If court ordered, yes. If not, no. However, the very action of doing so can be used as evidence against you in a pending family court action. I teach fathers how to do this. Note that 85% of crime is committed by those who grew up fatherless.
That depends on whether there are any court orders allowing the father to see the son. If the father has visitation rights then he must be allowed to see the son. If there are no court orders allowing the father to see the son, then it is up to the custodial parent if the father sees the son. If this is in the best interest of the son to see his father or not.
WE DON'NT HAVE THE WHOLE HISTORY TO MAKE JUDGMENT. BUT I THINK SOME THING WRONG WITH THE MOTHER .
Not unless the mother is willing to let the father sign his rights away. The judge also has to be agreeable. The way it works is the child has the right to be supported by both parents. If there is not "another father" willing to adopt, then the judge will not allow it.
if you have a restraining order with the son on it, the son should not be allowed to see the father.
You can have one or the other, but not both. As for punishing the child by denying access to the child, that's up to you. see link
The issue is not applicable to the need of the child to have access to the father. see link
If the father has full custody, you can't do anything. If you have a custody agreement set up, that includes you having visitation -- take the father to court. If there is no agreement, take him to court, and get it settled. You failed to mention the jurisdiction where you live, marital status, whether there are any existing court orders, whether the father has legal custody and where the father got the authority to prevent you from seeing your child. You need to add details. See related question links.
No, you should never turn your back on your child, just let the mom know you have legal rights and all you want to do is look out for your son, but don't force your way in your make it worse.
The truth is; we hide so we can be found, we walk away to see who will follow, we cry to see who will wipe away our tears and we let our hearts get broken to see who will come and fix it.
If there ore no other legal ramifications like child abuse, drug and alcohol abuse, I would would say the mother has no legal grounds to disallow the father to see his son.
see links below
see related links below