Thursday, January 24, 2008

Access Right to Associate

g. ACCESS RIGHT TO ASSOCIATE
Note that all parts highlighted in bold is what is illegally omitted from our laws and enabling
secret war crime. Reading the laws by skipping the bolded wording is roughly how our laws
read at the present time.



Access laws seem to remove or simply disregard the rights of the original parents and families and at the same time do not appear to safeguard or bar against access by those, especially criminal organizations, who are holding an unlawful intent towards the child, or to the family or nation through unjust interference with children.


20. CLRA -- (2) RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES -- A person who became inherently or lawfully entitled to custody of a child has the rights to full access and association with the child and the right to hold responsibilities of a parent in respect of the person of the child and must be granted protection to exercise those rights, responsibilities and parental protections reasonably and responsibly in the best interest of the child.
(5) ACCESS -- Lawful entitlements of access to a child may include i. the right to raise the child in a common household as a member of the family, ii. the right to visit with and be visited by the child, and iii. the same right as a parent to make inquiries and to be given information as to the religious groups, organizations and moral principles the child would be subjected to and including health, education, and general welfare issues of the child.

21. CLRA -- APPLICATION FOR ORDER -- A parent of a native multicultural and Canadian child or any other person, who is a true multicultural native or Canadian person who has demonstrated a settled lawful intention uncompromised by divided allegiances, unjustifiably separate or secret organizations or societies, sworn or otherwise and to treat the child as a child of his or her own family and respect the child’s lawful rights as a person; may apply to a court for an order respecting custody if,
(a) it is shown by evidence and in a court that has exercised equal benefit of law that the child is in need of protection under Part III (Child Protection Act);
(b) or based on evidence shown of aspects of the incidents of custody of the child that would cause a specific negative impact on the child’s development or safety,
(c) the person, agency, service or organization instigating or applying has i. obtained lawful possession of the child, ii. has developed a parental bond with the child prior to the time the issues of custody arose or iii. has a genuine, lawful and healthy interest in caring for the child;
(d) there was a settled intent shown to be a family member to the child; and or
(e) the child desires or has the right to variations of parental rights and options yet to be enforced or recognized by reasonably adapted law to multicultural native modern society;


69. CFSA: APPEAL -- (3) CARE AND CUSTODY PENDING APPEAL -- Where a decision regarding the care and custody of a child is appealed on viable grounds under subsection (1), execution of the decision appealed from shall be automatically stayed and the child shall remain in the care of the status quo without prejudice to the parties in access or any other issues in dispute or outstanding until,
(a) the appeal and disputed matters are completed concluded; and or
(b) appeal deadlines have been aired or expired and without known intensions of any parties to make applications of extensions of time;
(c) the child and original or biological parents have the right to, upon willingness and shall be afforded the means to re-untie, whichever is respecting the child's rights and at the earliest possible date regardless of ongoing matters, in equal benefit of weight of relationship to the child in the ongoing decisions.
(4) TEMPORTARY ORDER -- The Superior Court of Justice may, in the child's best interests, make a temporary order for the child's care and custody pending final disposition of the appeal, if a motion is filed that the "status quo" is unable to meet the required needs of the child requiring an order for relief of issues or placing the child in a place of secure custody as defined in Part IV (Young offenders) or a place of secure custody as defined in that Part that has not been designated as a place of safety, and the court may, on any party's motion before the final disposition of the appeal, vary or terminate the order or make a further order.
(5) EXTENSION OF TIME WHERE CHILD PLACED FOR ADOPTION -- An extension of time for an appeal shall be granted in matters where an affected party is "in dispute" concerning the constitutional validity of limitations, lack of legal "status" and protections afforded or adversarial processes or conditions imposed and considering the magnitude of the issues affecting any Appellant, including a child where the child may not have been placed for adoption under processes of reasonable law and Part VII (Adoption).

143. CFSA: ACCESS AFTER ORDERS -- (1) Where a child is placed for adoption by a society or licensee, under reasonable processes of law every order or need respecting access with the child is to be determined on the merits, wishes and rights of the parties of whom access issues affect.
(2) NO INTERFERENCE ETC., WITH CHILD IN PLACEMENT -- Where a protection, access, wardship or adoption order has been made or a child has been lawfully placed for adoption by a society or licensee , no person, agency or organization shall,
(a) interfere with or infringe on the freedoms, protections or rights of or misguide the child; or
(b) for the purpose to misguide or interfere with the freedoms, protections or rights of the child, stalk, slander, commit mischief against, visit or communicate with the child, original parents, their associates or with the person with whom holds lawful care and custody.
(c) for the purposes of interfering with original parents misguide or infringe on freedoms, protection or rights or cause prejudice by action or inaction to the position of the child.

158. CFSA: DEFINITION -- (1) In this section, "adopted child" means a person who was adopted in Ontario by proper and reasonable processes of law.
(2) STATIS OF ADOPTED CHILD -- For all purposes of law, as of the date of the making of adoption order,
(a) the adopted child becomes a child of the adoptive parent and the adoptive parent becomes a parent of the adopted child; and
(b) the adopted child can choose to maintain access or associate with their original parents or the person/s who were his or her lawful parents before the adoption order was made;
(c) the adoptive parents shall have custody, care and control of the child as if the adopted child had been born to the adoptive parent/s,
(3) HOW RELATIONSHIP DETERMINED -- The relationship to one another of all persons, including the adopted child, the adoptive parent, the kindred of the adopting parent, the parent before the adoption order was made and the kindred of that former parent shall for purposes be determined in accordance with subsection (2).

160. (CFSA?) ORDER FOR ACCESS BY BIRTH PARENT, ETC. -- (1) Where an order for the adoption of a child has been made under this Part a court shall make an order upon application under the Part concerning access to the child by.
(a) a biological, original, intended or birth parent; or
(b) an acting or fit member of a biological or birth parent's family.
(2) DEFINITION -- In this section, "biological, original or birth parent" has the same meaning as in section 166.

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