The child needs his mother to raise him, not a daycare. You can tell your husband that.
Farming a child out to someone else to raise is irresponsible and very cruel for the child. Be your child's mother and do what it takes to stay home to raise her/him or you will miss out on so much.
Take your husband to a therapist for mediation if you still fight about this, someone professional needs to step in and talk some sense into him. Just ask your husband if he trusts someone else to raise your child more than you? That is what is happening if you work outside the home.
Compromises could include: working a part time job when husband is home (doesn't leave time for the two of you so it isn't a very good compromise), OR taking an online job so you can work at home, OR promise to take a job once the child is in school full time - but you must be home when the child gets home because most children get into trouble between the time they get home from school and when the parent gets home.
Just tell him that you would like your child to grow up with their mother rather than in a nursery, and that you feel it would benefit his/her upbringing at least until they go to school. Beware though a lot of stay at home mothers kind find the boredom terrible.
yes
yes Generally, no (unless the new husband is, say, Donald Trump). This is because the new husband isn't responsible for the child[ren].
Any spousal support would reduce his child support, as it is a deductible item off his gross income, and there are no clear guidelines for setting it.
The laws vary from state to state.
A caring husband.
Encourage them both to go for a DNA test. If the mother is pressuring him for support, he should be able to demand one legally. (If he has already been supporting and/or raising her, this may be difficult, and he may need to consult a lawyer.) Support your husband in whatever decision he makes. If he loves the child then he may consider it as his anyway.
Texas Instruments makes cheap ones with plenty of functions.
the child support people
this question makes no sense
eating healthy food, plenty of sleep, exercise.
Your sister's husband is your brother-in-law. The English language makes no distinction between the husband of an older sister and the husband of a younger sister.
A genetics test should be done to be sure the baby is really his. If it is then being married to you makes no different and he should support the baby he helped bring into the world. As you know this is a serious problem and you and your husband are going to have communicate and tell him he needs to be honest about how he feels about this. If the genetics test prove he is the father then you have to make some decisions as to whether you want to stay with your husband after he's cheated on you and now how a child to support.