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Monday, October 17, 2016

Custody Battles and Double-Standards

The court system is so contradicting in regards to their ruling of chains strifes. It is blatantly obvious that roughly judges are slanted against homo evokeuals and in favor of heterosexuals when decision making who should have custody of a child. The judicial branch is symbolized by a lady of justness holding a equilibrize denture blindfolded. The blindfold meaning that the court will find cases without being influenced by individualized feelings or political preferences. every(prenominal) federal judge takes an oath, I . . . do solemnly confirm that I will parcel out justice without respect to persons, and do equal right to the hapless and to the rich, and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge and practise all the duties incumbent upon me . . . downstairs the Constitution and laws of the United States, so help me God. After analyzing the courts rulings in the Bottoms v Bottoms and Weigand v Houghton cases, it was egest that homosexuality weighed down the scale of justice. The lady of justice did not seem to have a blind fold, but the decide sure did. They were blinded by the horrific thoughts of same sex couples causing them to lack the superpower to see the substantial facts in these cases.\nThe Bottoms v Bottoms custody battle involved Pamela Kay Bottoms, grandmother of the child, and Sharon Lynne Bottoms, the sapphic mother. Pamela Bottoms, the grandmother, did not see that her grandchild should be raised in a homosexual environment and filed for custody. The Weigand v Houghton case involved a custody dispute concerning an adolescent, Paul, surrounded by his Mother, Machelle, and his homosexual father, David. As say in the court opinion, thither are many factors that should be considered in weighing decisions regarding custody. Age, as well as health, evokeing skills, force to provide child care, appointment and employment responsibilities, physical and noetic health and age of the parents, perceptual constancy of t he home environment, and preference of the parent the child would...

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