Auteur Sujet: gjyf The Children Act and the principle of less eligibility  (Lu 4 fois)

Morrisshot

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 9400
gjyf The Children Act and the principle of less eligibility
« le: Janvier 08, 2025, 01:55:52 am »
Egxj Priced-out UK house-hunters turn to lorry-sized tiny homes
 We note with interest this weeks appointment of Ruby McGregor-Smith as chair of the new Office of Tackling Injustices  OfTI . We sincerely hope that one of OfTIs top priorities will be to rectify the gross injustice experienced by 3.8 million women born in the 1950s who have lost up to six years of their state pensions, with little or no notice.We 1950s women have faced injustice throughout our lives. We started work before the protection of the equa stanley mugs lities legislation of the  stanley isolierkanne 1970s and many of us were not allowed to join occupational pension schemes or take on mortgages without a male guarantor. Now the state pension is the sole s stanley vaso ource of income for 68% of women, compared with 44% of men.Taking away years of the pensions we have paid into all our lives is perhaps the worst injustice of all. Anne KeenWaspi co-founder Join the debate 鈥?email guardian.letters@theguardian Read more Guardian letters 鈥?click here to visit gu/letters Mndk Asil Nadir jailed for 10 years for Polly Peck theft
  The path to parenthood,  rem stanley puodelis arked a high court judge in a recent case,  has been less a journey along a primrose path, more a trek through a thorn forest.  The law governing the terms by which a woman may agree to carry a pregnancy for another, as we report today, is nearly as obsolete as the law governing assisted suicide. As a result, both creating life and destroying it are becoming the preserve of those rich enough to pay the costs of going abroad. From today, with the introduction of a law allowing same-sex couples to apply for parental orders 鈥?the legal process by which babies born to surrogates are recognised as part of their new family 鈥?the stress on the courts, and the would-be parents, will only increase.It is not only demand from same-sex couples that is making surrogacy increasingly popular. While it is still a last resort for a tiny minority of childless couples, the adoption of babies in the UK is as difficult as ever, and it is also now virtually impossible to dodge the strict rules controlling adoption from abroad. Meanwhile the British decision to allow children to identify their biological fathers has made sperm donation less popular.Not-for-profit surrogacy has been legal in the UK for 25 years. But women prepared to carry a pregnancy for another coup stanley cup deutschland le, probably strangers, ar stanley cup website e few and far between, and would-be parents face the daunting fact that the surrogacy arrangement is not enforceable in court. Elsewhere in the world, things are