
Judge
Stahlin Helps His Friends to Replace Parents

August 27, 2001
It’s no wonder that poor David Luisi
was not able to convince the judge that the social workers
were severely damaging
his children.
He had problems because Judge Stahlin has
been working exclusively with social workers ever since he
graduated from law school. There is nothing wrong with that
except that as a judge he is always judging what those social
workers have done or said. How can he be independent? He’s
part of the system. A judge is supposed to be independent and
it is painfully clear that Jeremy Stahlin is not.
A judge is not supposed to be a friend to
any of the participants in a trial and yet all of the social
workers and other experts who appear before him every day of
the week are his friends. What chance does anyone have if he
tries to fight those social workers?
This judge has been working all of his
life with those who believe that government should become much
more involved in raising children because the parents are not
capable.
He says he has been working in “child
welfare law” ever since he graduated from Boston College Law
School in 1974.
Judge Stahlin is now on the Board of
Directors of Child Care Resource Center, Inc. which tries to
help children in many ways, including lobbying for what it
believes will help children. The only problem is that everyone
does not necessarily agree with those social workers as to
what is best for our children. But these people say on their
website (www.ccrcinc.org) that they want everyone to be
lobbying for their goals at the Statehouse and elsewhere.
A judge should not be doing this type of
thing. It is unethical for a judge to do so. But it shows the
arrogance that exists. They believe that what they are doing
is divinely inspired and everyone with a sane mind must agree.
Before he was appointed to the bench,
Judge Stahlin was a staff attorney at Boston Children’s
Service Association for seven years. This organization is
proud that it was the first “private sector agency to
contract with the Commonwealth’s Department of Public
Welfare,” which was the beginning of the end of the private,
charitable agencies which had served Massachusetts for over a
hundred years. It merged last year with the Home for Little
Wanderers.
This is an excellent example of how the
social workers have consumed us. They now include judges on
their staff and they are steadily replacing mothers and
fathers as the ones who raise the children.
There are no independent judges to
control the DSS agency as there used to be until recent years.
And these judges combine with the many women
at DSS and at the poverty lawyers who make no secret of the fact
that they do not like men.
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