Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Immigration Canada Not Revealing Risks To Immigrants Looking for Citizenship

By Martin Wong


What Immigration Canada is not telling you about: Canada's Family Laws are not the same as laws in other places. After you read this, ask your family lawyer to clarify this, not your immigration barrister (England) or immigration agent. They may not always tell you all of the bad with all the good about citizenship and immigration to Canada.

In their present form, the laws are set against reasonable treatment of families struck by the unfortunate yet natural occurrence of separation or divorce. Family Laws in Canada are so antagonistic to those family members snared by the court system that these laws could be in part responsible for a serious decline in immigrants seeking permanent residence in Canada.

In 1997, the Federal Liberal Government made significant changes to Family Law in Canada. The Federal Liberal Government persuaded the Provinces to immediately adopt the same laws.

Families are ruined by Canada's Family Laws. Children, former spouses, plus other family members suffer under the force of the family courts, including, grandparents, aunts and uncles, sisters and brothers of fathers over child visitation restrictions.

Children have become increasingly implicated as "pawns" in contrived conflicts. The conflicts are set up by the laws and then aggravated by businesses (legal corporations, paralegals, consultants). Some dads are ordered by the court to never see their children or limit visits to 2 (2) times each month. Some children suffer lifetime psychoses and drift into lives of addiction or crime.

Men who divorce are banished to a second-rate class. These men are maltreated by courts like Black Americans of the 1960's were treated by what was called "Southern Justice." Absent dads are tracked down and prosecuted as if they're major and dangerous offendors.

Since 1998, many specialists have presented positive reforms to the Governments of the Day. These are experts in sociology, child psychology, family therapy and pro-family legal experts, and have included a Special Parliamentary Joint Council.

To date, all the positive suggestions presented to all governments of the day have been ignored. After adequate time (more than ten years) to learn from the errors that were made at the outset, the Canadian and Provincial governments permit the current situation to endure.




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