Instigator / Pro
0
1476
rating
336
debates
40.77%
won
Topic
#3682

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
0
1

After 1 vote 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
1
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 is/ 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:

A debate like this is one where the instigator has to provide a clear delineation, i.e. what is forced integration under his case and what is not. I don't see that clarity, nor do I see any specific breakdown of the burdens in this debate from Pro. At several points, he says that it's not actually his burden to show that all cases of forced integration should not have been done, but he never tells me the number of cases he has to show are unjustified in order to win this debate. A vast majority? A bare majority? Some unknown minority? Pro doesn't say, and that's just begging the question: what does Pro have to do to win this? Con tells me that he has to present a specific case with a subject and enforcement, and while that may not be absolutely necessary (we could be talking about a broad array of subjects and enforcement), we do still need something solid to latch onto. It's only in the later rounds that Pro suggests some instances of this and brings up a clear harm: violence. However, Pro doesn't quantify that harm, instead largely leaving the issue vague. Saying that it's bad for violence to happen and that forced integration can result in violence just isn't enough. It doesn't tell me why individual cases of forced integration are bad, nor does that suffice as an effort to weigh Pro's impacts against Con's.

It also doesn't help that much of Pro's impacts, especially early on in the debate, seem to focus on freedom of association. Pro never really acknowledges the point by Con that many people lack that basic freedom and that forced integration offers a method to resolve that problem. Is it painful in many instances? Yes. Is it worth that pain? Con tells me it is. Pro doesn't really give me any reason why it isn't beyond the assertion that the pain is bad. Again, I understand that it's bad. Tell me why it's worse than the benefits that Con gains in terms of improved freedom of association and overcoming issues of racism. You can tell me that the forced integration requires that we abrogate freedom of association, but you can't simultaneously argue that we had freedom of association to begin with without defending its existence in the status quo before forced integration. Pro doesn't do that, so since freedom of association already doesn't exist for large swaths of the population as Con points out, forced integration at least offers them opportunities to associate that they never had before. Those opportunities may result in bad short term outcomes for some, but Con shows that in the long term, that freedom of association becomes more widely available. He's essentially piggybacking on Pro's main impact from R1.

So Con is the only one really engaging with the issue of what matters most in this debate. Pro gives me things that matter, but by making no comparisons to the benefits of forced integration (or, for that matter, challenging those benefits), he resigns himself to Con's directing of the debate, and Con's direction clearly nets him the win.