ThisAs a child of divorced parents, I am quite against this. As many have said before me, an unhappy marriage is far worse than a divorce, no matter how messy it may be.
ThisAs a child of divorced parents, I am quite against this. As many have said before me, an unhappy marriage is far worse than a divorce, no matter how messy it may be.
I think your language 'socially ruin' is exaggerated, but not without merit. Being divorced isnt exactly a credit to you; it shows a profound failure in your personal life that could spill over into other areas - like an employer considering your position re reliability, control etc. It's not fair that one partner is able to inflict this damage on another for any reason. The other big issue is the children who need both parents and, left to themselves/without law, parents are too selfish to realise this until it's too late and the children grow up to hate them and view the world in similar uncompromisingly selfish termsIt takes two to make a relationship work, if one wants out, the other has no choice but to let him/her leave. How does this socially ruin the other partner?
Rick Feneley said:PICTURE this: a husband so desperate to escape an unhappy marriage that he commits fraud to "expose" himself in an act of infidelity. He hires a prostitute to act as his lover and a private investigator to burst into a motel room and photograph them in flagrante delicto.
Australia's private investigators can recall the boom days of a seedy, sordid business, when a spouse would go to such extremes to get a divorce. Until the arrival of no-fault divorce laws in 1975, a marriage could not be dissolved unless one spouse was found, in effect, to be the guilty party. Commonly it was for adultery, more often for desertion. Otherwise cruelty, drunkenness, imprisonment or insanity might be grounds for divorce.
Now Tony Abbott , the prominent Liberal and Catholic, wants to turn back the clock.
And what about the even more tawdry business of entrapment? A loveless marriage exists and partners have a very strong incentive to push their partner to adultery. Culminating of course in one partner hiring a private investigator / prostitute to lure their partner into infidelity.Hahaha. If they want to destroy their own reputation like that, then let them. The point is that marriage should be srs business. A party to a business contract cant withdraw for whatever reason he/she likes. How is marriage, involving the most fundamental relationships of a society, less important?
Wait, so is Abbott just proposing to make fault-based divorce optional upon registration? That's weak as bru.Mr Abbott's plan would see heterosexual couples offered an alternative to the current law allowing divorce after a 12-month separation.
"The point I make in the book is that a society that is moving towards some kind of recognition of gay unions, for instance, is surely capable of providing additional recognition to what might be thought of as traditional marriage," Mr Abbott told Fairfax newspapers.
"Something akin to a Matrimonial Causes Act marriage ought to be an option for people who would like it.
"Even though [marriage] is probably the most important commitment that any human being can make, in fact there are many, many contracts which are harder to enter and harder to get out of than this one."
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But Mr Dowding does not think there is any room for Mr Abbott's argument in Australian politics.
"I don't like people who are right-wing judgemental Catholics trying to bring their religious politics into Australian life," he said.
"We're not a bunch of Americans. We don't go round with our politicians pretending to be deeply religious and demanding that everyone else be while they go around committing adultery on the side, as they do in America.
"And we don't want to be in a position where people with right-wing and intolerant attitudes, like Tony Abbott, control what people believe.
Same here. However, although I would probably be psychologically better off due to there being less fights etc. (WW3, srsly), in a practical/physical sense it's an absolute pain in the arse having divorced parents, especially with shared custody (half my stuff in two different houses, transportation problems, having to get double of stuff like school uniforms etc.).As a child of divorced parents, I am quite against this. As many have said before me, an unhappy marriage is far worse than a divorce, no matter how messy it may be.
Best excuse for handing in homework late or wearing the wrong uniform tho, amirite?Yeah, it's pretty damn annoying. I stay at either house for half of the week, and I always forget where my stuff is. It shits me to christmas when I forget school books. Still better than dealing with fighting parents though.
That would only apply if the proposal was opt-out not opt-in.Yeah, I suppose that it would have a similar 'pre-nup' problem, as it would be seen as the most hard-core marriage you can get and, I assume, most couples about to wed are sure that the marriage will last forever, or will at least be reluctant to acknowledge that they dont see the union lasting long (why get married then?). Going for the current, weaker form of marriage would be awkward.
I therefore resupport this push and the subtle moral manipulation therein. Right-wing Catholics ftw