A sign of things to come in American courts? Not if I have anything to do with it...

By Skycop150 Posted in Comments (2) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

This article appeared on FoxNew.com

I found it tonight, and I was thinking to myself, that this is the type of court system that Justice Kennedy and his ilk, want in this country. The decision our Federal courts and even many State courts are making mirror this type of big brother, I know what's best for you and your families --and you will like IT!

Courts here in this country need to realize that Americans don't want this type of a judiciary. In fact, this isn't a judiciary at all; it is nothing more than an abuse of power.

I apologize to the readers of this blog if it seems like I have been hammering away at this repeatedly of late, but this is just too important of an issue to let go by the wayside.

Write your representatives and demand action on the recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Tell them that you don't agree with the court, and that you don't want a Supreme Court that acts in its own best interests, and not the best interests of the American people.

A Canadian court has overturned a father's punishment for his daughter after she refused to stay off the Internet, his attorney said Wednesday.
The girl, 12, took her father to Quebec Superior Court after he refused to allow her to go on a school trip for chatting on Web sites and then posting "inappropriate" pictures of herself online using a friend's computer, AFP reported.
The punishment was for the girl's "own protection," according to the father's attorney, Kim Beaudoin, who is appealing the ruling.
"She's a child," Beaudoin told AFP. "At her age, children test their limits and it's up to their parent to set boundaries. I started an appeal of the decision today to reestablish parental
authority, and to ensure that this case doesn't set a precedent."
Otherwise, she continued, "Parents are going to be walking on egg shells from now on."
According to court documents, the girl's Internet usage was the latest in a rash of disciplinary problems. But Justice Suzanne Tessier, who was presiding over the case, found the punishment too severe.

 
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