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How To Win An Emancipation Case

How to win an emancipation case?

I hate living with my parents. It's awful. I would ether die than live with them. The only thing I love in this house is the dog. I want to live for the sake of my happiness and sanity. I've been looking into emancipation, I just want to be sure I will the case. If I don't things will just get worse. Yes, I love my parents but only because they're my parents. No, they don't physically abuse me but, my father has threatened to choke me for stupid mistakes on more than one occasion. I'm just not happy. I'm also, emotionally abuse and drained from them. They just can't accept that, I'm a 15 year old girl and I'm going to make mistakes. They treat me like the devil every time I make one. I just need to leave. Someone help me out here.

How to win a emancipation trial please i need help :( !!!!! SOS SOS!?

Hello im a 15 year old im looking to become emancipated . Once im 16 i wish to find a job and keep it. I have a boyfriend in which ive been with for 4 years hes 18 currently... we met since i was 11 he was 14. He wants to marry me we are made for each other . I lost my virginity to him this summer i was 15 he was 18 . My dad found out and banned me from seeing him . He was going to press charges but i made a deal with him. It was either not seeing or press charges. We have been talking through letters. I miss him dearly . I have seen him secretly and he was going to propose. We even thought of running away with one another. He has two jobs and he is in a university trying to get a phd. He makes ok money to rent a small apartment. My question here is can i get emancipated ? with me having a job and having support from him. How can i win this any tips?My mom died of cancer last year . My dad gets financial support 800 something dollars for me and my sister. He barely buys things for me. he remarried 3 months latter after her death. Sometimes when i get introuble i get hit and choked... is this enough to win this case?

Do I have a case to become an emancipated minor?

Be abused or neglected to the extent a judge will agree you need to be emancipated.Get a job or two and keep them longer than a week, and make enough money you can show the courts not only are you responsible enough to live independently but also can earn enough money to do so. Get a car with the required insurance unless you live in an area with good public transit. Save some money because you’ll need money for deposits for that apartment and utility hook ups. I’d research what it’s going to cost you in your area to live. Rent prices, utility prices, gas prices, food costs., If you want a phone you’ll have to pay your own phone payments and data plan. You’ll have to spend money to wash your clothes every week. You’ll probably have to pay your own WiFi costs.Work out a budget you can show to a judge to prove you understand what it’s going to take to be independant.

What is the Emancipation Proclamation? Did it do what it was designed to do? Why?

The Emancipation Proclamation allowed Americans, but only White Male Americans, to legally drink alcohol again.

Seriously, I got good grades in History and all that, so you can trust my answer.



Or you could try doing your own homework instead of asking complete strangers to feed you random answers.

What impact did dred Scott case and emancipation proclamation have on the early struggle for civil right?

Learn to Google. You just had to Google the two .. Dred Scott Case and Emancipation Proclamation.

https://www.google.ca/search?sourceid=na...

Dred Scott case was one more nail in the coffin of the Union- split the democrats too.

read the article:

http://www.ushistory.org/us/32a.asp

The Emancipation Proclamation had some limitations. First, it only freed the slaves in the Confederate States that were not under Union control. There were some areas and border states where slavery was still legal, but were part of the Union. The slaves in these states were not immediately freed. For the rest of the Southern states, the slaves would not be free until the Union was able to defeat the Confederacy.

However, the Emancipation Proclamation did eventually set millions of slaves free. It also made clear that in the near future all slaves should and would be set free.

The Emancipation also allowed for Black men to fight in the Union Army. Around 200,000 black soldiers fought on the side of the Union Army helping the North win the war and also helping to expand the area of freedom as they marched through the South.

http://www.ducksters.com/history/emancip...

Will I win in chancery court if my only reason to emancipate is that my parents don't let me play video games?

It’s going to fail spectacularly.Perhaps as an ex-English lawyer, I should say a few words about the whole whys and wherefores of this creature called “emancipation.”Emancipation — insofar as the English-speaking world is concerned — is an English legal development and in turn was loosely derived from something loosely similar in Roman Law.The whole idea of English jurisprudence having emancipation is for political purposes. It’s a legal(istic) way for the nobility and the high-born destined by their political factions to be contenders to powerful positions (even royalty). In doing so, they can lawfully detach themselves from their families in order to (shall we say) give play to their potential politics. That’s the true origins of emancipation.That is why in English law emancipation requires the child to be no younger than age 14 and either independently wealthy or with “independent means,” both of which translates into having no need for a job but having his/her own places to live, etc.By the time the legal concept of emancipation had emigrated to America, the whole thing became a different legal creature altogether — though the legal requirements of age and financial position remain largely intact.The added requirements (e.g. “reasons”) are to be found in your local laws — and these will vary from state to state if you are in the USA.

Will I become emancipated?

I live in Missouri and I've already looked at all the laws behind it and I want to know if my case is good enough for the judge to actually consider and allow me to become an adult. I am 17 years old and I'm attending an amazing highschool with great STEM programs. I want to go to S&T for comp science and it's one of the best in the world for stem. My father is being stationed to El Paso Texas. I asked my mom if I could stay with a friend and both my parents said no. I have been attending this school district since 6th grade and I am a junior and I won't get to start or finish off my senior year. The problem is, I need to go to S&T and my parents have already made it clear that they won't sign on any loans, and they won't help me pay it off. Going out of state will more than double my tuition. I already have a friend that said I can stay at his familys house and I have a job so I can pay rent. My mom will not give me consent to become emancipated so I'm going to have to go through a court order. Do I have a case? Do you think I can win? I don't want to leave my family and I love them. But my dad made it clear he wants to get this promotion and I'm ok with that. I've moved around my whole entire life. And I get here and plan my life out because I was told I'd graduate here. Only to get to my junior year, having all of my plans almost finalized, and now I'm told I have to give them up? I'm tired of moving and I know moving to El Paso is not in my best interest. THANKS

Should I become an emancipated minor and take care of myself instead?

It sounds like you are in a difficult situation, but you’re to be commended for taking positive steps toward your future. Your commitment to finishing school and becoming financially indepedent will serve you well, not matter what you decide about your current living situation.I know you must already realize this, but emancipation is a pretty drastic step. I believe it would be good to get the input of a caring, objective adult who’s familiar with your situation and has your best interests at heart.And to be honest, I really don’t think it’s a good idea to move in with your partner. This type of arrangement often does not turn out well and can end up creating another kind of unhealthy, dependent situation.If your home life is really that bad, is there a relative or another family you could live with? Just a thought.Wishing you the very best. Keep pursuing your own goals and believing in your future, OK?

One effect of the Emancipation Proclamation was:?

I have to agree that NONE of these answers is really accurate. (C) is the "best answer" and so I gather it is "supposed to be" the correct answer, but put that way it is misleading. Even for Lincoln, it was STILL a war whose goal was preserve the Union, just no longer "as it was" (that is, with slavery left in tact). The proclamation was a TOOL he used to wage that war, undermining the South's resources, undercutting the ultimate CAUSE of the war (which WAS slavery), etc.

And I must vociferously disagree with dem_dogs, and the many who repeat the mantra "the proclamation freed no one". That is utter nonsense! In fact, it IMMEDIATELY declared the freedom of those slaves who had escaped assuring that they would NOT be returned, it encouraged others to run away (which many did) AND it meant that AS the Union forces took control of any Confederate territory, its slaves were indeed freed.

Remember too that the proclamation did not stand alone -- Lincoln and Congress had already begun other efforts to end slavery both in the border Union states (ALL of which had outlawed it be the war's end!) and nationally, ultimately, by passing the 13th amendment (which Lincoln worked VERY hard to push through). Certainly Lincoln DID want to see slavery end, and said so often, though he insisted it must happen Constitutionally, in this case by his "war powers" and then through the changing of laws and amending the Constitution. (KC is wrong about this --start reading Lincoln's writings from 1858 to the end and this will be clear. His initial hope was that 'containing' the evil of slavery, not allowing it to expand, would cause it to wither and die.)

Thus, understood as the foundation for the other efforts, one might argue that the end of Slavery (A) was in a sense an "effect of the Emancipation Proclamation", but not taken alone.

Here's a much better answer to the question, from Civil War historian Stephen Sears:

"We now know that Lincoln issued his proclamation for a combination of reasons: to clarify the status of the fugitive slaves, to solve the Union's manpower woes, to keep Great Britain out of the conflict, to maim and cripple the Confederacy by destroying its labor force, to remove the very thing that had caused the war, and to break the chains of several million oppressed human beings and right America at last with her own ideals."
http://www.mrlincolnandfreedom.org/insid...

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