| | The only thing I could suggest would be to know who the heck you're voting for, including judges. Learn about the issues, and be vocal about them. Opinions like Rhode's need to be in the public's face all the time, but just the opposite is true. Op ed's and mass media rarely, if ever, talk about the corruption that naturally springs from developing legislation geared toward directly controlling the lives of individuals. Right now, Rhodes is one small voice in huge wilderness of guilt.
There is a documentary made about the issue, but, of course, it's not under wide release. I'm willing to bet even PBS is nervous about buying and broadcasting something as unpopular as challenging family court and family law.
Website for the documentary is www.supportthemovie.com
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