View Poll Results: ideal number of children in a family
- Voters
- 102. You may not vote on this poll
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2
54 52.94% -
3
39 38.24% -
4
9 8.82% -
5 up
1 0.98%
Multiple Choice Poll.
Results 101 to 110 of 133
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July 18th, 2010 07:55 PM #101
Two children will be ideal in these times. And I got 4 in two batches. Girl, boy, girl, boy. Two in college the other two in elementary. With one wife lang ha.
The two additional were unplanned. But no regrets. They are growing up to be good and wonderful kids.
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July 18th, 2010 09:31 PM #102
I don't think there is an ideal number, if you have the means and can give quality lives to your children, kahit 10 pa maganak ka, but if you can't afford, then HUWAG KA na magkaanak kahit isa!
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July 18th, 2010 10:15 PM #103
yep
thing is, those who aren't supposed to have children are the ones having the most number of children
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July 18th, 2010 10:31 PM #104
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July 18th, 2010 11:00 PM #106
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BANNED BANNED BANNED
- Join Date
- Dec 2009
- Posts
- 607
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July 19th, 2010 08:14 AM #109
Tingin ko, basta't kaya mong suportahan, okay lang, up to a maximum of 3....
10.3K:sumo:
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July 21st, 2010 03:55 PM #110
SWS: Severe hunger rises in RP
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/07...unger-rises-rp
MANILA, Philippines - Rosely Salazar, 36, sheds a tear when she talks about the hardship that her family goes through every day.
A single parent who earns a living as a manicurist, she said her five kids --ages 16,14, 9, 8 and 5 -- sometimes eat nothing but patis (fish sauce) or noodles once a day just to fill their bellies.
"Sometimes, we don't eat at all especially when I can't find work," she told abs-cbnNEWS.com.
Salazar's family is just one of some 780,000 families that went hungry more often in the past quarter, according to the latest Social Weather Stations survey released Wednesday.
The survey, conducted last June 25-28, showed that an estimated 4 million Filipino families went hungry at least once in the past three months. Of that number, at least 780,000 families said they went hungry "often" or "always" in the past quarter, compared to only 530,000 families in the first quarter of 2010.