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Children!
It is the mean of the number of children in the households with the 8th and 9th largest number of children.
to provide protection for children who cannot protect themselves
No, I personally think that bilingual households have a very high advantage of learning over one language households
Yes, the health and safety laws have a positive impact on the Children's development as it helps protect them.
Usually people who argue against laws to protect children are the ones who are not wanting to stop the action that is harming the child or the fear of being caught. Such as driving with no child restraints? Who would argue against that? Or no smoking in the auto while a child is in the car? I would only argue that if I was smoking with the child in the car. So if your question is about those types of arguments, then I feel my answer is correct. If your question is not about those types of laws to protect children, could you be more specific? please. Often people argue againt some laws because they understand that each law that is passed removes individual rights. Also, laws purported to protect children may not be sensible in all cases, but the laws are enforced universally.
Yes. 20% of same-sex households are raising children.
There are laws that prohibit child abuse or any mistreatment towards any child. However, the government cannot directly protect children.
Society give children extra protection that it does not give to adults, because children are less able to protect themselves, and have often been treated as slaves by their parents or guardians.
As a result of writings like "The Bitter Cry of the Children," new laws were established to regulate child labor, improve working conditions for children, and ensure their right to education. These laws aimed to protect children from exploitation and abuse in the workplace and to provide them with a safer and healthier environment in which to grow and develop.
It is the same percent as children raised in straight households, about 3% to 8%.Typically it is believed that gay households produce more gay children, but this is wrong. The only reason people believe this is that gay households are more accepting of gay children and the children will grow to feel comfortable with being out as gay. In homophobic heterosexual households, gay children may learn not to accept themselves and hide that they are gay. The numbers are not the same, but the openness is where the misconception comes from.
If children were all raised to respect everyone, we would need far fewer laws. Some laws were written to increase our safety (e.g. traffic laws) and to protect property from robbery (laws against trespassing, and, of course, stealing). Some laws (Freedom of the Press, Freedom of Speech) were instituted to keep the government from becoming a dictatorship. We need some laws that don't exist, e.g. laws with severe punishment to protect animals from human cruelty.