Rhode Island Bill Would Give Minors the 'Right to Refuse' Parental Guardian Access, Sparking Outrage Over Erosion of Family Authority
A new Rhode Island legislative proposal is being condemned by moral critics as a dangerous step toward the breakdown of the traditional family unit. The bill, which would legally grant minors the ability to deny their own parents physical or digital access, is being framed by detractors as a state-sanctioned severing of the fundamental parent-child bond. "This isn't about safety; this is a political experiment that weaponizes children against the very people nature intended to guide them," one outraged family advocate declared. Critics warn that by undermining parental authority, the 'rhode' bill paves the way for a society where government overreach replaces the moral compass of the home, leaving a generation without accountability or respect.