Listen, if you’ve ever stepped foot in a family court, you know it’s a bureaucratic meat grinder. It’s a place where “justice” goes to die, buried under a mountain of red tape and expensive billable hours. But the absolute worst part of this dysfunctional system? The kids. Specifically, the kids who are weaponized by one parent to completely annihilate the relationship with the other parent.
For decades, we called this “Parental Alienation Syndrome” (PAS). But the legal system and the psychological “experts” spent years arguing over whether PAS was a real “syndrome.” While they were busy debating semantics, families were being ripped apart.
Enter Dr. Craig Childress.
Filmed at the California Southern University School of Behavioral Sciences, Dr. Childress delivered a lecture that changes the game. He’s not interested in the “syndrome” debate. He’s interested in actual clinical psychology and the attachment system. He’s calling it what it really is: Pathogenic Parenting.
If you want to understand why a child suddenly treats a loving parent like a monster, you need to watch this video and understand the Attachment-Based Model.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brNuwQNN3q
Beyond the “Syndrome”: Why Science Matters
The old-school “Parental Alienation Syndrome” was based on the work of Richard Gardner. It was a decent start, but it didn't have the heavy-duty clinical backing to survive the scrutiny of the courts. It felt “anecdotal” to the bureaucrats.
Dr. Childress flipped the script. He moved the conversation away from a fringe “syndrome” and anchored it in established, peer-reviewed science: Attachment Theory, Family Systems Theory, and Personality Disorder Dynamics.
This isn't just a difference in names. It’s a shift from “maybe this is happening” to “here is the clinical evidence of psychological abuse.” In a free society, the state has no business meddling in families, unless there is clear, documented harm. By grounding this in the attachment system, Childress provides the tools to prove that harm.
The “Pathogenic Parent”: Using a Child as a Tool
In Dr. Childress’s model, the parent doing the alienating isn't just “bitter.” They are often a “pathogenic parent.” This usually involves a parent with Narcissistic or Borderline personality traits.
When a high-conflict divorce happens, these parents can’t handle the rejection. Their own attachment systems are broken, usually from their own childhood trauma. To cope, they project their pain onto the other parent and use the child as a “regulatory object.”
Basically, they turn the kid into a psychological shield. They create a “cross-generational coalition,” pulling the child into the adult conflict to help them regulate their own collapsing ego. The child isn't a person to them; they are a weapon to be aimed at the “enemy” parent.
The Three Diagnostic Indicators
One of the most powerful parts of Dr. Childress’s lecture at California Southern University is his identification of three specific diagnostic indicators. If all three are present, you aren't looking at a “preference” or a “rebellious phase.” You are looking at parental alienation.
1. Attachment System Suppression
The attachment system is an instinct. It's hardwired into our DNA to seek comfort from our parents. When a child suddenly and completely “terminates” their relationship with a previously loving parent, that is a biological abnormality. It’s like a child refusing to eat or breathe. If a child is rejecting a normal-range parent, something is suppressing their natural attachment drive.
2. Presence of Narcissistic/Borderline Traits in the Child
The child starts acting like a mini-version of the alienating parent. They show a total lack of empathy for the targeted parent. They become entitled, demanding, and cold. They engage in “splitting”, viewing the alienating parent as all-good and the targeted parent as all-bad. This isn't how kids naturally think; it’s a learned behavior from a personality-disordered parent.
3. The “Fixed Delusion”
The child expresses beliefs about the targeted parent that are completely untethered from reality. They might claim a parent was “abusive” because they made them do homework or didn't buy them a specific toy. These aren't just complaints; they are fixed, delusional beliefs. The child is living in the parent’s distorted reality.
This is Child Abuse. Period.
Let’s stop sugar-coating it. When a parent manipulates a child’s internal software, their attachment system, to hate their other parent, that is child psychological abuse.
It destroys the child’s ability to form healthy relationships in the future. It forces the child to participate in a “delusional” reality. It’s a form of “soul-murder” that leaves deep scars long after the divorce is finalized.
As libertarians, we believe in the non-aggression principle. Using psychological warfare to strip a child of a loving parent is a massive violation of that principle. It’s a violation of the child’s right to their own mind and their own family bonds.
We’ve written before about how Missouri HB 2308 is trying to protect children from this kind of garbage, but legislation is only half the battle. The other half is education.
Who is Dr. Craig Childress?
If you’re going to listen to someone on this topic, you want someone who has spent time in the trenches. Dr. Childress is a licensed clinical psychologist who has seen it all.
Before his private practice, he was the clinical director for a children’s assessment and treatment center at California State University, San Bernardino. He worked at the Children’s Hospital of Orange County and collaborated with the UCI Child Development Center. He’s not just a guy with an opinion; he’s an expert consultant and witness in legal cases across the U.S. and Canada.
His work at California Southern University is a cornerstone for anyone trying to fight back against the “pathogenic parenting” that is destroying modern families.
Reclaiming the Truth
The system is rigged, the courts are slow, and the “experts” are often behind the times. But the Attachment-Based Model gives us a scientific framework to call out the truth.
If we want to stop the cycle of trauma, we have to stop treating parental alienation like a “dispute” and start treating it like the psychological violence it is. It’s time to shred the old playbook and demand that the courts recognize the science of attachment.
For more on how the legal system gets things wrong, check out our piece on the myth of “pressing charges” or dive into our blog archives for more raw truths.
Sources & References:
- Video: Dr. Craig Childress – Parental Alienation Lecture
- California Southern University School of Behavioral Sciences: Psychology Department
- Dr. Childress’s Official Site: C.A. Childress, Psy.D.
- Dr. Childress’s Blog: drcraigchildressblog.com
- Research: The Attachment-Based Model of Parental Alienation (Childress, 2015).
- Purpose: To educate the public, legal professionals, and mental health experts on the signs of alienation.
- Date: April 25th is recognized officially in several regions, with many organizations advocating for awareness throughout April, often considered Parental Alienation Awareness Month.
- Activities: Events include “Bubbles of Love” campaigns, light-up events (where landmarks turn red), and social media awareness campaigns using hashtag #PAAwareness.
- Warning Signs: Behaviors include a child's unjust criticism of one parent, unwavering support for the alienating parent, and false accusations of abuse.
