Let me have another go and try to seperate everything properly
Apologies for the above all scrunched up post, hopefully this is easier to follow (?):
"My attitude towards "professionals" who advise UK courts nowadays is certainly coloured by my experience when I encountered them twenty years ago (though their predecessors helped me maintain contact with my daughter ten years earlier).
However, somewhere on this forum I will have mentioned a meeting I attended at Westminster organised by our UK Conservative party where the feeling in the room against those professionals across all the disparate groups attending was so strong they were not invited to attend the meeting on the subject of proposed changes to family law (incidentally I spoke to Theresa May briefly, then present as "shadow Home secretary").
In my days campaigning for fathers/parents rights I've encountered at least one professional on a site for parents/fathers who used the forum name "Solomon" (probably to indicate a level of wisdom - she suggested the famous case adjudicated by King Solomon had a flaw because the king had threatened or abused the child by proposing to cut the child in half and share it between the two women, though how else he'd have discovered the true mother otherwise, before DNA tests etc. she didn't explain). In the short discussion I had with "Solomon" I said if I was acting as a court welfare officer and I had a father before me trying to maintain his relationship with his child I'd be tempted to give him the benefit of any doubt, so long as there is no risk of harm to the child, but in doing so I acknowledged that I might not "strictly be following the criteria of always putting the child's interests first".
Recently I've encountered a few others who say they work in child protection services in the UK or at least used to do so (or at least they used to), and once again arguments you've seen me put forward here divide us, as I'm sure wont surprise you. I try to add to my suggestions of the very limited changes I'd like to see in family law that if the government thought more children would be harmed by my suggestions than helped by them that that would defeat my argument to replace the child's best interests as the sole consideration for the UK family courts in some circumstances.
In our brief discussion here I'd assumed that my follow up comment that you'd be happy having professionals interviewing (or peering/prying as I would call it) so long as they were following your strict guidelines and rules, covered a limitation as to how far they could/should go. If I sound as though I take this subject personally it is because I do.
I hope you don't mind my asking you a question which I think you might struggle to answer, and it is one that I once posed to the head of the court welfare service in Wales at a father's campaign meeting in Cardiff. I asked him "if he could envisage his not having contact with his own children not being in their best interests?"
His reply was that "Yes he could, if he had been abusing his children!" Unfortunately the man didn't get an easy ride after that from a few other fathers who picked up on the comment that the head of the service supposed to be protecting children could say he could envisage harming them (I hope I'm not twisting his words there). In every other way this man behaved in a thoroughly professional manner, so much so that whatever evidence he might present to a court would be bound to hold sway over the possibly disjointed ramblings of a father seeing his contact with his children removed."
Finally here is another aspect of our debate where the good and great of the UK parliament are having their say:
https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commo...2FFE7F10/SexualHarassmentAndViolenceInSchools
This is taken from the UK parliament record "Hansard" this week, where the Children's minister Anne Milton said something about all the challenges young people faced nowadays like "who to have sex with" and she didn't say anything about the need or desirability to love the person concerned.
Anne Milton quote:
"I have not covered all the points I would have liked to address, but I just want to say that I do not consider myself to be an inbetweener — I think I am a born-again feminist. I do not think that the House of Commons is sexist; I think it just smells of boys a bit, to be honest. When I was public health Minister and I had responsibility for sexual health, what struck me more than anything when reflecting back over 40 years was how very much more complicated life is for today’s young people.
Young people have to make decisions on a far more complex set of choices than I ever had to make. For me, it was just about smoking and drinking, and how much to do of both. Now it is about taking club drugs, being on the pill, using a condom to protect oneself from STIs, who to have sex with—and where and when—and the risks of going home with somebody. If we overlay that with everything that is on social media, all the pornography that is freely available, all the coercive sexual behaviour that we know goes on in schools, and sexual assault and rape in or outside the classroom, it is absolutely clear that we have much more to do to make young people more resilient and able to resist the challenges they face. There is no doubt that there is an urgency to do exactly that."