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Is it illegal for parents to intimidate their children?
Deliberately threatening children is illegal. According to the provisions of China's Law on the Protection of Minors, parents or other guardians should create a good and harmonious family environment for minors and perform their guardianship duties and support obligations according to law.

If parents intimidate their children, don't mislead them. Some time ago, I saw a child get lost. As a result, the child was scared to death when the police tried to help him. Because parents often bring it. If they don't listen, let the police take you away and tell the children, which will lead to the children forming a wrong concept and treating the police as bad people. Therefore, when children are disobedient, parents can't just educate their children about threats. If the child is young, you can coax the child. If the children are older, they will understand some truth and be more sensible. At this time, your threatening words may be useless. So you should communicate with them in time when they encounter any problems. If someone else's parents threaten their children, I think this kind of behavior may be considered illegal, because it is very unfavorable to children's physical and mental health and directly affects their living conditions. For example, some parents blocked others on their way to school because their children were bullied by others, threatening him to wait at the door after school today.

legal ground

People's Republic of China (PRC) Public Security Administration Punishment Law

Article 42

One of the following acts shall be detained for less than 5 days or fined for less than 500 yuan; If the circumstances are serious, he shall be detained for more than 5 days 10 days, and may also be fined up to 500 yuan:

(1) writing threatening letters or threatening the personal safety of others by other means;

(2) publicly insulting others or fabricating facts to slander others;

(3) fabricating facts, falsely accusing and framing others, and attempting to subject others to criminal investigation or public security administration punishment;

(4) Threatening, insulting, beating or retaliating against witnesses and their close relatives;

(5) sending obscene, insulting, intimidating or other information for many times to interfere with the normal life of others;

(six) voyeurism, sneak shots, eavesdropping, spreading the privacy of others.