Figli Contesi 24
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Figli Contesi 24
@FigliContesi24
Figli Contesi 24 #Bambini #Figli #Children #Fatherless #AlienazioneParentale #ParentalAlienation #PaternityFraud #Surrogacy #AdopteeVoices #Gender #FamilyCourts



Behold the Trans Phantom Penis Project, WPATH 2022. Phantom penis is apparently the perceived penis of "trans man" (i.e. woman). Smaller phantoms undergo "metoidioplasty," larger phantoms undergo "phalloplasty." Like if phantom is an "uncircumcised micropenis," then metoidioplasty (this creates a smaller "penis"). Truly deranged. Can't wrap my head around it.

La alarmante tasa de profesoras acusadas de violar a niños pequeños en Estados Unidos. Cosas que pasan dailymail.com/news/article-1…







Thank you all of those wonderful people who are joining our army of parental voices! Thank you @againstgrmrs @MichaelGAG_EIC thank you @realSonjaShaw for standing up with us to tell our @AndriyLyashche1 story! Matt Ward is a super interviewer! youtu.be/HXB2djYVMFI?si…




Child care is shifting in Australia: rising costs, changing family roles, and declining grandparent support These charts track child care patterns, costs, and the evolving role of grandparents over the past two decades. 1. Use of child care (children under five): Families are increasingly relying on formal, paid care rather than informal arrangements. The share of families using any child care has increased gradually. Paid care shows a clear upward trend, especially after 2014. Care provided by grandparents has risen modestly but remains below paid care. “Other” informal arrangements have declined slightly over time. 2. Weekly hours of care: Care intensity is increasing, not just participation, but time commitment. Average weekly hours per child have increased. Paid care hours trend upward and now approach the highest levels in the series. Grandparent-provided hours remain relatively stable. Total care hours per week have risen steadily. 3. Median weekly expenditure (real terms): Child care is becoming structurally more expensive for families. Median child care spending has more than doubled since the early 2000s. After peaking around 2022, costs remain elevated. The long-term trend is clearly upward in real terms. 4. Share of people who have grandchildren (by age): Grandparenthood is occurring later in life, reflecting delayed childbearing across generations. Compared with 2007–2011, fewer people at a given age have grandchildren in 2019–2023. The shift is especially visible in the late 50s and early 60s. 5. Grandparents providing care (overall): Fewer grandparents are actively providing regular care. The share of grandparents providing care has declined. The drop is especially visible among grandfathers. Among grandparents with grandchildren under 15, participation has also decreased since 2019. 6. Care provided by gender (grandparents with grandchildren under 15): Grandparent-provided child care is structurally weakening. Women consistently provide more care than men. However, both male and female participation rates have declined sharply since around 2019. The decline accelerates in the most recent years. Overall structural picture Paid care usage and hours are increasing. Real costs are rising significantly. Grandparent involvement is declining and shifting to older ages. Informal support networks are weakening. Source: @MelbInstUOM The Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey









