Instigator / Pro
1
1476
rating
336
debates
40.77%
won
Topic
#3681

Forced integration should have not been done

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Winner
1
2

After 3 votes and with 1 point ahead, the winner is...

oromagi
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
Three days
Max argument characters
20,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Winner selection
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
2
1922
rating
117
debates
97.44%
won
Description

Disclaimer : Regardless of the setup for voting win or lose, The aim of this interaction, Is for those that view it, Learn and or take away anything that will amount to any constructive value ultimately. So that counts as anything that'll cause one to reconsider an idea, Understand a subject better, Help build a greater wealth of knowledge getting closer to truth. When either of us has accomplished that with any individual here, That's who the victor of the debate becomes.

When we're talking about "racial" integration or any sort of the kind, forcibly so by law was not correct.

I will expound further in the debate rounds.

For questions, clarity, concerns, please send a message or drop a comment.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:

This was not a debate but a massacre.

Pro's argument whole seems to boil down to "People have a right to create bubbles of association where nothing they dislike is let in." He considers this interest to be more compelling than the general interest of people in having uniform opportunity and access to things which are taken for granted in the 21st century.

In Round 4, he laments that if public spaces are desegregated then segregationists who are forced to shop in these integrated establishments for lack of alternative will be denied said right to create bubbles of association. And yet, in his hand is the solution to his own problem: segregationists, in order to uphold their right, can simply deny themselves access and opportunities in the same way previously experienced by the outgroup (here, 20th century blacks). If, after all, it was no excessive burden to living for 20th century blacks then it could've been no excessive burden to living for pro-segregation 20th century whites either.
So then, if the practical consequences of segregation for blacks did not pose an ethical dilemma grave enough to outweigh the perceived interest of segregationists, then effectively the same consequence applied to segregationists could not have posed an ethical dilemma grave enough to outweigh the very real and tangible interest of blacks.

Ultimately, Con takes down Pro by citing definitions which show freedom of association to be not only freedom FROM but also freedom TO. This, combined with the mountain of evidence that Con brought to the table, is enough to make this vote easy peasy.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:

Since I already gave a vote for the other debate on this same subject, I'm going to keep this one short and focus on the differences between the points made here and there. Note that I am not referencing that previous vote as this does stand alone, I'm just making clear that if voters are interested in thoughts that are largely consistent between the two debates, they can refer to my vote on Pro's other debate on the same topic.

Pro spends little time actually defining his impact or subject here. The impact appears to just be "freedom of association good" and "best to avoid bringing out peoples' worst impulses." These are decent points, but in order to support them, Pro has to give more analysis than I'm seeing. If we should always get the choice to associate only with those people that we want to associate with, then I need to see some reason why those who cannot do that in a society that denies them those basic interactions (often by facilitating racism) is one that's better than a society where some forced interaction leads to a more widespread freedom of association. Pro doesn't do that. Instead, he leans on the latter impact, arguing that it makes for bad interactions that are actually harmful. I need to see some comparison of impacts where Pro provides me with some quantitative measure for how bad this is and compares it with Con's own measures for why the benefits of forced integration outweigh. I don't see that. It's a short term vs. a long term impact. Con tells me to favor what yields the best impact for everyone as well, and Pro doesn't address that.

What changes in this debate is that Pro presents a few subjects to debate on, though they're still rather vague. Pro doesn't actually state what instances with businesses, the military and sports yield bad outcomes or how we can generalize from specific bad outcomes in these. Instead, he just asserts that forced integration yields bad outcomes for each of these. After a round that is copy-pasted from the other debate and doesn't apply here since it's responding to points not made in this debate (bad on Con for that), Con tells me why those are in place and, in some instances, challenges that these even are instances of forced integration. I don't see any direct responses from Pro, just repetition of the same points. Con clearly supports certain instances of forced integration and, in general, the idea of forced integration as a means to ensure improved freedom of association. Neither he nor Pro necessarily have to deal with all instances of forced integration, but only Con gives me some basis for determining who has the burden to address them and demonstrate that they are bad (Pro), while he only has to show that forced integration can be good. He does so. Therefore, I vote Con.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:

During this debate, Con not only essentially self-plagiarises from this debate: https://www.debateart.com/debates/3682-forced-integration-should-have-not-been-done but never addresses the issue of whether forced integration should be done (which Pro points out again and again).

Con's position is that it should indeed have not been done but that it was not done. These are not mutually exclusive.

Mall/Pro wins the debate because he clamps down on this BoP issue over and over again, noticing Con's lack of addressing it:

"Even if the law is not forcing people to integrate, by taking away segregation, those that do not want to integrate are being forced to.

That's what you're continuing to miss or dishonest to ignore. One of the two.

I point you back to that KKK meeting example. I'll point you to Shakespeare with Romeo and Juliet. No law of the land but the two different families would of had to face forced integration for a marriage they were against.

By legalizing so called interracial marriage and miscegenation, families are not being forced by the law of the land to integrate but by marriages unwanted.

You have your two adjectives, the unwanted and unallowed intrusion of a party.
Basic forced integration.
This is what I want you to get your head wrapped around.
The law is not the only side to force something .
Taking you back to the military example, by allowing certain people to join with others that did not wish to bunk with those certain individuals (share the barracks) were forced to do so if not just all out refusing.
When something or situation is forced on you or an attempt is made to force, it's understandable that you may reject it and that's fine .
All the topic statement is saying, it's fine to not accept any association of any kind.
You shouldn't have to be around people you don't want to."

Con keeps agreeing over and over again that forced integration should not have been done because Con's entire case revolves around the premise that it has not been done and would only be wrong if it had. Con concedes the debate repeatedly.

Con keeps saying that free exchange of ideas and people of differing outlooks is important but Pro's position is that the freedom of those that wish to keep to their own ethnicity and/or race should be entitled to do so.

Con literally gives examples of forced integration (such as a gas station being forced to provide for people of a race they'd rather not) and just basically regurgitates what he said in the other debate on the topic. Unlike in the other debate, however, Con doesn't expand on why he believes forced integration should have been done, all he does is continually state that Pro can't prove it ever was.

That implicitly implies, if we account for the 'free exchange of ideas and outlooks' that those with a segregating, exclusive outlook should be allowed to do so.