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I pretty sure alimony is now about the higher earning former spouse providing financial support to the lower earning former spouse until he or she gets married regardless of gender. Is this mentioned in this article. I mean it would not make sense for the poorer man to give money to his richer ex-wife.The Shadow Treasurer (talk)11:51, 18 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]
This article is, as far as I can see, only about US law. But I cannot se it mentioned anywere, rather it states in the beginning that alimony "is an obligation established by law in many countries", specifying that the article might be about alimony in general on a world-wide scale. The rest of the article, though, seems to be about US law only even if it is not explicitly stated. I don't know if the article should be about US law only, but if it should, it must be specified, and if it shouldn't, it must be rewritten to explicitly state what parts of the article are specific for US law. I don't have enough knowledge to do anything about the article myself, but I added the the globalize/USA template to the article.212.181.133.11611:26, 1 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hi her, I heard, that if your marriage's year and your Age are together hit 65 Years, you are automaticlly get Alimony for live!Is that treu?—Precedingunsigned comment added byScheiz live (talk •contribs)16:16, 5 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I'm annoyed after reading this article. Wikipedia is a global site and yet this article repeatedly lapses into sections written as though the U.S.A. is the only country in the world. Even when other countries are mentioned, it's written like an off-the-cuff remark meant to satisfy the hoi polloi. Why does it only seem to be Americans who do this? I've never experienced an article that assumes Serbia is the only country or that South Africa is the only country...Owen214 (talk)09:33, 9 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The treatment of non-U.S. content betrays an overwhelmingly U.S-centric perspective. The most objectionable infraction is probably 'English Common Law' getting a ~5 line mention which is subsumed under the heading "Alimony reform in the United States." Since the paragraph discusses legal reform in England it is not only improperly titled but entirely irrelevant to the section; the implication - however unintentional - is that English law is in some way a subset of U.S. law.92.29.141.212 (talk)16:30, 1 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
I personally would like to see a section of this pertaining to UK law information on this seems hard to come by and its kind of a fairly important matter for a lot of people— Precedingunsigned comment added by87.102.82.115 (talk)21:24, 24 April 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Is it possible for someone to waive their right to spousal support and then 2 1/2 years after the marriage ask for it and get it?
Ok,can a wife (party A) who has full custody of their teenage child (or child whatever the case may be) and be asked to pay allimony cause they made more money then the other? Also is ones retirement/pension be considered in a alimony case if its thought one won't live to enjoy and/or use their retirement?
Alimony is prositution in arears, where the courts establish the fees.
Alimony is an awful lot like Involuntary Servitude.207.5.194.240 (talk)22:17, 27 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Alimony reflects traditional views of marriage that males that must pay for wives, even after the termination of the marriage contract.Why is the fundamental gender dynamic of the assumption of male responsibilityas a general rule not addressed in this article?Dogru14418:39, 9 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I came to this page after reading about the huge divorce judgment that Heather Mills got from Paul McCartney and wondering about the reasoning behind this. I'm sure this page gets lots of visitors every time there's a celebrity divorce and a big alimony payment is awarded, so wouldn't it make sense to have an explanation of the historical circumstances and legal reasoning surrounding alimony laws?—Precedingunsigned comment added by71.201.191.23 (talk)23:26, 22 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Child support is listed as being an obligation of the non-custodial spouse, but in shared or joint custody situations, this is not the case - child support is still usually required by the courts, and paid by the parent with the higher income at the time of the divorce to the one with the lower income. I will think how to word this, and if no one kvetches, I will change the child-support sentance. --Fish-man19:39, 5 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]
One issue with child support and alimony is the state will enforce both as "support" if they are ordered at the same time. For instance, if a Court orders $100 in child support and $4,000 in alimony, which is not unusual because alimony is a transfer of income from one party to another. So in effect most, if not all, state enforcement bodies will enforce both streams of payments. What this creates is a perception of claim of the "deadbeat" name. Because if no alimony is ordered , then child support would be nominal or capped by state guidelines, as an example $1,000/mth. So if the paying spouse pays $2,000/mth for 5 years, that paying spouse would be still in arrears of $120,000, and still be identified as a "deadbeat" by local law enforcement and state agencies. On the otherhand, if no child support is ordered but alimony is ordered, then the alimony is not enforecable by the state. A case recently reversed in Todd Nadrich v. Renee Nadrich, all temporary support, alimony, and child support required reversal because the order did not take into account the former husband's living expenses, noted in opionin by the Florida 4th DCA. Basically this case is complicated by the fact, pending the appeals court decision, the former husband Todd Nadrich, was subjected too a 100% wage income deduction order, an equitable lien on his home and the forced sale of the property, also reversed. However after all said and done, the income is gone, the property was sold and the former husband could not even pay for transportation to work or even the basic needs of the children while the former wife, Renee Nadrich, had agreed to a substantial timesharing schedule. It is apperant the laws need to be changed. Every state needs to adopt alimony guidelines, as in a recent case in Florida denotes, alimony is similar to winning the lottery.Ibtodd (talk)14:50, 23 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I would like to add subsequent clarifications to the factors, perhaps in a lower section - I will sandbox changes here, and look for any comments
(Sandbox removed)
Please comment... --Fish-man20:32, 5 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]
نفقه
Please do not add commercial links —or links to your own private websites — to Wikipedia.Wikipedia is not a vehicle foradvertising or a mere collection ofexternal links. See thewelcome page if you would like to learn more about contributing to our encyclopedia. Thanks.Titoxd(?!? -did you read this?)04:40, 18 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, I was wondering about that....I'm removing the link.Joshcating14:42, 1 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This page has been the target of multiple different vandals over the past few days. Anybody have any ideas on how to resolve this?Xnuala03:13, 12 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The paragraph in question is obviously vandalism and is definitely not written from a npov. I think we should request semi-protection. Almost all of the edits that have added the vandalism or reverted it back are from unregistered users.Masciare00:27, 14 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Agree, you can request hereWikipedia:Requests for page protection--Hu1200:52, 14 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I requested semi-protection for this article. We'll have to wait and see if it is approved.Masciare02:52, 14 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I had a bad divorse. I couldn't collect child support or alimony because my x filed for bankruptsy. My x worked for cash at his uncle business, the district attorney went to the place of business and bought a spark plug to prove he was working. My x told the judge he was just helping out for the day. The judge believed my x. Now some years later my x has a nice house, cars and a 6 figure income, just like before our divorse. We were married for 16 years so the 10 year rule applies for lifetime alimony in California. So can I file today, I have become disabled as well.—Precedingunsigned comment added by173.67.123.141 (talk)23:18, 6 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Do you think anything should be written about all the murders that occur, usually of wives, so alimony wouldn't have to be paid? Many get away with the murders because it was made to look like suicide or robbery or many other things?Stars4change (talk)04:51, 9 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
That's a good point, I think there should indeed be a section about the effects of this law—Precedingunsigned comment added byOwen214 (talk •contribs)09:37, 9 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Is it worth mentioning that alimony is actually a form of indentured servitude (slavery), being that one has to work for the benifit of another without receiving due compensation for their labours?MattUK (talk)09:05, 17 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
That's not slavery in the conventional sense, this is more just an opinion. I think the slight correspondence between slavery and alimony is obvious enough to most; we don't need to point it out to people -Owen214 (talk)09:47, 9 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I would appreciate any suggestions on how to better maintain a neutral point of view in this article. I will note that this artical has extensive footnotes. Otherwise, I would ask that the "NPOV flag" be removed. Thank you.—Precedingunsigned comment added byPTiger1985 (talk •contribs)14:57, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1
Please read the four added sources at the beginning of the Alimony Reform Section - Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Huffington Post and National Public Radio. These are very credible sources and support every fact in the ensuing sections.
Which "weasel words" are you referring to? Please also point out the "soapboxing" and I will correct. Otherwise, please remove the NPOV warning. Thanks. PTiger1985.—Precedingunsigned comment added byPTiger1985 (talk •contribs)18:36, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Having checked further, I noted multiple other copyright vios, as well as the original research and NPOV problems noted above. I have removed the whole section as it needs to be completely rewritten following WP policies. If PTiger1985 or others want to try again, I suggest starting small, with a very short paragraph summarizing the issue. Note that most of the info appears to relate to one possible bill in one state of one country of the world. Given this, the length and detail was in any case inappropriate, since the alimony reform movement seems rather small at present.--Slp1 (talk)19:20, 5 December 2009 (UTC)s[reply]
I have made the correction requested. Also, please note that the reform movement in at least a have dozen states is dicussed in the Wall Street Journal, National Public Radio and the Huffington Post. Massachusetts is ahead of other states, but this effort is clearly going on across the nation.
I have also directly quoted the WSJ on the multi-state nature of the Alimony Reform movement.
I have also better documented the changing concept of the "Partnership Model" with a new source.
I have also extracted a direct quote from the Massachusetts Law School publication, The Reformer, on how alimony is likened by experts to welfare.
I hope this addresses your concerns. Thanks for the help!!! PTiger1985PTiger1985 (talk) 20:23, 5 December 2009 (UTC)—Precedingunsigned comment added byPTiger1985 (talk •contribs)20:16, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. PTiger1985PTiger1985 (talk) 20:24, 5 December 2009 (UTC)—Precedingunsigned comment added byPTiger1985 (talk •contribs)20:02, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
No, you have left whole sentences of copy and pasted material in there, and you have not addressed the issues of original research, synthesis, undue weight etc. As I said, please start small, with a well-sourced paragraph that can be checked carefully. --Slp1 (talk)20:33, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I have completely rewritten the Alimony Reform sections.
All text is original - no cut and paste.I have footnoted all factsI have removed all NPOVI have not included any original research - only documented statements and facts from published (non-copywrited) materials.
Thanks for your help! Sorry, I am new at Wikipedia, but trying to provide insight on this topic!
PTiger1985 (talk)22:02, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Great! Thanks.
PTiger1985 (talk)22:18, 5 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
To understand the history of alimony it is important to understand two concepts.1) The English Common law doctrine of coverture created a responsibility for spousal support after the marriage2) Alimony was originally intended to provide 'sustenance' support to an ex-wife who (at the time - 17th Century England) usually had no means of support. Over time the purpose of alimony evolved in many states (but not all states) to providing the lifestyle the wife became accustomed to during the marriage. In Texas and other states, alimony is limited to providing essential needs.
In Massachusetts and other states, alimony is intended to provide the lifestyle a spouse became accustomed to during the marriage.
This evolution of the purpose of alimony, leads to vastly different alimony amounts depending on what state one gets divorced.
PTiger1985 (talk)00:26, 6 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
It is also extremly important to understand that women are increasingly finding themselves paying alimony. Also, alimony began as a means of providing 'sustanence' support to an ex-wife without means of support. Now, alimony is paid to spouses, both men and women, who are perfectly capable of self-support. A very important change in the role of alimony over its History.
PTiger1985 (talk)00:56, 6 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I feel the truth is important to know. Don't you?
PTiger1985 (talk)20:57, 6 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The changing social circumstances in the US that are described in this article have also inspired theFathers' rights movement theMen's Rights movement and efforts to reform child support and custody laws.
I am creating links to those sites. They ARE NOT spam.
PTiger1985 (talk)01:44, 6 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I believe alimony is to most, a very confusing topic. A topic that can be better understood and less threatening.
For an unlucky few, fighting with a parting spouse over alimony (due to the current vague statues and confusing case law) ruins relations between parting spouses, creates a hostile home environment for the children and drains the family bank account to pay the divorce attorneys.
I have made significant contribution to this section, but I need and would appreciate you help. Thank you.
PTiger1985 (talk)16:33, 6 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
13:45, 6 December 2009 (UTC)
Slp1
To understand the origins of alimony law in 16th and 17th century England, it is important to understand the dependent relationship of the wife on the husband that, unlike to day, did not end at the dissolution of the marriage. This point is misssing from our History section. From divorcenet.com
http://www.divorcenet.com/states/nevada/alimony_weakest_link
<removed copyright violation>I think we should add some of this historical context.
Will you work with me on that?
PTiger1985 (talk)21:52, 6 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Here is similar historical context to alimony law. This time from CNN.
http://edition.cnn.com/2005/LAW/05/05/grossman.adultery.alimony/index.html
<removed copyright violation>
Value of a shekel = 1lb barley
http://galileoandeinstein.physics.virginia.edu/lectures/babylon.html—Precedingunsigned comment added byPTiger1985 (talk •contribs)20:09, 7 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I notice you have not answered the questions above. Nonetheless I will draw your attention to the fact that you are continuing to use unreliable sources. You must stop; it is a waste of time for you and for WP.This[3] is not a reliable source. A self-published website with no sign of editorial oversight.WP:RSThis[4] is a reliable source for silver prices today. It is not a reliable source about the value of silver in the past, and it is obvious original research to try and make the point you are trying to here.[5]WP:OR Stop reinserting this without getting consensus. You could tryWP:30 if you like. This[6] is not a reliable source unless you can find that Bob Gaston has published (in books, newspapers, journals) on this subject. I've looked and I cannot find any sign that he has.[[7]] Enough for now. --Slp1 (talk)20:12, 7 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I have deleted all these references and the related text.
thanks
PTiger1985 (talk)21:40, 7 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1 Thanks for acknowledging my effor to comply to WP rules. I AM trying. I am new. I am not big on rules, but I AM trying...
What don't you like about the Gaston Reference? It was originally copied from the "Divorcenet site" - I agree, not the best source. Now I have found the original article written by The Honorable Robert E. Gaston and Published by the Nevada State Bar Association. Because Divorcenet plagerized the text, you may not have noticed the new, reliable source.
The Honorable Robert E. Gaston was a divorce attorney for 23 years and a District Family Court Judge for 12 years.
http://www.adrservices.net/pdf/Gaston%20Resume.pdf
His view on Alimony being the largest source of divorce litigation is from a very reliable source - The State Bar of Nevada (website). To me, it meets all three WP criteria for a "reliable source" - see I did read it!!
It is a peer reviewed article - reviewed by other members of the Nevada Bar Association The Creater (Gaston) has excellent credentials - see above. And the publisher is the Nevada State Bar - one of the 50 accredited state Bar Associations in the US. So, it meets all three criteria for a WP "reliabe source".
Thanks again,
PTiger1985 (talk)11:35, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The wiki "Divorce" page received 49,000 hits in November, 2009
The wiki "Alimony" page received over 23,000 hit in November, 2009"Child Support" received 14,000"Family Law" 8,000"Child Custody" 7,000"Father's Rights Movement" 3,600"Separation" 3,100
My point? Clearly, Alimony is AN IMPORTANT topic that wiki readers are looking to for detailed information. Please contribute more information to our readers!
PTiger1985 (talk)01:44, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Hi PTiger. I do appreciate that you have been reworking the article and finding better sources and removing unreliable ones. This is a great start. Thank you. At some point I will devote some time to making sure that the edits are contain only information that is directly citeable to the references given, but before I do that I think it is important that you get your head aroundWP:Original research, and especiallysynthesis. To put things very simply, we cannot make our own arguments in the text. More specifically, we cannot even put multiple sources sentences together to make a point. There is lots and lots of this in the article. This is an example.
The role of men and women in the workforce and at home has changed dramatically since alimony was conceived in English Common Law. 49.5% of the workforce in America and in many other developed Nations is now comprised of women.[22] Women outnumber men in colleges and Universities by 58% to 42%.[23] In 1970, dual-earning couples were 39 percent of all married couples with children; by 1998 this had risen to 64 percent.[24] By 2002, only 7% of all household represented the traditional model of a family with children where only the Husband worked.[25] Today, it is estimated that 70% to 80% of all marriages are dual income."[26] In 40% of marriages women make as much or more than men.[22] But alimony, a concept established in 17th century English Common Law to protect a non-working wife who had given all her property rights to her husband (see History above and coverture), has changed little. Now many legal experts and legislators question whether the laws governing alimony should be re-written to align better with the modern roles of men and women.[17]
With the exception of reference 17, not one of the references has anything to do with alimony or even mentions it. PTiger is trying to show that times have changed in marriage/work etc, but on WP, PTiger is not allowed to make an argument of this sort by combining referenced sentences in this way perWP:SYNTH The bulk of this section will need to be deletedunless one or more reliable references, which, while taking about the alimony make these exact points.
As I said, there is lots more of this kind of synthesis in the article. The Betty Friedan part etc for example, and more. Before you spend time sourcing the rest of the article, I urge you to try to understand what WP requires. We need to start with the best, highest quality sources about alimony and alimony reform, and work from them. It will likely save you a lot of time and energy, and prevent a lot of annoyance on your part, if you identify what is original research first, before spending lots of time finding refs that are going to end up being deleted. If you want help with this please ask. --Slp1 (talk)03:34, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I think I have fixed this specific issue by changing the wording of the first sentence and adding a source. Will work on other examples (below) later. Thanks,
PTiger1985 (talk)11:58, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1 Thanks for acknowledging my effor to comply to WP rules. I AM trying. I am new. I am not big on rules, but I AM trying...
What don't you like about the Gaston Reference? The Honorable Robert E. Gaston was a divorce attorney for 23 years and a District Family Court Judge for 12 years.
http://www.adrservices.net/pdf/Gaston%20Resume.pdf
His view on Alimony being the largest source of divorce litigation is from a very reliable source - The State Bar of Nevada (website). To me, it meets all three WP criteria for a "reliable source" - see I did read it!!
It is a peer reviewed article - reviewed by other members of the Nevada Bar AssociationThe Creater (Gaston) has excellent credentials - see above.And the publisher is the Nevada State Bar - one of the 50 accredited state Bar Associations in the US
Thanks again,
PTiger1985 (talk)11:21, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Can you point to the evidence that the article has been peer-reviewed? Some links please. Otherwise, the Gaston article does not meet WP criteria because there is no evidence that he meets WP's particular definition of an 'expert' that his scholarship needs to have been published by third party sources.[8] I've looked and couldn't find anything. --Slp1 (talk)12:36, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1
Sorry, I wan't clear. The Gaston paper is published on the "Official Site of the Nevada Bar Association". That is what the cite
http://www.nvbar.org/default.htm
is. The Nevada Bar Association is the largest organization of lawyers and judges (peers), in the state. Everything, published by the Nevada Bar Association and posted on the website is (by definition) peer reviewed.
This source definitely achieves the three Wiki criteria of a reliable source.
Hope that clarifies.
PTiger1985 (talk)15:42, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1I have found the link we have been looking for!
As you can see, Gaston's article, Alimony: You are the Weakest Link! Part I
was published in The Nevada Lawyer in the October 2002 addition. Hit the link below and scroll down.
http://www.nvbar.org/nevada%20lawyer%20magazine/nevada_lawyer_2002.htm
So these meets all three Wiki criteria
1) Reliable Publihsed Source: "The Nevada Lawyer", the official magazine of the Nevada Bar Association (peer reviewed is NOT a wiki criteria, but Gaston's peers have read this article and thus, reviewed it)
2) The creator of the work is credible: Gaston was Nevada lawyer for 23 years and a Family court Judge for 12 years
3) The publisher is the Nevada Bar Association. Every state has its own Bar Association and they are THE reliable source of all legal articles in that state.
Please remove the rs tag.
Thanks again,
PTiger1985 (talk)16:50, 8 December 2009 (UTC)<removed private emails published without permission¨>[reply]
I will take the rs tags off.Thanks,PTiger1985 (talk)18:57, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Please wait to get consensus. I will respond later this evening. --Slp1 (talk)19:45, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Ok. One last comment. I think part of your discomfort with Gaston and, perhaps other sources, is that they are State Journals, not National Journals. "HOw is a divorce judge in Nevada, no matter how qualified, an authority on divorce law?" This may be what you are thinking? However, keep in mind that all divorce law is under US State jurisdiction. So, you won't find articles discussing divorce law at the National level in Journals like that of the American Bar Associsation or the National Law Review. The state based Journals, published by the State Bar Association and the State law Schools are the most authoritative and reliable (and only) source of divorce law information in the US.
Again, here is the link provided by The Nevada Bar Association on the process to submitt an article
http://www.nvbar.org/publications/pdf/NVSubmitGuide.pdf
As you know from the e-mail, all articles from this Journal are reviewed by an "Editorial Review Board" before publication.
So, again, back to the 3 Wiki criteria governing "reliable" sources:1) We have a piece of work by Gaston, laying out one argument for Alimony Reform. A piece that has been written by an expert and reviewed by an editorial board.2) You have a Pulication - The Nevada Lawer - that is the Official magazine of the Nevada State Bar. The Nevada state Bar is the official State wide organization representing and, more important, creditentialing (administering state based bar exams to deter who can practice law in Nevada and who cannot) all lawyers in the State. Again, divorce law is under state jurisdiction, not National jurisdiction, so most all sources on Alimony and Alimony reform are going to come from Journals from the State Bar Associations or Law Schools.3) Gaston is a very credible and reliabe author - 23 years of divorce law practice followed by 12 years as a family court Judge.
This is as good a source on US Divorce Law as we are going to find. This is a much better source than some hack in the WSJ or NYT or NPR trying to understand Divorce law from the remote standpoint of a national (layman) journalist.
Hope that helps.PTiger1985 (talk)20:29, 8 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1
This comes from the Boston Globe. Others sources support this fact: alimony was at one point ordered as part of a finding of marital fault. When states adopted "no fault" divorce laws, this notion that alimony was linked to fault ceased and alimony continued.
FromAdrianne Walker in theBoston Globe
"Like most states, Massachusetts divorce law changed in the 1970s, the golden era of no-fault divorce. But while divorce changed, alimony really didn’t. The idea that the lower-earning spouse needed and deserved to be supported for life in some approximation of their old lifestyle was simply too deeply ingrained."Boston Globe, Alimony Agony.
Please read the the section. This is a fact in the evolotion of alimony. Stop threatening me for adding "original content"!!
PTiger1985 (talk)21:29, 9 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. Adrianne Walker is not an "activist". He is a well regarded reporter at the Boston Globe. What evidence to you have that he is an "activist"??PTiger1985 (talk)21:51, 9 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
It's introduced as the opinion from Stephen Hitner of the alimony reform movement..."His argument, stripped of expletives....". His opinion is also misleading for the history session, since by then, alimony was not being given only if one person was at fault. --Slp1 (talk)21:57, 9 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1
I completely disagree.Walker is obviously paraphrasing Hitner in theprevious paragraph on an entirely different point - that alimony should help a spouse weather the economic dislocation of divorce, not be forever.
"His argument, stripped of expletives, is that the legitimate purpose of alimony is to help people weather the economic dislocation of divorce, as opposed to maintaining a certain lifestyle forever."
Walker's next paragraph has nothing to do with Hitner or temporary v. permanent alimony. That is why he starts a new paragraph.
"Like most states, Massachusetts divorce law changed in the 1970s, the golden era of no-fault divorce. But while divorce changed, alimony really didn’t. The idea that the lower-earning spouse needed and deserved to be supported for life in some approximation of their old lifestyle was simply too deeply ingrained." This held true even for spouses clearly capable of supporting themselves. Pierce’s wife was making $95,000 a year when this case began, with close to $1 million in various retirement and other accounts - although she, like her former husband, is now retired." Please review this again and stop racing to snap judgements.
Also, please readGaston's section "History of Alimony". It is long, but he makes the same points:
"Initially the decisions emphasized the "bad acts" of the husband (1882)....More recently, inRodriquez(Nov 2000) the Supreme Court clarified the isue of "fault" or by holding that the trial court was no longer permitted to consider misconduct of either of the parties when considering alimony."
Also, inSciarrino, the very same point is made:
"It was buttressed by the fact tha the courts found marriage to be a contract, fault to be a breach of contract, and that most women were without means. Though today such rationales have been eroded by no fault divorce...."
It is a complete statement of fact, not opinion or original research, supported by three different credible sources to say that:
In the 1970's, most states moved away from the the notion that alimony should be paid in cases of marital fault when they adopted "No Fault" divorce laws. Even in "No Fault" divorce states, higher earning spouses continued to pay lesser earning spouses life time support
This belongs in the History of Alimony as it is an important evolution in the history. Please stop badgering me on this. I think you have an EXTREME bias on this topic.
PTiger1985 (talk)22:35, 9 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1Again, in your rush to drive your agenda and prove me wrong, you have failed to read carefully. Your ONE source that you hold up against my THREE is not even a lawyer, nor a judge. She is law student. See the footnote on the VERY FIRST PAGE.
The following statement is true:
In the 1970's, most states moved away from the the notion that alimony should be paid in cases of marital fault when they adopted "No Fault" divorce laws. Even in "No Fault" divorce states, higher earning spouses continued to pay lesser earning spouses life time support.
Your source, as un reliabe as it is (you should really read the wiki rules on credible sources) doesn't even contract this point.
Again, please stop expressing your pro-woman views here and stick to helping me write a fact based article on Alimony.
PTiger1985 (talk)00:42, 10 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
If you doubt McCoy and the Florida State Law Review as a reliable source, do make a post at thereliable sources noticeboard. I will abide by whatever they say, but I can pretty much guarantee that a scholarly journal will be deemed a reliable source. Curious too that you would object to McCoy based on her being a JD student, since Barbara von Hauzen, Esq. who you have cited by name in the article, and who published her article in the much less prestigious "The Reformer" magazine,[12] is also a student, thanking her supervisor and all. --Slp1 (talk)01:32, 10 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
BTW, you'll note that despite McCoy's comments (supported by several research studies) about how women have suffered financially from no-fault divorce, I haven't actually included in the article, and in fact have added several chunks of text that support the arguments of alimony activists, sourced to her article.--Slp1 (talk)01:41, 10 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Slp1 Do you know what the "Esq." in Barbara von Hauzen, Esq means? Again, why are you rushing to fight me on this and drive your own POV? As a Wiki Editor, with your enhanced editorial power, that doesn't seem fair.
McCoy is a law student. My sources are Gaston(a lawyer with 23 years and a judge for 12), Walker (a reporter for theBoston Globe and Sciarrino (A. Sciarrino: LL.M. Wisconsin. M.A.R. Yale Divinity School. Associate Professor of Business Law, State University of New York at Geneseo. S. Duke: JD University of San Diego. Private Practice in New York State.)
I really don't think you should be re-writing the entire Alimony section based on an article by a law student.
I am tired. I had a bad day at work. I am going to give it a break for a while. I suggest you do the same.
We can come back at this with cooler heads later.
PTiger1985 (talk)02:02, 10 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
It appears each states reacted to no-fault divorce laws differently as you pointed out with Florida. The text has been revised to show this state by state difference. Hope you concur.
Despite the similarity to a previous editor "with an axe to grind", this is my very first time on Wiki. I am trying to keep to a NPOV. Thanks for your help in this. I think we are keeping each other in balance.PTiger1985 (talk)12:36, 10 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
There is a ton of info in the US section that only refers to Mass. Please break that out. Mass is a state ruled by very old case law and is out of step with the general US. It is a poor example in the general US section. There is enough there to breakout a section specific to Mass.SchmuckyTheCat (talk)
Here is a credible source, Dr. Felix M. Berardo,http://74.125.93.132/search?q=cache:9ZTeIJknK8wJ:www.clas.ufl.edu/users/fberardo/+Felix+Berardo&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
on the impact of hostility around alimony on children
"Even if its use has declined, alimony can continue to cloud relationships after the marriage is formally dissolved. “It has very profound implications for the emotional and economic well-being of the former spouse, not to mention the children,” he said.The payments can keep the initial hostility alive in divorced couples, especially if the man wants to remarry but doesn’t think he can afford to."
This is from the University of Florida News.http://news.ufl.edu/2001/05/21/alimony/
Is this a reliabe source for the following sentence to be added to the Alimony Article?
"Alimony can negatively impact relationships between ex-spouses even after the dissolution of the marriage. This has a profound impact on the well being of parting spouses and their children."
http://news.ufl.edu/2001/05/21/alimony/—Precedingunsigned comment added byPTiger1985 (talk •contribs) 23:09, 13 December 2009 (UTC)PTiger1985 (talk)23:40, 13 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Please review this section for additions and comments before I post it in the article.
Unlike in the U.S. where state laws dominate, divorce in Canada is governed by Federal Law. During the 1980's the Supreme Court of Canada embraced the notion of economic "clean break" between parting spouses. It also supported the principle of alimony as a means of providing temporary support even in long term marriages.Cite error:The<ref>
tag has too many names (see thehelp page). However, in subsequent rulings in the 1990's (Moge v. Moge and Bracklow v. Bracklow) the court revised its view on alimony leaving divorce law in Canada in a state of flux.Cite error:The<ref>
tag has too many names (see thehelp page). At this point, some reform advocates promoted the passage of statutory guidelines, but these efforts were initially rejected due to a concern that statutes would lack necessary flexibility. In 1997, Canada adopted Child Support guidelines which were considered a success. The success of Child Support guidelines in Canada combined with alimony reform efforts in the U.S.A led many to reconsider the benefits of Alimony guidelines.Cite error:The<ref>
tag has too many names (see thehelp page).
To address the controversial issue of spousal support reform, the federal government created an advisory group to develop recommendations and propose support guidelines if appropriate. The adviory group, consisting of Judges, attorneys, academics and bureaucrats, proposed the first draft spousal support advisory guidelines (SSAG) in January of 2005.< ref name = "Oldham" p. 440 /> The final version of the SSAG was released in 2008 and recommended guidelines for amount and duration of alimony. For marriages without any minor children, the guidelines recommended 1.5% to 2.0% of the difference between spouses incomes multiplied by the number of years of the marriage. More complex formula were developed for divorces involving minor children. The recommendation of duration of alimony was for one half to one year for every year of the marriage. The acceptance of the SSAG depends upon the Supreme Court of Canada which has yet to hear a case based on these guidelines.Cite error:The<ref>
tag has too many names (see thehelp page).
Comments appreciated.PTiger1985 (talk)20:30, 20 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
References
In order to not violate the wiki policies regarding potential self-promotion, I am not editing the article directly. However, I have done significant research into various alimony formulas used in other jurisdictions across the United States, and particularly in Massachusetts. I have compiled these formulas into a calculator and have described the resources of these formulas at length in an article (including various state statutes and/or organization recommendations such as the AAML). This seems like the type of information that could be useful to have in the wiki and so I am posting links to it here in case someone more neutral than me agrees. The calculator is available athttp://www.alimonyformula.com andhttp://familylaw.kelseytrask.com/spousalsupport.htm. The article is available athttp://www.alimonyformula.com/SpousalSupportCalculator.pdf andhttp://familylaw.kelseytrask.com/SpousalSupport.pdf
If you agree with me that these formulas should be discussed in the wiki article then please feel free to review the resources in the endnotes of our article as well as to contact me through our above-referenced websites for any further information that might be useful.—Precedingunsigned comment added byJlkelsey (talk •contribs)04:26, 14 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
After reading the article I got an idea why alimony was introduced in the first place, but that was long time ago, when this was basically a penalty for marital infidelity and also because women rarely had income of their own.
Today in most places there is the no-fault divorce and women work. Why alimony still exists? Article doesn't explain this. Article says "because the other party got accustomed to particular lifestyle". So how is this different from when an employee has high income and as a consequence gets accustomed to the particular lifestyle? Should there be the law requiring an employer to keep paying the ex-employee salary in cases when they didn't manage to find another high paying job?
Is alimony perceived as a relict from the past? Does it make sense to majority? Or most people don't care? Or maybe women support it because they are statistically on the receiving end and men don't care enough to change it? In any case, article should elaborate on alimony meaning it today's world.Yurivict (talk)23:09, 14 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The article says "In the 1970s, the United States Supreme Court ruled against gender bias in alimony awards, and the percentage of alimony recipients who are male rose to 3.6% in 2006." The reference is to an article about men receiving alimony, but I could not find a reference for the Supreme Court decision. Can this be made more specific? I've looked for the case in question but cannot find it, unless this is a reference to Orr v. Orr 440 U.S. 268, 99 S. Ct. 1102, 59 L. Ed. 2d 306 (1979). I feel like I can't put that in the article without knowing for sure that that was the case being referred to.Thanks, --Bluejay Young (talk)15:58, 11 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Civil Unions and Heteronormativity in this Article. This article is very well informed in avoiding gender bias in such a gender charged issue. However, despite haphazardly including civil unions in parenthesis as an alternative for marriage, it does disregard the role of non-heterosexual unions in the issue of alimony. This page could greatly benefit form including at least a section about the implications of Civil Unions for alimonial law. The article goes into great detail describing several factors that contribute to the controversy of alimony including health, gender, fault, finances, the list goes on. It only makes sense for the article to at least cite sexuality as one of the factors. It also focuses on the history on alimony in the US specifically and how its definition and the laws surrounding it have evolved. It is a large oversight to not include the history of the LGBTQ rights movement and the emergence of Civil Unions as a complicating factor to the progression of defining alimony. Interestingly enough, the article seems to evolve from heteronormative to inclusive language as it progresses. For instance, at the beginning of the article, the author describes alimony as a legal agreement between husband and wife. Starting towards the middle of the article, however, the authors abandon this binary and opt for more inclusive language like “spouses” or “partners.” While the article ends using more inclusive diction, the entire article could use and overhaul to correct these errors from the very beginning. This I propose a critical look at the gendered language describing the couples in question and a section that addresses LGBTQ implications on alimony.— Precedingunsigned comment added byMfinckCalpoly8 (talk •contribs)05:39, 14 October 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Could the article at least link to some? How much and how often are the questions I wanted to see answered. --82.128.250.221 (talk)20:06, 21 April 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Portions of the section for Canada seem to be taken verbatim from the cited source at[15].I'm going to blank part of the section and place a copyvio notice there, but I must emphasize that not all of the information is subject; while substantial portions (sentences and paragraphs) have been copied verbatim, clearly additional research has been done - for example, naming specific pieces of provincial legislation.Zelse81 (talk)23:51, 2 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Quoted from the text:
"Permanent alimony began to fall out of favor, as it prevented former spouses from beginning new lives,[6] though in some states (e.g., Massachusetts, Mississippi, and Tennessee), permanent alimony awards continued, but with some limitations."
"In Texas, Mississippi and Tennessee, for example, alimony is awarded only in cases of marriage or civil union of ten years or longer and the payments are limited to three years unless there are special, extenuating circumstances."Then two sentences later in the same paragraph""In Maine, Mississippi, and Tennessee alimony is awarded in marriages or civil union of 10 to 20 years and the duration is half the length of the marriage barring extenuating circumstances."
"In other states, like Mississippi, Massachusetts and Tennessee, alimony is usually awarded for life."
"California, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Oklahoma, New York, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, and West Virginia have all passed laws that allow for the modification or termination of alimony upon demonstration that the recipient is cohabitating with another person."
The references are all over the place and often not even for TN. This needs serious revision.— Precedingunsigned comment added by199.82.243.103 (talk)14:44, 21 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
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This passage is the laziest writing I have ever read:
It may be true -- the reference link is dead, so it's of no use -- but "special software" is a bizarre description that conjures up an image of aStar Trek episode where humans are consulting through telepathy some otherworldly oracle with blinking lights! What makes the software "special"? Which of the software -- if any -- on my computer is "special" and how can I tell? Is this "special" softwarespecialer than the software that NASA uses which, by professional estimations, is pretty damn special. (A blue screen of death in space would likely be literally that!)
Regardless, all software is (currently) written by humans, and humans had to come up with the rules that the software uses. While I realise that an encyclopaedia has its limitations, and we don't need to see a line-by-line analysis of the source code of the software, someone with "special" knowledge of this "special software" must have a better way to summarise what's so "special" about this software and what information, in general terms, it uses to spit out a number.
Signing off from my "special software" that allows me to magically modify the contents of a website on the other side of the planet.
--Craig (t|c)07:58, 10 September 2016 (UTC)[reply]
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