Thrive on Less: How the U.S. Court System Profits from False Allegations

The U.S. court system was designed, at least in principle, to uphold justice and defend the innocent. Yet in practice, it has become a machinery of profit, one that thrives not on truth, but on conflict. False allegations—particularly in family courts—have become the perfect fuel for this system. They generate endless hearings, lawyer fees, custody battles, evaluations, and appeals. The longer the conflict drags on, the more money the system makes. Justice takes a backseat, while greed drives the process forward.

This corrupt cycle can be compared to flies swarming around excrement. Flies cannot survive without waste, and the court system cannot survive without conflict. The more filth—the lies, the accusations, the fabricated evidence—the more “eggs” the system can lay: more cases, more billable hours, more fees, and more suffering to feed upon.

America, in this way, is building its wealth on conflictual relationships. The system doesn’t seek to resolve disputes—it thrives on perpetuating them. Just like flies will never clean up filth but instead multiply within it, the court system multiplies its profits from the decay of broken families, false testimonies, and ruined reputations.

The greatest victims in this charade are overwhelmingly men. Time and again, men are painted as aggressors or abusers without sufficient evidence. False allegations are weaponized against them, stripping them of children, homes, livelihoods, and dignity. The system almost never punishes false accusers, because lies fuel the machinery. Punishing false allegations would mean cutting off the very waste that keeps the flies alive.

This is not mere injustice—it is wickedness. It is as though Satan himself were seated in these courts, rejoicing in the destruction of families and the corruption of justice.

The Bible warns us about such times:

  • “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!” (Isaiah 5:20)
  • “The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are trustworthy.” (Proverbs 12:22)
  • “Do not spread false reports. Do not help a guilty person by being a malicious witness.” (Exodus 23:1)

A system that rewards false reports and feeds on lies has abandoned righteousness and aligned itself with darkness. If America continues to let flies multiply in its courts, the decay will eventually consume not only families but the entire foundation of society.

The path forward is to starve the flies—to restore integrity, punish false allegations, and put truth above profit. Only then can justice be more than a façade, and families more than commodities to be divided for gain.

2 responses to “Thrive on Less: How the U.S. Court System Profits from False Allegations”

  1. SW Legal Group @ Bing Wildlife Foundation Avatar

    Very interesting. Not everyone is aware of these implications.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Terry Lorentz Avatar

      Thank you for your feedback.

      Like

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