maraboutslim wrote:I didn't say I think it's "ok". It's typically best for a child to be raised by both parents. But I will say that I certainly don't find this parental "child abduction," issue to be one for courts or governments to get involved in at all, much less for a decision made in one country to influence another country's opinion on the matter or spur them to any sort of action.
Why? Just because people from two countries decide to breed, we need some sort of international judicial organization to manage their relationship? Or, as others have proposed, some sort of additional red tape at the airports or passport agencies? Ridiculous. Make these international couples take care of their own lives!
A government's job in a democracy is to protect and ensure the well being of its citizens, especially the children. In a perfect world parents look after and have their children's best interests at heart, but sadly in the real world that is not always the case. That is where social welfare and the courts come into play. When an international marriage goes off the rails things get more complicated. It becomes an 'international' problem. That is why to insure fairness and the well being of children involved an international agreement between countries is necessary where decisions made in the court of one country are respected in another.