issue “would loom” so heavily over her afterward.


    This article originally identified John M. Haas as the president of the National Catholic Bioethics Center; in fact, he is a former president of the center.

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    Elaine Godfrey

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  • Advocates Deliver Over 540,000 Signatures Demanding Increased Regulation to Combat Child Sexual Abuse Online

    Advocates Deliver Over 540,000 Signatures Demanding Increased Regulation to Combat Child Sexual Abuse Online

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    The Petition’s Delivery to EU Institutions Marks the First Mass Public Outcry Calling for Legislators’ Attention Amid Global Debates

    Since 2022, proposed legislation to combat online child abuse — the Regulation to Prevent and Combat Child Sexual Abuse — has gone through a number of iterations, the latest of which child protection advocates view as a compromise too far. This echoes happenings globally, as legislation in countries like the United States and United Kingdom face roadblocks. However, with over 540,000 signatures, a petition submitted to the European Union demonstrates mass support to enact comprehensive legislation protecting children online.

    The Justice Initiative led the petition’s delivery in the European Parliament on December 6th attended by NGOs, survivors, and politicians including European Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson, Members of the European Parliament, former United States Ambassador-at-Large John Cotton Richmond, and a Spanish Council Presidency representative.

    Advocates urged lawmakers to champion the rights of children. As survivor Mie Kohyiama said, “The compromise in the European Parliament is a clear step back in the protection of children online.”

    In 2022, there were 32 million reports globally of suspected online child sexual exploitation. Powerful interest groups have done everything they can to weaken the proposal, but survivors say, “Enough is enough.” This stance is in line with results of recent EU-wide surveys such as the Eurobarometer and one conducted by ECPAT-NSPCC, whose results show an overwhelming majority of citizens support legislation to prevent, detect, and report child sexual abuse online.

    As global debates continue, the European Union has a crucial role to play. With a user base higher than the United States, as Guido Fluri of the Justice Initiative said, “What the EU decides to do about the sexual abuse images on the internet will have repercussions around the world. This is an opportunity for global child protection.”

    With significant events set to occur internationally including landmark testimony on the issue of online child sexual abuse and exploitation to the United States Senate Judiciary Committee from five of the largest tech CEOs slated for January 31st, the legislation faces another round of revisions. At the event, calling on governments to act, former U.S. Ambassador-at-Large to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons Richmond said, “We’re not going to stop this problem if we don’t hold the perpetrators, whether it be individuals or companies, accountable.”

    Ylva Johansson, European Commissioner for Home Affairs urged, “This is a decisive moment. The European Parliament and the Council of the European Union are deciding on the final text of the proposal. I urge you to listen to the silent majority, to listen to the survivors and support my proposal, to protect children from the worst crime imaginable.”

    Access photos from the event here.

    Source: The Justice Initiative

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  • Alexandra Laxmi Iyer Joins the Dads and Moms of Michigan Board

    Alexandra Laxmi Iyer Joins the Dads and Moms of Michigan Board

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    Press Release


    Aug 21, 2016

      Dads and Moms of Michigan is excited to announce a new board member, Alexandra Laxmi Iyer.

    As a seasoned “eventing” veteran, Alexandra is most passionate about driving positive change through her work. As a single mother and step-parent, Alexandra fully understands the impact our evolving family structures have on our children. It is her hope that she can help inspire communities to come together to protect our children from emotional abuse and protect a child’s right to access and receive love from all of their parents. “I am very excited to funnel my energy into such a positive organization that is committed to sowing the seeds of peaceful co-parenting relationships.” Iyer said.

    We’re excited to repeat the success of the Oakland County Parental Alienation Awareness Day rally into other areas of the State so that education on this important issue is available to more and ultimately, the lives of more children are positively impacted.

    John Langlois, Executive Director, Dads and Moms of Michigan

    Given her background, Iyer will be focusing on breathing life into the awareness rallies throughout the state of Michigan. With Iyer’s help, Dads and Moms of Michigan is already planning a Fall rally scheduled to take place on September 14, 2016 in Lansing and a second iteration of the Hostile Aggressive Parenting & Parental Alienation Awareness Day rally on April 25, 2017 in Oakland County.

    “We’re excited to repeat the success of the Oakland County Parental Alienation Awareness Day rally into other areas of the State so that education on this important issue is available to more and ultimately, the lives of more children are positively impacted.” Langlois said.

    For more information about upcoming rallies or to support a rally in your area as an event sponsor, please contact Alexandra Iyer, Dads and Moms of Michigan, laxmiiyera@dadsandmomosofmicigan.org. ​

    About Dads and Moms of Michigan
    Dads and Moms of Michigan is a nonprofit dedicated to bettering the lives of children by providing education and support to help parents create a “Conflict Free Zone” for their children. 

    Contact:
    John Langlois
    President/Executive Director
    langloisJ@dadsandmomsofmichigan.org

    Alexandra Laxmi Iyer
    Communications & PR
    laxmiiyera@dadsandmomsofmicihigan.org
    www.dadsandmomsofmichigan.org

    Source: Dads and Moms of Michigan

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  • New TV Network Tackles Parental Alienation

    New TV Network Tackles Parental Alienation

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    Press Release


    Jun 13, 2016

      Ryan Thomas, a victim of parental alienation, launched a TV Network last week to nurture the community of parents, children and families who are alienated from their children.

    RyanThomasTV.com aims to help viewers break through feelings of victimization and replace those emotions with actions for empowerment. “I wanted to create an entire network dedicated to providing real-life solutions and hope so that individuals, parents, and families can create true transformations in their life.” – Thomas said.​

    “I wanted to create an entire network dedicated to providing real-life solutions and hope so that individuals, parents, and families can create true transformations in their life.”

    Ryan Thomas

    RyanThomasTV.com features shows on overcoming adversity, improving communication, parental alienation, creating breakthroughs, reuniting advice, divorce aftermath, interviews with experts and more. The goal is to provide behind-the-scenes information not available anywhere else from Ryan’s unique and personal experience.

    “I am so grateful to you for helping me understand and try different ways to reconnect. I’ve read many books on PA and I think your program is the best source of information and tools I have found. I will always be grateful to you. You are changing my family tree for the better!!” Alienated Father, Josh said.

    By offering free access, Thomas hopes that his network not only nurtures the community of families affected by parental alienation but also impacts those who are unaware of this issue. “Parental alienation is not just about the parents who are suffering. Its damaging emotional abuse cripples our children. Alienation hides in plain sight pretending to be love, which is why parents and professionals must know how to recognize it and stop it.” Thomas said.

    Visit www.RyanThomasTV.com or www.RyanThomasSpeaks.com for videos, free-trainings, and more.​

    About Ryan Thomas
    Ryan was raised to believe his Dad never truly cared for him and that story was re-enforced and manufactured every moment of his life. With his perception and love for his dad constantly tainted, the stress become so unbearable that he severed the relationship as a young teenager.  In his late 20’s, Ryan reconnected with his dad and slowly built a new “friendship.” He found the most kind, loving man, and the best relationship of his life.

    Ryan is the author of several books including; Sabotaged: 3 Hidden Weapons of Parental Alienation and The Alienated Mind: Why Parental Alienation is So Powerful Through the Eyes of a Child. He is also the creator of “The Reconnect Formula,” a 5-week online video training program. Ryan also offers workshops, video series, and group coaching calls to give practical, real-life strategies to create breakthroughs. Ryan is leading a movement for the #RightToReunite children and their families, and to transform alienated parents into accepted parents.

    To learn more about Ryan Thomas or for speaking inquiries, please contact:
    Alexandra Laxmi Iyer​
    212-920-9133
    alexandra@ryanthomasspeaks.com

    Source: Ryan Thomas Speaks

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  • Curtis Lee Putman to Perform at the Michigan Parental Alienation Awareness Day Rally on April 25th.

    Curtis Lee Putman to Perform at the Michigan Parental Alienation Awareness Day Rally on April 25th.

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    Press Release



    updated: Apr 15, 2016

    ​​​​April 25th is Parental Alienation Awareness Day in the state of Michigan, as signed in a proclamation by Gov. Rick Snyder.  As interest builds for upcoming Parental Alienation Awareness Day Rally on April 25th, Dads and Moms of Michigan announced additions to the rally line-up this week.

    Michigan House Minority Leader, Rep. Tim Greimel (D-Auburn Hills) will be kicking off the event with a champagne toast and “Bubbles of Love” release.

    “It’s an honor to be part of this rally. Parental Alienation is one of the cruelest forms of child abuse, and arguably the least understood. Hopefully through awareness and accountability, we can force the necessary change in the family court system to end the enablement and encouragement by the system that’s sole focus should be protecting children from abuse.”

    Curtis Lee Putman, Musician & Songwriter

    One of the original pioneers in the study of parental alienation, Douglas Darnall, PhD, has provided a pre-recorded video message to inspire and encourage the rally-goers. Dr. Darnall has been advocating for children and families victimized by parental alienation for the past 25 years. An Ohio licensed psychologist since 1979, he worked as a court psychologist for Trumbull County Family Court for 21 years and is currently CEO at PsyCare, Inc. He has published Divorce Casualties: Understanding Parental Alienation, Divorce Casualties: Protecting your Children from Parental Alienation and Beyond Divorce Casualties: Reuniting the Alienated Family. He has appeared in court on over one hundred cases in twelve states as an expert witness involving custody, parental alienation, and other forensic matters. He has also appeared on the Montel Show and Court TV. He has given presentations at both State and National Conferences including the Missouri State Bar and North Dakota State Bar Associations, AFCC, Children’s Rights Council, and Local and State Bar Associations.

    Singer / Songwriter, Curtis Lee Putman, announced his support of the rally this week as well, offering his own story on parental alienation and a musical performance.

    “It’s an honor to be part of this rally. Parental Alienation is one of the cruelest forms of child abuse, and arguably the least understood. Hopefully through awareness and accountability, we can force the necessary change in the family court system to end the enablement and encouragement by the system that’s sole focus should be protecting children from abuse,” Putman said.

    Curtis Lee Putman’s country and blues music is as memorable, distinctive and genuine as Kalamazoo, MI, where he was born, raised and still calls home. Putman also works in Nashville and Montgomery while managing his namesake CLP Music Productions label. Putman has been recognized by the 13th Annual Independent Music Awards in a spotlight artist feature and is a coed favorite wherever he brings the party. Jeff Cummings from the Montgomery Area Musicians association described him as “what happens when Johnny Cash, Waylon and Hank Sr. collide with John Lee Hooker and Lightning Hopkins.” Putman is currently finishing his long awaited next release entitled “#MyTruth,” with the first single debuting at this event entitled, #TallintheSaddle.” This song speaks to the experience Curtis went through fighting for his life as an alienated father through a protracted divorce, extensive custody battle; culminating in being wrongly accused of child abuse, fighting the courts and system to the highest levels, and finally exonerating himself. The ultimate resolution has been a recent full reconciliation with his daughters who were and still are the center of his world and his heart.

    Joining Putman on stage will be his daughter, Sabrina, who is a testimony to reunification after alienation.

    Dr. Darnell & Putman join our previously announced speakers, Shelly Loomus, JD, MSW and John Langlois. “Together we can provide valuable information and inspiration for sowing the seeds of peaceful shared parenting. Children need both parents,” Dads and Moms of Michigan’s President & Executive Director, John Langlois said.

    The rally is scheduled to take place from 1:30 – 4:00pm ET at NOAH’S Event Venue, 3391 Cross Creek Pkwy Auburn Hills MI 48326.  Participants will enjoy passed hors d’oeuvres, refreshments and live music. To register for this free event, please visit https://parally.eventbrite.com. ​

    About Dads & Moms of Michigan
    Dads & Moms of Michigan is a nonprofit dedicated to bettering the lives of Children in Bi-Nuclear Families by providing education and support to help parents create a “Conflict Free Zone” for their children.

    ​Contact:
    John Langlois, President/Executive Director
    248-559-3237 
    langloisJ@dadsandmomsofmichigan.org
    www.dadsandmomsofmichigan.org

    Alexandra Iyer, Rally Event Director
    212-920-9133
    xahndra@gmail.com
    http://bit.ly/hap-pa

    Source: Dads and Moms of Michigan

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  • Announcing a Proclamation From the Governors Office Recognizing April 25th as Parental Alienation Awareness Day for the State of Michigan

    Announcing a Proclamation From the Governors Office Recognizing April 25th as Parental Alienation Awareness Day for the State of Michigan

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    Press Release


    Mar 29, 2016

    ​Bloomfield, MI, March 18, 2016 – With planning already begun for upcoming educational events for the month of April on the topic of Parental Alienation, Dads & Moms of Michigan has announced the support of Michigan governor Rick Snyder for recognizing April 25th, 2016 as Parental Alienation Awareness Day in the state of Michigan. Upcoming events are aimed to help educate parents with best practices to help create a conflict-free environment for children post-divorce. They include:

    Parental Alienation Seminar Part 1 with special guest Dahlia Berkovitz, PhD
    Date: April 13th, 2016 from 7:00 – 8:00pm ET
    Venue: Dads & Moms of Michigan offices located at 6443 Inkster, #290, Bloomfield, MI or participate online as well.

    “Dads and Moms of Michigan couldn’t be more thrilled with the progress that is being made in the area of Parental Alienation awareness. As an organization we have one goal in mind, to help parents provide a “Conflict Free Zone” for their children. We’re excited about the Governor’s recognition in our efforts to help drive more participation in the month of April as we continue to sow the seeds of peaceful Shared Parenting.”

    John Langlois, President & Executive Director, Dads and Moms of Michigan

    The 10th Annual Parental Alienation Awareness Day Rally with special guests including John Langlois, President/Executive Director of Dads and Moms of Michigan and keynote speaker, Shelly Loomus, JD, MSW, author of Winning Your High-Conflict Divorce: Strategies for Moms and Dads.
    Date: April 25th, 2016 from 1:30pm ET – 4:00pm ET
    Venue: NOAH’S Event Venue, 3391 Cross Creek Pkwy Auburn Hills MI 48326

    Shelly Loomus, JD, MSW, is an attorney with a dual degree in clinical social work and a trained family law mediator. After her own experience with a high-conflict divorce, she realized that litigation is only one of the many tools available to parents struggling to be free from the unrelenting hostility that characterizes high-conflict divorces. She uses her legal, clinical and mediation expertise to help parents manage chronic divorce and post-divorce related conflicts. She serves as a Board Member for Dads and Moms of Michigan and CCG Community Partners, LLC. She also serves on the advisory committee of the Women’s Divorce Resource Center.

    Parental Alienation Seminar Part 2 with special guest Dahlia Berkovitz, PhD
    Date: April 27th, 2016 from 7:00 – 8:00pm ET
    Venue: Dads & Moms of Michigan offices located at 6443 Inkster, #290, Bloomfield, MI or participate online as well.

    Dr. Berkovitz has a Doctorate degree in Marriage and Family Therapy from Michigan State University, College of Human Ecology, and a Masters degree in Clinical Social Work from Wayne State University. Dr. Berkovitz is an adjunct professor at Wayne State University, a member of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) and of the National Association of Social Workers (NASW).

    Topics covered include:

    • What is Alienation?
    • What is Parental Alienation?
    • What does the DSM-5 say about Parental Alienation?
    • What do the experts say about Parental Alienation?
    • How would you know if you were actually dealing with Parental Alienation
    • Rule out abusive behaviors by the supposed Alienated Parent
    • Attachment-Based Parental Alienation (C.A. Childress, Psy.D.)
    • Existing Programs & Support Available
    • High Road to Reunification (Dorcy Pruter)

    “Dads and Moms of Michigan couldn’t be more thrilled with the progress that is being made in the area of Parental Alienation awareness.  As an organization we have one goal in mind, to help parents provide a “Conflict Free Zone” for their children. We’re excited about the Governor’s recognition in our efforts to help drive more participation in the month of April as we continue to sow the seeds of peaceful Shared Parenting.” Dads & Moms of Michigan’s President & Executive Director, John Langlois said.

    For more information about participating in person or remotely at upcoming seminars and events, please visit www.dadsandmomsofmichigan.com.

    About Dads & Moms of Michigan
    Dads & Moms of Michigan is a nonprofit dedicated to bettering the lives of Children in Bi-Nuclear Families by providing education and support to help parents create a “Conflict Free Zone” for their children.

    Contact:
    John Langlois, President & Executive Director
    ​248-559-3237 
    langloisJ@dadsandmomsofmichigan.org
    www.dadsandmomsofmichigan.org

    Alexandra Iyer, Rally Event Director
    212-920-9133
    xahndra@gmail.com
    http://bit.ly/PAAdayMI​

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