• dariaanne BlogTalkRadio Share Show Widget Conserv. Rep Forum with Congreeman Terry Lee. http://bit.ly/5ImrFD
    • Saturday, November 28, 2009 07:31:03 PM  

Celebrating ‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’

In honor of the opening day of New Moon, the latest film in The Twilight Saga, we thought we ...

The Cheryl Behind the Cheryl

Known to many as the long-suffering (ex)wife of funnyman Larry David, the man behind Seinfeld, ...

BlogTalkRadio Host of the Week: Alfred McComber from...

By Christina Blodgett In our continuing effort to spotlight more members of the BlogTalkRadio ...

 

Your show will start playing after this message

Profile

J DeGolier Noetling

http://freeicanbe.info/speak.out.now


Country: United States

Language: English

Follow on Twitter

Visit on MySpace


Listeners

  • Torq64
  • dsguthrie
  • granniebebop
  • J DeGolier Noetling
  • Laughing Lady
  • Sunny Days
  • Coach Phil
  • D.A. (WDKK RADIO)
  • PrittyKatt
  • APONI
  • Intimate Conversatio
  • *Nikki*
  • Ms Blue
  • Bridgin The Gap
  • Leroy Harold Parrott
  • Showcase Host
  • sunhawk

Friends

  • AmericanHeroesRadio
  • Asperger Women Assoc
  • Author Autobahn
  • Red River Writers
  • Before Bedtime
  • Gary McCants
  • Hotel Infinity
  • Carolyn Ferris
  • Showcase Host
  • sunhawk
  • RealTalk~RealWoman
  • JohnCSweet

My Mama's Mustache & Other Inherited Stuff  

"The end of silence is this…light, life, laughter, liberty… oppression will not stand an end of silence." Janeen DeGolier Noetling (1953-?) The recipe for changing a life is simple; it is rarely easy. For myself, it seemed a slow trudge to nowhere. The main ingredient was the getting up each morning and putting one foot before the other; like a broken record, I got sick of it. I did it anyway.

  • Archived Blog Post

    Date / Time:

    Due Process Is Never The Law in Rigid Family Systems

    What was I being convicted of by the "family system?"



    "In the early years of the United States the terms law of the land and due process were used somewhat interchangeably. The 1776 Constitution of Maryland, for example, used the language of Magna Carta, including the law of the land phrase.[16] In New York, a statutory bill of rights was enacted in 1787, and it contained four different due process clauses.[17] Alexander Hamilton commented on the language of that New York bill of rights: "The words 'due process' have a precise technical import...."[18]

    New York was the only state that asked Congress to add "due process" language to the U.S. Constitution. New York ratified the U.S. Constitution and proposed the following amendment in 1788: "[N]o Person ought to be taken imprisoned or disseised of his freehold, or be exiled or deprived of his Privileges, Franchises, Life, Liberty or Property but by due process of Law."[19]

    In response to this proposal from New York, James Madison drafted a Due Process Clause for Congress.[20] Madison cut out some language, and inserted the word without, which had not been proposed by New York. Congress then adopted the exact wording that Madison proposed, after Madison explained that the Due Process Clause would not be sufficient to protect various other rights:

    Although I know whenever the great rights, the trial by jury, freedom of the press, or liberty of conscience, come in question in that body [Parliament], the invasion of them is resisted by able advocates, yet their Magna Charta does not contain any one provision for the security of those rights, respecting which the people of America are most alarmed.[20]
    No state or federal constitution in the U.S. had ever before utilized any "due process" wording, prior to 1791 when the federal Bill of Rights was ratified. However, when the U.S. Constitution took effect in 1789, it did contain a Supremacy Clause, which specified that the Constitution itself, and federal statutes enacted pursuant to the Constitution, would be the supreme "law of the land". As mentioned, in the early United States, the terms law of the land and due process were used somewhat interchangeably."

    Quoted from Wikepedia.


    Six Concepts
    Related to Family
    Structure*

    Value System

    Healthy Families: members find a niche within the family;
    members see value in belonging; capacity for symbolism;
    individuals find higher meaning in life.

    Unhealthy Families: value system is rigid or
    non-existent; people are perceived as bad;
    no acceptance of differing views.

    Boundaries

    Healthy Families: Ability to speak freely without fear of
    retaliation or punishment.

    Unhealthy Families: roles are unclear; minimal connection
    within a community; isolation; rigid roles and expectations

    Organization
    and Negotiating
    Skills

    Healthy Families: room for
    discussion in times of negotiating;
    spirit of camaraderie; tasks run
    smoothly; little stress.

    Unhealthy Families: tasks done
    with difficulty and inconsistently;
    repeated arguments;
    organizational structure
    maintained by control.

    Warmth, Joy
    and Humor

    Healthy Families: humor important bonding
    element; shared happy experiences; humor
    runs freely; allows members to feel at ease.

    Unhealthy Families: little or no shared
    happy memories; feel as though no one
    cares; humor at others expense; do not
    seek to comfort others.

    Freedom of
    Expression

    Healthy Families: lively discussion; accepted differences; love is
    not withdrawn due to differences; ambivalence and uncertainty
    accepted.

    Unhealthy Families: pressure to hide feelings; avoid adversity;
    range of feelings are unacceptable.

    Power and
    Intimacy

    Healthy Families: equal power in
    primary dyad, consideration of
    member viewpoints promotes
    intimacy.

    Unhealthy Families: little or no
    consideration for member feelings
    or opinions; usually one member
    dominates decision making.

    *Adapted from Peterson, G. (1996)
    by
    Family Systems Theory:
    Applications for PSA Casework
    Philip McCallion, Ph.D., ACSW
    Lisa A. Ferretti, LMSW
    Center for Excellence in Aging Services
    School of Social Welfare, University at Albany, State University of New
    York

Comments

There are no comments at this time.

Extras

Everything Else

Listen

 

Participate

 

Services and Terms

 

Corporate

 

BlogTalkRadio

 

© 2009 BlogTalkRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.