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Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Natalie Goodnow Promulgates A Child Welfare Propaganda Legal Defense For Faith Based Trafficking Of Tiny Humans In Michigan

Natalie Goodnow. Photo courtesy of the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty.
Natalie Goodnow
Child Welfare Propagandist
Why in the world would anyone want to promote the dismantling of civil rights?

Let us ask Natalie Goodnow of the American Enterprise Institute, my favorite lil think tank that can crank out some child welfare propaganda better than rest.

AEI is the home of Madame Maura Corrigan (said in a high British accent), the godhead of the implementation of privatization, which all started in child welfare.

Maura Corrigan likes to train people, so, of course, I wonder if she trained Natalie in this propaganda.

In this particular propaganda campaign to prepare for congressional hearings and the Michigan Auditor General report on privatization in child welfare, Natalie is defending Faith-Based Agencies, which just so happen to be all privatized.

The Michigan Children's Ombudsman, Orlene Hawks, who is still a few laps behind on what is going on, even expressed her concern about Michigan continuing to operate through privatization, so you know that is not working because we are just only talking about Faith-Based Agencies.

The reason she is using Michigan as her example is because privatization in child welfare started here, in Michigan, under John Engler.

Yes, the same Engler who has some issues over there at Michigan State University because child welfare privatization policies for the state came from there.

Yes, Natalie uses her talking points platform, in support of Faith-Based Agencies, to circumvent that Michigan's child welfare system which is still under federal court monitoring, of which I truly hope will go under federal receivership because the system is rife with fraud, as a legal defense because it comes from an extremely biased political think tank.

Yes, Natalie focuses on Michigan, the state where former U.S. Representative Hansen Clark formally requested the U.S. Attorney General to investigate Michigan's child welfare system, which just so happens to be privatized and faith-based.

((Sshhhh, you did not hear this from me but Hansen Clark was never supposed to win that election because the "Legal Geniuses" (trademark pending) tried to rig it but the people really, really liked Hansen and so do I.))

Back to Natalie.

Anyway, Natalie also uses Catholic Charities as one of her working examples to hold up her waning argument with some dry rotted crutches of arcane chattel law, to justify the fact that just because Catholic Social Services was so jacked up in Michigan when it was under Bureau of Children and Adult Licensing (BCAL), the regulatory oversight for child welfare, that the state, through privatization policies, whick was dismantled, by contracting out through privatization, whereby the Attorney General will do nothing to prosecute, sanction, contractually debar, revoke licensing, or even recover fraud, because it is a civil matter, dealing with a private corporation, which just so happens to be a non-profit, meaning you cannot FOIA or take any form of legal action because of one's membership in the population of "The Poors" (always said with clinched teeth), which means one cannot afford legal representation, absolving the state through an artificially created immunity,

Catholic Social Services was so jacked up, and I only speak from personal experiences, that it became a Corporate Shape Shifter and restructured under the corporate umbrella of Catholic Charities.

As a matter of fact, Catholic Charities is so jacked up, I was calling them out as far back as 2015 to be probed, and, I have a sneaky suspicion that they were, hence the upcoming congressional hearings because they are already doing the for-profit side.

See, the for-profit side of privatized child welfare organizations make their money through Social Impact Bonds on Wall Street.

The non-profit sides like to money launder, buy land and fund political campaigns.

I smell the collaborative work of George Bush, John Engler, Betsy DeVos and Maura Corrigan because Faith-Based was, and still is, bread and butter for their personal investment ventures,

This is Faith-Based child welfare operational mentality in Michigan:


These Faith-Based Agencies are nothing but residuals of the peculiar institution because the Emancipation Proclamation forced them to shift over to the charity model to promulgate the trafficking of tiny humans, to maximize revenues, of course.



Behold, the child welfare propaganda of Natalie Goodnow, if that is even her real name.

How do I know?

Because I am the original source and I smell fear.

I smell it whenever I see a desperate online propaganda campaign in child welfare.

You can spot the models so easily it is not even a challenge to me anymore.

She privatized her tweets because she is a private contractor, even though she is generating public policy through legal defensive propaganda.

This is going to get really nasty and it is coming back home to Michigan.

There are no civil rights in child welfare because it is privatized.

In the spirit of fuchsia...

The Role of Faith-Based Agencies in Child Welfare

For decades, the government has relied on private child-welfare providers, including faith-based agencies (FBAs), to help care for children in foster care. There are about 440,000 children in care right now, about a quarter of whom are waiting for adoption. In places like Illinois, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco, some FBAs have been forced to shut their doors because of their faith. Eighty members of Congress penned a letter on May 23 to President Trump urging him to protect faith-based child welfare providers. The future of FBAs in Michigan and Philadelphia are currently under threat.

In the big people world, we like to call this "decades long government relying upon private child welfare providers" privatization, Executive Order 12803 Infrastructure Privatization under George Bush, Sr.


The letter states:
“Child neglect, abuse, and abandonment are being fueled by the ongoing opioid epidemic, yet as more children are entering the foster care system we have fewer families available to provide safe and loving homes for them. ...
“We cannot allow history to repeat itself and shut out faith-based agencies doing crucial and quality work. Too much $$$ is at stake to place politics above the needs of our nation’s most vulnerable children. Members of Congress are working to develop legislative solutions. But this issue is so important that all branches of government must take responsible action.”
Members of Congress, the Executive Office, and the Judiciary are all working to develop solutions, but I do not think they will all be "legislative" solutions.(snicker).

*I did not archive that page.

Faith-based adoption agencies are too valuable to shut down

On May 18, Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer signed into a law a bill that would allow faith-based child welfare providers to continue serving vulnerable children and families in accordance with their sincerely held religious beliefs. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin signed a similar law on May 11. They join the ranks of seven other states that, over the last few years, have proactively protected FBAs that provide foster care and adoption services

lawsuit by the ACLU in Michigan — a state which currently protects FBAs — wants the state to stop allowing FBAs exemption from regulations that conflict with their faith. If the ACLU wins out, organizations like Catholic Charities would likely not be able to continue providing their services to vulnerable children.

ACLU sucks because it is constrained with their "token-box" check off system of class based animus certification future fundraising money laundering operations through their charitable partners in ignoring the fact that in child welfare, particularly in Faith-Based, there is the legal "Right To Lie" in foster care and adoption because they are immune from prosecution of false claims to the courts and to DHHS for cost reimbursements, in its stripping of civil rights.

My new report out for the Heritage Foundation looks at the important role of faith-based agencies (FBAs) in the child-welfare system. It also lays out what states would lose if many FBAs had to end their foster care and adoption services over regulations that conflicted with their sincerely held beliefs.  

Your report sucks and I salivate for the opportunity to pungently thrash you in a court of law, that way you are under oath and every time you lie or just regurgitate your child welfare propaganda in the record, I will be able to request to hold you in contempt, just by going through my databases that the world has access to with their thumbs on their hand held devices for real time castigation.

Heck, I bet I can get referrals on your for participating in some cover up racketeering activities, or civil rights violations, or just get you a scheduled ridicule your entire career in a public forum, of which I shall enshrine in the annals of history, all of your illustrious institutional instruction upon child welfare fraud.

Oh, I forgot, I also wrote a book.  You do know who is reading my book, right, Natalie?  If you do not, I strongly encourage you to go find out.

With a population of 325 million people — Hispanics, Christians, Asians, atheists, whites, Muslims, African Americans, Buddhists, Native Americans (and too many other religions, races, and ethnicities to list) — across 3,000 counties and two billion acres of intensely varied geography, the United States represents an incredibly diverse community. This is mirrored in a diverse set of providers that deliver human services to families across the nation, including foster and adoptive services. There are public, private, faith-based, and secular child-welfare agencies. They all abide by regulations and requirements set by their states, to ensure a certain standard of care for the children they serve. They all do important work. With the growing foster care and adoption needs of the country, there is plenty of room for all these agencies to roll up their sleeves and work together.

I just adore the use of these Linneaus based hierarchial classification taxonomies when dealing with lower level populations of "The Poors" (always said with clinched teeth). It is just a Faith-Based thang, to make you feel better about the filing of false claims and trafficking tiny humans, you know.

Forcing agencies out because of their faith leaves other agencies to absorb their caseloads — requiring more caseworkers, more foster families to recruit and train, and more resources to serve these additional children. That is especially tough when many agencies are already staggering under the influx of children into foster care over the last five years.

No one is forcing you to leave your faith.  We just want you to stop trafficking tiny humans and put down your imperialistic morality parade drums because all you are doing is running a proactive propaganda defensive campaign because you know you are going to face legal, public query, in the not so distant future.

While nationwide the number of children in foster care has increased by 10 percent from 2012 to 2016, several states saw growth of over 50 percent in that time, like Georgia, Minnesota, Mississippi, and New Hampshire. The number of kids in care waiting for adoption increased 15 percent nationwide from 2012 to 2016. One of the primary driving factors in this increase is the opioid crisis — which has only continued to worsen.

It has worsened because Faith-Based funding is for propaganda purposes, only.  Did I tell you Michigan is looking into Faith-Based funding in child welfare?  No?  I just did.

This has increased the number of foster homes needed. However, many states have actually seen their foster-home capacity decrease over the last few years — either because their number of foster homes is going down, or because the number of foster homes isn’t increasing fast enough to keep up with the growing numbers of children in foster care. People of faith are more likely to step forward for this role. Research has found that practicing Christians are much more likely to adopt and foster, or even consider fostering, compared to the general population.

The number of foster homes are going down because "The Poors" (always said with clinched teeth) do not qualify to be foster parents and most of them see a problem with the trafficking of tiny humans, or shall I just refer to its christian Faith-Based term of chattel.

There are also many examples of faith-based organizations and networks that excel at recruiting foster parents. The CALL in Arkansas helped recruit almost half the state’s foster families. Focus on the Family helped cut in half the number of children in Colorado waiting to be adopted. These are just two instances. Sometimes FBAs also do a better job at finding forever homes for populations that are traditionally harder to place, such as sibling groups and older youth. For example, 45 percent of all Catholic Charities adoptions were children with special needs in 2016.

Those trafficking tiny human networks are well established in the churches through Faith-Based funding.

FBAs are valuable partners for states and can help prevent children from languishing in care or aging out of the system without a permanent family. In a time of great need when there is a shortage of foster and adoptive families in many places, states that are looking to take full advantage of their local resources should embrace their faith communities. Likewise, faith networks and organizations should increase their efforts and commitment to families in need and help ensure that every child has a loving home.

I have a grand idea.  How about you stop stealing children, the land and the votes in the name of the tax exempt god?

Natalie Goodnow is a research fellow at the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty and a visiting fellow at the Independent Women's Forum.

Oh, Natalie, you are being mean to my Sweetie in your incipient attempt at developing a legal defense through your Faith-Based propaganda.

You do understand the moral of the story..."Do not be mean to my Sweetie, Period."

I await our public encounter.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

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