So wild sex parties with the little tykes is okay by you if the parents want to raise their kids that way.
Discipline can be carried out with 40 lashes of the scourge.
Hey it's totally up to the parents.
You might want to reconsider your position. Or maybe not.
Every time I make that statement somebody invariably comes back with an extreme example (or in this case, two). My answer is always the same. Yes, you should be able to raise your kids any way you want. They're your kids, nobody else's, and how you raise them is nobody's business.
Now, if you want to make exceptions for extreme examples, that's fine, but the exceptions need to be spelled out and you need to stick to those extreme exceptions. The slope can't be slippery enough to allow a child to be taken from its parents on an unsubstantiated allegation by a neighbor (or even a teacher or medical professional) to "err on the side of caution" without due process. The slope cannot be slippery enough to allow a child to be taken away because a parent spanked him in the cereal aisle of the grocery store for throwing a temper tantrum and then have the parent hauled off to jail, because that's not extreme. If a kid is bruised or is injured, "consistent with" abuse is not evidence of abuse, and the kid shouldn't be taken away and put the burden of proof on the parent that they didn't do it - the burden of proof is on whoever makes the allegation - and unless that burden of proof is met, the kid stays with the parent.
It should be extraordinarily hard to remove children from their parents. Unbelievably hard. It should be a last resort instead of the first resort that it is.
The Department of Health and Human Services defines child abuse or neglect as:
"Any recent act or failure to act on the part of a parent or caretaker which results in death, serious physical or emotional harm, sexual abuse or exploitation; or an act or failure to act, which presents an imminent risk of serious harm."
And states can expand on that. In some (most) states it's been expanded now to include the serious emotional harm of a child getting a spanking, and "imminent risk of serious harm" has been expanded to "possible risk of imminent risk of serious harm" to where kids playing in the front yard while not being directly supervised by a parent is considered neglect, because of the possibility of a windowless van driving by and snatching them.
In 2012, the most recent year that Health and Human Services has published reports, 3.2 million children were investigated by CPS, 2.5 million of those were eventually declared non-victims, and another 686,000 were declared to have met the expanded definition of abuse or neglect. As many as 80 percent of those 686,000, or 548,800 children were of the non-extreme type, like playing unsupervised in the yard, left in the car for 5 minutes while the parent runs a quick errand, or left at home for an hour while the mom goes to the grocery store.
Imminent risk of serious harm becomes hypothetical risk of serious harm.
Since 2008, the number of referrals to CPS has increased by 14.3 percent, even as overall rates of actual child victimization declined by 8.3 percent during the same period. That's insane. That's a 22.6 percent spread between reality and people minding other people's business. That's how you get 548,800 children wrongly being taken away from their parents over minor things that come down to being nothing more than a difference of opinion on how kids should be raised.
The system of Child Protection Services isn't about protection, it's about power. So in that light, yes, absolutely, you should be able to raise it any way you see fit with no outside interference.