Domicile
Dare any mortal enter the dystopian world of modern children?
Since Dickensian times, no author has conceived so damning a commentary, concerning contemporary childcare.
Domicile is a place one must reside by enforced law.
This book is based entirely upon known fact.
Written through the eyes of a young girl who endured years of horrific abuse, Domicile exposes a British care system hell-bent on destroying normal, loving families.
Or is there another, more sinister motivation? Family Court must balance social worker claims of 'possible, future emotional abuse', against the foreknown emotion abuse of a child being taken into Care.
The book asks if in law, there should be Degrees of Rape. It proposes the level of intent of both parties be taken into consideration, and that anonymity for both be the norm until conviction.
But what sets this book apart, is that it follows the money trail, something police and press failed to do. Those in positions of deepest trust, and a Duty of Care, sold themselves out for money running into tens of millions of pounds. It is but a small step to conclude British judges and barristers, Social Services, Police, and Local Authority, are also an integral part of this travesty of justice.
The Muslims in Rotherham were also making Millions of pounds p.a. in untaxed, used notes. The figures are in the public domain, but nobody bothered to do the maths.
This book does.

What if––one of these girls was your own daughter, legally abducted:
10-years old, and already an unpaid Muslim sex slave?

Domicile

In modern British Family Courts, 'the needs of the child' are irrelevant.

Profits from sales of this book will go to charities supporting
similarly abused children
"1126077629"
Domicile
Dare any mortal enter the dystopian world of modern children?
Since Dickensian times, no author has conceived so damning a commentary, concerning contemporary childcare.
Domicile is a place one must reside by enforced law.
This book is based entirely upon known fact.
Written through the eyes of a young girl who endured years of horrific abuse, Domicile exposes a British care system hell-bent on destroying normal, loving families.
Or is there another, more sinister motivation? Family Court must balance social worker claims of 'possible, future emotional abuse', against the foreknown emotion abuse of a child being taken into Care.
The book asks if in law, there should be Degrees of Rape. It proposes the level of intent of both parties be taken into consideration, and that anonymity for both be the norm until conviction.
But what sets this book apart, is that it follows the money trail, something police and press failed to do. Those in positions of deepest trust, and a Duty of Care, sold themselves out for money running into tens of millions of pounds. It is but a small step to conclude British judges and barristers, Social Services, Police, and Local Authority, are also an integral part of this travesty of justice.
The Muslims in Rotherham were also making Millions of pounds p.a. in untaxed, used notes. The figures are in the public domain, but nobody bothered to do the maths.
This book does.

What if––one of these girls was your own daughter, legally abducted:
10-years old, and already an unpaid Muslim sex slave?

Domicile

In modern British Family Courts, 'the needs of the child' are irrelevant.

Profits from sales of this book will go to charities supporting
similarly abused children
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Domicile

Domicile

by John Morris
Domicile

Domicile

by John Morris

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Overview

Dare any mortal enter the dystopian world of modern children?
Since Dickensian times, no author has conceived so damning a commentary, concerning contemporary childcare.
Domicile is a place one must reside by enforced law.
This book is based entirely upon known fact.
Written through the eyes of a young girl who endured years of horrific abuse, Domicile exposes a British care system hell-bent on destroying normal, loving families.
Or is there another, more sinister motivation? Family Court must balance social worker claims of 'possible, future emotional abuse', against the foreknown emotion abuse of a child being taken into Care.
The book asks if in law, there should be Degrees of Rape. It proposes the level of intent of both parties be taken into consideration, and that anonymity for both be the norm until conviction.
But what sets this book apart, is that it follows the money trail, something police and press failed to do. Those in positions of deepest trust, and a Duty of Care, sold themselves out for money running into tens of millions of pounds. It is but a small step to conclude British judges and barristers, Social Services, Police, and Local Authority, are also an integral part of this travesty of justice.
The Muslims in Rotherham were also making Millions of pounds p.a. in untaxed, used notes. The figures are in the public domain, but nobody bothered to do the maths.
This book does.

What if––one of these girls was your own daughter, legally abducted:
10-years old, and already an unpaid Muslim sex slave?

Domicile

In modern British Family Courts, 'the needs of the child' are irrelevant.

Profits from sales of this book will go to charities supporting
similarly abused children

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161222379
Publisher: John Morris
Publication date: 12/22/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

John Morris has stories to tell. His novels are absorbing fiction, which are intense and emotional at times, and funny at others. “I study the Human Species,” he relates. “I share this by writing a rainbow of human emotions. One minute the evocative words may make one cry, and the next, humour dispels the emotional miasma. Good novels, like real life, are a question of balance, and drawing the reader in.”

Morris draws on his eclectic life experiences in his writing. He brings to the reader a range of heartfelt emotions, highs and lows of human life, as mirrored by humanity in general.

“I am sharing my written words with readers, and feedback has been fantastic. I’m hungry to write more, and share with others life’s experiences. My books have several levels, but I love it best, when I use words to hide a clue written in plain sight. That is Cristie-esque.”

Morris has never accepted anything simply because it is the norm. He admits, “I have enjoyed so many different careers, and seen so much of the world in the process, they seem like separate lifetimes. I always wanted to be a folk/rock star, because I’m driven to tell stories of people’s lives and loves, initially by writing lyrics. Whilst being very good at playing a 12-string acoustic guitar, I could not sing to save my life. Over time, I discovered I could write, poems and short stories at first, and then novels.”

Born in England to a local father and an Irish mother, Morris has lived in China since 2004. He has held numerous positions, from the ten years he spent as a police officer specializing in serious fraud, to entrepreneur and world trader, to writer. Early on, he qualified as a Yachtmaster for sailing vessels.
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