 Okay, I hope the boss doesn't catch me, mate. So pretty big differences in family law between Australia and United States. For one, parents have no rights in Australia, so the only legal question is what's in the best interests of the child, which is infinitely flexible. So essentially judges get to decide they have much more flexibility and power, it seems like, in Australian family law compared to American. Then in many American states, there's community property rules. So the property that you bring into a marriage, you get to take it coming out of a marriage while the assets that you build together, they get distributed 50-50. So that's a lot simpler than so-called equitable distribution, which is what you have in the United States, and I think some American states. So in equitable distribution, there are all sorts of categories and principles, but essentially means that women, generally speaking, as the less-earning spouse, get to keep about 60%. That includes all the property that you may bring into a marriage, everything that you build on your own prior to the marriage, prior to meeting this woman. You have to distribute it. So there's a big growing men's rights movement here, parental alienation is a major theme. So tens of thousands of fathers feel like their children after divorce have been turned against them by the mother. So parental alienation is a big talking point, particularly on the right. So the right-wing perspective is that the family law system is dominated by feminists. So from this perspective, when you add up the power that the feminists have and the men's rights activists have, it's no contest that feminists have more power because powerful men don't want to join victim groups. So men's rights is essentially a new victimhood group, and powerful men, successful men, don't want to join victimhood groups. So a lot of men have been, appeared to have been driven to suicide by their inability to see their child. So the family court system, the Family Law Act, was passed by the Goff Whitlam government in 1975, and so it established no fault divorce in Australia. But fault does play a role often in the distribution of property and access to children. So there's no right to see your kids in Australian law. The court gets to decide whether it's in the kids' interest for them to see you. So no fault divorce in Australia. You can get a divorce in Australia. What you have to do is be separated for at least 12 months. Then you're eligible for a divorce. It's no fault divorce. And you can get a divorce without an agreement on distribution of property and a plan for the children. So in America, you have to settle everything before the court will grant you a divorce. But in Australia, you can get the divorce. Then within 12 months of getting the divorce, then you have to file for financial distribution and access to children. So usually the custodial parent is the woman and the custodial parent on a whim or for whatever reason can decide to not allow access to the kids. And family law courts won't find her and won't jail her. Now they will file on jail. They'll be really tough on the men. So child maintenance payments, what in America is called child support payments or alimony payments, the family law court very tough. But when it comes to custodial parents and granting access to the other parent, family law court is soft as butter. So men's rights groups in Australia say this is acting against the interests of men. So it's a growing political issue on the right. Pauline Hanson of the One Nation Party has championed it. She led a government inquiry into this issue. So generally it's people on the right who are upset at the current system. The current system was developed by the Labour Party and Judge Lionel Murphy kind of oversaw the permissive society, the node-fought divorce. But the way the system works now, the custodial parent can essentially block access to the children to the other parents. So usually the custodial parent is the woman and she can block access so a man could fly to see his kids. He could drive for hours and she could say, oh, a kid doesn't want to see you. The kid's sick or she can come up with any reason, just completely block access. So this is a growing issue of men's rights in Australia as well as America and a growing men's rights movement and it's big in conservative politics.