Instigator / Con
0
1480
rating
17
debates
52.94%
won
Topic
#4814

America Does not stand for Democracy or Freedom

Status
Finished

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

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
0
Better sources
0
0
Better legibility
0
0
Better conduct
0
0

After not so many votes...

It's a tie!
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
30,000
Voting period
Two weeks
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Pro
0
1500
rating
3
debates
66.67%
won
Description

No information

please feel free to vote

yes it does

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@WillyB

I get that law can be confusing, especially on an international level. A general rule of thumb I recommend is that if the law you are reading concerning rights is not specific. This means that the idea behind the law is subjective or not always enforced. It's also important to know the difference between an actual right and a specific set of rules that give something similar to a right but does not say it outright. That's the easiest way I can think of to explain international law.

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@Americandebater24

My bad, I think it’s article 38, not 36 I misread the article I was reading from. From what I’m reading, the quote you’ve got is from article 58, but article 38 says “Article 38, third paragraph, of the 1949 Geneva Convention IV provides that protected persons “shall be allowed to practise their religion and to receive spiritual assistance from ministers of their faith.” And also article 27 says this ‘Article 27, first paragraph, of the 1949 Geneva Convention IV provides: “Protected persons are entitled, in all circumstances, to respect for … their religious convictions and practices” and I mean these laws aren’t that specific to cases, so in a court it probably would be down to the subjective opinion of a judge. But this international law stuff is really complicated and out of my full understanding to be honest, I think basically that under most international law and moral principles America committed truly evil breaches, but there’s complications in how far America can be held accountable, in a legal sense, and if they actually have to adhere, especially in the Iraq case, to the accepted international rules. But I’m kinda glad we didn’t go into this area in massive detail in the debate, because I’m kinda out of my depth with some of this international law stuff

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@WillyB

Article 36 states, "Prisoners of war who are ministers of religion, without having officiated as
chaplains to their forces, shall be at liberty, whatever their denomination,
to minister freely to the members of their community. For this purpose, they
shall receive the same treatment as the chaplains retained by the Detaining
Power. They shall not be obliged to do any other work."

It does not say anything. About allowing Prisoners to practice their religion specifically. Also, if you saying, "I’d constitute forcing someone, like a Muslim to eat pork, Hindu to eat beef or a Jew to eat shellfish, to be prohibiting them to participate, follow and practice their religion in a very large way, as these dietary principles are very important to those religions" Than you are basing this on a subjective opinion and not a matter of law. And you are half right about the Geneva Convention. Both nations did sign it before the war. But neither side agreed to Protical 1, which protected civilians. So that adds further complexity to arguing that America committed war crimes though prisoner abuses did happen.

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@Americandebater24

Article 36 says ‘shall be allowed to practise their religion’ I’d constitute forcing someone, like a Muslim to eat pork, Hindu to eat beef or a Jew to eat shellfish, to be prohibiting them to participate, follow and practice their religion in a very large way, as these dietary principles are very important to those religions. I’m not 100% sure about Geneva convention law, I assumed that because both the USA and Iraq had signed original copy, that contains this article, that they’d have to follow it, but I guess I could be wrong on that front.

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@Barney

From what I found. Iraq did sign the 1949 Geneva Convention in the 1950s. But they did not sign the protocol 1 until 2010. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_I Neither did The USA at the time of the Iraq war. I also did not find any requirements in the 1949 Convention Article 36 that make making Prisoners of war eat pork to be a violation. https://www.icrc.org/en/doc/assets/files/publications/icrc-002-0173.pdf I agree with WillyB. Nothing we say in the comments here should affect the results.

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@Americandebater24
@WillyB

My understanding of the Geneva Convention rules, is that they only apply when both nations in a conflict signed it.

As an example, medics are supposed to be clearly marked so that snipers /do not/ shoot such a high value target…

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@Americandebater24

The comments aren’t a place for debate, but I’d like to point out that US law doesn’t mean shit, because they’re not in the US. They’re not entitled to any US laws you’re right, because they’re not American or in America. Just like I’m not entitled to US laws etc. however they are entitled to their basic human freedoms, as outlined by article 36 of the Geneva Convention in 1949 which the US has signed and ratified. It’s not just a dick move, it is breaking a treaty that the US signed and ratified. Personally I don’t think any of the comments me or Con say should be taken in consideration of the results, both of us should have been clearer with our points in the actual debate. But, off-the record discussion on the topic is welcome

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@WillyB

I would like to point out. That Iraq POWs are not US citizens. They are not entitled to US law concerning freedom of religion. They fall under the Geneva Convention. So while making them eat pork might be a dick move. If it does not violate the Genova convention, the USA technically did not violate any religious freedom, at least not under American law. Bombing important religious sites might. But I am not familiar if that's true under international law.

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@Barney

The US bombing of significant and important mosques as well as making Iraqi POW’s eat what US soldiers ate, which included pork which is against the Islamic religion. Either POW’s ate pork or starved, this constitutes a breach of religious freedom in the Iraq War. This isn’t all cases, but it happened.

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@Barney

Just to add. There was a point where I proved the Pro went against their evidence. They argued that Latvna and Luxembourg were better examples of Democracy and freedom than the USA. But they went against that by saying NATO nations were not freedom-loving nations. even though Lativna and Luxemburg are members. Their Data chart showed Luxembourg, Latvia, and Estonia were on the top charts of the Freedom index that Pro provided. Estonia is also a NATO member.

Read the first couple rounds, but I have important goals to get to. Here are my initial thoughts...

My interpretation of the resolution is that America is more so a symbol of democracy and freedom than not.

"The evidence put forward by the pro is based on statistical data. Not factual evidence for that matter."
I'm a data scientist, a statement like this is quite funny to me. With 14 countries ranked higher, arguing they don't have the exact same laws as us so they're less free ignores so very much which is easily summarized on the data charts.
A better tactic here would have been pointing out that the USA is ranked 15, less than 0.9 of a point below the very top (all the top slots at fractions apart), and more than twice as free as the bottom.

Other countries:
Both had good examples of the USA supporting or opposing democracies around the world.
Things like Nato, and supporting Ukraine, seem like present day examples of the USA shining brightly. Also as a veteran of the Iraq war, I am curious how we interfered with freedom of religion? The death toll was however a good point, as it's a recent ugly mark on our record for which we accomplished nothing.
Pretty sure this will swing back and forth through the debate.

Supreme court:
Pro argues it is undemocratic since they are appointed without elections.
Con defends that free people follow it, and it only institutes laws proposed by freely elected people.
This area feels like a wash to me, with it just part of the representative democracy.

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@FishChaser

Get control of yourself or take a forced break from this site.

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@WillyB

Suck my potato sack nigga.

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@FishChaser

Bro get out of this comments unless you’ve got something relevant to say, instead of your unwarranted personal insults. You’re just being annoying and rude for the sake of it, if you’ve got an issue with an individual, message them privately instead of wasting people’s time publicly commenting.

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@FishChaser

No, they aren't. Dumb can mean being unintelligent or having a disability depending on the context. Mentally Ill is when you suffer from a condition that prevents you from acting or thinking normally, often leading to unpleasant or unpredictable behavior.

Dumb and mentally ill are not mutually exclusive retard. I am both for your information.

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@FishChaser

First, this a debate app. Not a Rap app. Second, you started this conversation by getting hostile for no reason. Do you think I am going to do anything for you at this point? You are either dumb or mentally ill.

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@FishChaser

What did I do?

I challenge you to a rap battle but you have to filter your raps through 6 different languages on google translate and still make them rhyme

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@FishChaser

What beef? I don't even know you. You just came on here and started cursing at me and Pro.

Handle your own beef pussy.

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@FishChaser

Okay. I will report you now. Have a nice day.

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@WillyB

fuck you

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@Americandebater24

fuck you

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@Barney

Thank you for your suggestion. I have done so and have advised Pro to do the same.

I advise including bullet point summaries of key takeaways in the final round.

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@Savant

Clearly you should vote Con when this is done then! Lol

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@Savant

That's not the basis of the debate.

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@Savant

LOL! Good one!

US does not stand for democracy

It stands for "United States"