Sentences with phrase «seriously damaging to the child»

The Barbie Dream House I mentioned earlier, for example; if a toddler sees the house in the store when mom was just running in to buy diapers, and she gives in and lets her child have it because she wants to make her happy or feels that her bond with her child will somehow be impacted, that can be seriously damaging to the child.

Not exact matches

For those concerned that men, women, children, and their future happiness are being seriously wounded in all this — and that grave damage is being done to medical ethics and law — a good place to begin examining the whole «T» phenomenon is Ryan T. Anderson's recently published study, When Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment.
«It is nothing short of a national scandal that those who are dedicating themselves to giving a future to children and young people are seeing their own lives damaged by the failure of government and employers to take their health and welfare seriously.
We are writing to express our grave concern about the exclusion of arts and creative subjects from the new English Baccalaureate, or EBacc, for secondary school children, which we believe will seriously damage the future of many young people in this country.
A good piece of advice if your child has been seriously injured or killed due to the negligence of a third party, is to speak with an experienced personal injury lawyer before you file a claim to learn about some of the issues that can arise with these claims, including the type of evidence needed to prove a claim and the type and amount of damages you can recover.
The correct test where the claim has a real prospect of success is in three stages: to consider (i) whether the children had a seriously arguable case that they would succeed at trial in obtaining a proprietary interest in the property; and if so (ii) whether either or both parties would be adequately compensated by a damages award; and if not (iii) where the balance of convenience between the parties lies.
[FN52] Calls to 911; police reports; restraining orders with their supporting affidavits; convictions and criminal records; medical records; photographs of injuries or of property damage; the affidavits of neighbors, coworkers, friends, and family members; answering machine tapes or notes with angry messages or threats; journals kept by the client or her children; detailed records of problems with provisional arrangements for child transfer — all these and more may provide actors in the family court system with the documentation they need to take the abuse seriously.
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