Introduction: Welfare and Expectations
When my party noticed the challenge for this debate, we were eager to accept. Our party believes in a basic principal...
- All things come with expectations
Not only is this a good civil code to live by, but a natural truism. All things are done with an expectation contingent. Should I buy my fiancee a present, because she will certainly shower me in love for it? Must I buy my kid this toy? What will come out of it, his love? Will this business deal make me money? Is it worth the time?
All of these are questions human's subconsciously ask themselves on a daily basis. This is no alien phenomenon. This is human nature. Humans have wants, and they either give to receive, or take to receive. It can be something as material as money, or precious as love. The basis for all modern day utilitarian beliefs lies in this astoundingly true proverb. All things come with expectations. If there's a man who's given his good will for nothing, then that man is far from human, or is lying to himself.
Yes, we've heard stories of men giving for their religion, giving for their beliefs, giving for a plethora of purposes. Let's not forget, every purpose has an end, and giving is the means to that end. Take a second to reflect on what I just said. The commandment is as clear as the sky is blue. All things come with expectations. Why should us, as a government, a unified people, be any different?
- We most certainly should not differ from our nature, but embrace it. To embrace it, we must identify the things we seek to gain from our generosity...
- To bring fallen members of society back into the community
- To help children in need who are impartial to their parents economic distress
- To revitalize economic productivity by first revitalizing the workforce
This is all great, but there are certain things which led people to the place they are in life, before recieving welfare. Sex, Vice, and Drugs being very prominent. This debate isn't about sex and vice, so let's focus on drugs.
- Drugs make citizens dysfunctional and destructive to the community
- Drugs hurt families, and cause rifts and unfair treatment to children
- Drugs make it harder for people to participate in a competitive workforce
It is clear, that drugs defeat the original purpose welfare sets out to achieve. I know there are other ways to help these people besides financial support, because if it come's down to supporting a drug addict continue his bad habits, or giving the man nothing to work his way out of the hole himself, I'll gladly back the latter. But I know man's will for love, care, and acceptance outweighs that of any drugs. While many people would fall to vice, a drug test would encourage citizens to give up that vice in favor of a more productive path in life.
Let's be reformers of the system! Let's Institute drug tests each year, before citizens can collect welfare! We leave the floor to the opposition.
Return To Top | Posted:
2014-10-24 09:53:22
| Speak RoundI will ask my opponent to stick to using American examples in order to prevent this debate from becoming too crazy. My opponent's general premise is "drugs are harmful" if we look at his three primary bullet points. I agree to some extent, drugs can be harmful. Of course depending on what drugs in particular we are referring to. However, my opponent stating that "drugs defeat the purpose of welfare" is outright incorrect. What do drugs have to do with welfare? The primary purpose of welfare is to act as "social insurance[1]." Welfare exists to operate as a safety net for the less fortunate amongst us. The existence of welfare has nothing to do with drugs.
[1]http://fee.org/the_freeman/detail/marching-to-bismarcks-drummer-the-origins-of-the-modern-welfare-state
Drugs themselves are not directly harmful either. That is a matter of what drugs we are referring to. What happens if I need painkillers for arthritis in my hands? What happens if I need to use a steroid on my path to recovery from an injury? I would hope my opponent is not referring to prescription drugs because he does not clarify at all in his Round 1 arguments. It seems he is implying illegal substances such as marijuana, cocaine, heroine, and many others.
"
- Drugs make citizens dysfunctional and destructive to the community
- Drugs hurt families, and cause rifts and unfair treatment to children
- Drugs make it harder for people to participate in a competitive workforce"
What evidence does my opponent have to prove any of these statements? My opponent shouldn't try to find any absolute evidence because I promise she won't find any.
Drug tests would be ultimately be a waste of resources. My opponent made the claim that drug tests should be instituted before anyone should be able to collect welfare. If someone is using an illegal substance, they will only need to stop using it for a month or a few weeks[2]. Then once the drug test has been taken, they can simply go back to using drugs. My opponent may suggest that we have routine drug tests that happen randomly. This would be too costly. It would be $42 per person that a drug test is used on[3]. The Center for Addiction and Mental Health is against testing for drugs[3]. They too have made the claim that random tests would be for naught. They have suggested that government employees should be allocated the resources instead in order to receive training in order to notice drug users and people with disorders.
[2]http://www.hightimes.com/read/drug-testing-101
[3]https://www.aclu.org/drug-law-reform/drug-testing-public-assistance-recipients-condition-eligibility
American prisons are overpopulated with non-violent criminals and my opponent wants more people to be sent to prison it seems[4]. After all, it seems he is implying that we do tests on illegal drugs it seems. What does he think will happen when people fail these tests? When they fail these tests they will go to jail.
[4]http://www.alec.org/initiatives/prison-overcrowding/
My four points of why drug tests should not be implemented for people to receive welfare:
1. Drug abusers can plan for the tests by not using drugs leading up to the date of the drug tests.
2. Random drug tests would be too costly.
3. Drug tests if implemented would result in an increase in the prison population. This would be a direct contradiction to welfare since it exists to help people not jail them.
4. Drug tests may discourage people from seeking help for their addictive habits. After all, they would be going to jail if caught.
Return To Top | Posted:
2014-10-24 19:04:35
| Speak RoundDarth Vitiosus: When you say drugs, do you mean illegal drugs? Or drugs in general?
Legion : The resolution is referring to illegal drugs
Legion : Do you concede that Tennessee drug tested 800 applicants, and less than 1% showed positive for drugs? (http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2014/08/07/3468610/tennessee-welfare-drug-test-positive/)
Legion : Do you concede that while drug users can plan ahead for the test, they are being clean for a short period of time?
Legion : Furthermore, would you concede that the average drug stays in your system for 2 weeks, while the average withdrawl rate for most major substances is three days?
Legion : Beyond that, would you concede that the most popular drug test proposals have made their tests random?
Legion : Do you concede that jail offers a platform that forces people to wane off their drug habits? Do you also concede that most governments, even Iran, create special prisons for recovering drug addicts, with doctors and therapists?
Legion : I have several more questions for you when you return. Forgive me for asking so many at once, but I may be gone for a large portion of the day, and the faster you answer the more time I have to ask my other questions.
Legion : (The opposition has been online and ignored cx with only a couple hours left)
Darth Vitiosus: 1. That is the results they have arrived at in Tennessee
Darth Vitiosus: 2.I stated in MY ARGUMENT in the first round that tests can be prepared for
Darth Vitiosus: (NO I WASN'T ONLINE, STOP LYING)
Darth Vitiosus: 3. I will not state anything about drugs being in someone's system for a mere two weeks, that is relative to the drug being used
Darth Vitiosus: 4. I do not know what drug tests proposals you are referring to
Darth Vitiosus: 5. I disagree, I can show evidence of drug users using illegal drugs in prisons
Darth Vitiosus: (AGAIN, I WASN'T ONLINE, STOP LYING)
Darth Vitiosus: 1. Should these drug tests be conducted by a private contractor or the government?
Darth Vitiosus: 2. Who will pay for these drug tests?
Darth Vitiosus: 3. What happens to the people who fail the drug tests?
Darth Vitiosus: 4. What is the exact amount of an illegal substance allowed in someone's body before they can be convicted?
Darth Vitiosus: 5. What evidence is there that drug tests work?
Legion : 2. You answered a question with a question. Do you concede that people planning ahead for a drug test will be off for a short period of time
Legion : 2. So you do concede that?
Legion : 3. So you'
Legion : *So you're refusing to answer my question
Legion : 4. The most popular ones
Legion : 5. Can you show it now?
Legion : A1)Government A2)Drug Corporations through taxes A3) They wont be given welfare. A4) Trace elements are dependent on the drug in question. There isn't a blanket answer. A5) The FDA states that drug elements are incredibly detetectible after urinating ( http://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/ProductsandMedicalProcedures/InVitroDiagnostics/HomeUseTests/ucm125722.htm)
Legion : I'm changing my second answer to taxpayers in general. We aren't debating how the budget should be allocated, so I have no authority over that in this debate
Legion : Since you conceded to the Tennessee study, where 1 out of 800 welfare recipients tested positive, would you also concede that in general, the amount of convictions would be very low?
Legion : Do you concede that if people break the law, then they should be tried in court?
Legion : Furthermore, would you concede that drug abusee's have the choice to take drugs over recieving welfare?
Legion : Would the average drug addict, who knows he'll test positive for drugs, check in for his welfare check? If so, then is it likely that the only people who would actually go to jail are incredibly foolish?
Legion : Why do you keep refrencing the United States
Legion : *? Where did you get the idea this debate was US specific?
Legion : If you agree this debate isn't country specific, then would you also concede that different countries have different procedures for handling drug offenders? With this in mind, is it fair to say arguments about country specific offender policy is irrelevant to this debate?
Legion : For example, Portugal offers rehab to drug users, whereas the United States offers jail time. Again, with this in mind, isn't making arguments about policy specific to a specific country irrelevant in this debate?
Legion : Furthermore, if you concede that your arguments are irrelevant do to your case being entirely United States specific, then would you also concede your resolution is severely lacking?
Return To Top | Speak Round
Concessions
Things conceded in cross examination - The Tennessee welfare tests, where the Tennessee government tested 800 recipients, and only 1 man was positive, was conceded to be true by the opposition
- Drug tests can be prepared for ahead of time
Unfortunately, the rest of my questions were dropped, and the opposition outright refused to give an answer on several. Debates in which the rules cannot be met should not be accepted by the opposing party.
This Debate Is Not Set In The United States: Opposition's Arguments On US Criminal Code Are Irrelevant
I don't know where the opposition got the idea that this debate was centered in the United States. This debate in non-country specific, therefore, his entire case is moot. What can we infer from this....
- The opposition's argument that the US has enough prisoners already are moot
- Since this debate is non-country specific, arguments on the result of failed drug tests can't be subjectively made
(IE, Portugal and Canada send drug addicts to rehab, where the US and Mexico send them to jail) - The opposition does not have a stable case outside his argument on criminal code in the United States, which by the non country specific nature of this debate, is irrelevant.
Opposition Concession: Tennessee Only had 1 welfare recipient Test Positive Out of 800
The reason for this was even stated by the opposition, being that "Drug addicts will prepare for their tests, and wont be caught".
Why is this important? It clearly shows the opposition contradicted his own case. His entire case is built on drug addicts going to jail, but by his own inferred omission, he's conceding that drug addicts wont be going to jail.
- The opposition contradicted his original argument
What does this first concession reveal
- The majority of people wont be caught carrying drugs
- Drugs stay in a person's system for weeks, meaning drug addicts will stay clean for a couple of weeks
Drug Addicts Wouldn't Check In For Welfare Checks If They Know They Have Drugs In Their System
Again, the opposition's case falls flat. No one got caught in the Tennessee trial, because people valued receiving their checks over their drugs. This is social science. No one would willingly endure something that they are well aware will get them caught. People aren't forced to take their checks. They are forced to decide whether getting their check is more important than taking drugs.
People Who Value Drugs Over Their Welfare Check Wont Be Taking Taxpayer Money: Win For Everyone
Welfare is a system of helping people help themselves. It only works if they are willing to work for their own good. If people would rather take drugs than recieve taxpayer money, then we should let them. The last thing we need are slackers and people who are to lazy to better their life's taking money from people who have families and responsibilities, who deserve it more.
There is no case, therefore the resolution is affirmed
Posing a Question: Should people who break the law go to jail?
Return To Top | Posted:
2014-10-26 11:14:25
| Speak RoundMy opponent has argued against the resolution he is supposed to be affirming. My opponent has given the best evidence why drug tests are not needed. Then he went out to give us a rouse of contradictions in his arguments.
" Tennessee Only had 1 welfare recipient Test Positive Out of 800"
If there is only 1 welfare recipient out of 800 that tested positive in Tennessee, What need is there for a drug tests? This further shows that the drug tests would be a waste of time and taxpayer money. This is the best of evidence given to show that the tests would not be of any significance nor do anything of noteworthiness.
"This Debate Is Not Set In The United States: Opposition's Arguments On US Criminal Code Are Irrelevant"
If this debate is not country specific, why did my opponent offer evidence from one state of one country and use it as an example of all countries? This is a hasty generalization fallacy[1]. I said my arguments will be country specific in order to have conclusive results for the readers to understand. My opponent has not even offered any explanation for drug laws in majority of the world's countries. What evidence has he offered about the drug policies in the United Kingdom, the Congo, India, China, the United Kingdom, and the many other existing countries throughout the world. My opponent didn't even bring up the United Nations opinion on the matter as a sample. Instead my opponent only gave us one example from one US state. Yet, let us look at the blatant contradictions below:
"Since this debate is non-country specific, arguments on the result of failed drug tests can't be subjectively made(IE, Portugal and Canada send drug addicts to rehab, where the US and Mexico send them to jail). The opposition does not have a stable case outside his argument on criminal code in the United States, which by the non country specific nature of this debate, is irrelevant."
"Tennessee Only had 1 welfare recipient Test Positive Out of 800"
[1]http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/hasty-generalization.html
"Why is this important? It clearly shows the opposition contradicted his own case. His entire case is built on drug addicts going to jail, but by his own inferred omission, he's conceding that drug addicts wont be going to jail."
Drug addicts who use illegal drugs do go to jail when caught,this is a fact not an opinion[2]. My opponent does not seem to know what a contradiction is it seems. My opponent has not shown how drug addicts are willfully being ignored by the police and smoking dope wherever they wish. In fact, my opponent has not shown any statistics or facts related to drug addicts and jail. I don't see why he has even brought this claim up. My opponent has only pointed to the tests in Tennessee which showed 1 out 800 tested positive for illicit drug usage. What does this have to do with illegal drug users going to jail? It does not, My opponent has offered us another erratic argument with unsupported evidence.
[2]http://www.drugpolicy.org/drug-war-statistics
"The opposition's argument that the US has enough prisoners already are moot"
American prisons being overcrowded is a fact. If my opponent actually looked at the link I offered, he would of noticed how there aren't enough prisons for the amount of prisoners existent in the United States. Therefore prisons are overcrowded because there isn't enough room.
"Again, the opposition's case falls flat. No one got caught in the Tennessee trial, because people valued receiving their checks over their drugs. This is social science. No one would willingly endure something that they are well aware will get them caught. People aren't forced to take their checks.They are forced to decide whether getting their check is more important than taking drugs."
This is merely conjecture and speculation on the part of my opponent. I offered the facts showing how drug users would just stop using drugs when the tests were officially planned.
All four points I offered in Round 1 stand as is because my opponent has only addressed #1 and he only offered conjecture. My opponent has given me a fifth point to add as well:
1. Drug abusers can plan for the tests by not using drugs leading up to the date of the drug tests.
2. Random drug tests would be too costly.
3. Drug tests if implemented would result in an increase in the prison population. This would be a direct contradiction to welfare since it exists to help people not jail them.
4. Drug tests may discourage people from seeking help for their addictive habits. After all, they would be going to jail if caught.
5. Drug tests are useless since it has been show very few people on welfare use drugs. In Tennessee, only 1 out of 800 welfare recipients tested positive for illicit drug usage.
Return To Top | Posted:
2014-10-27 07:48:06
| Speak RoundDarth Vitiosus: #1.Why do you keep using US examples if this isn't a country specific debate?
Darth Vitiosus: #2. If only 1 out of 800 people tested positive for drugs, why do we need the tests?
Darth Vitiosus: #3. What evidence is there to prove that drug tests should be administered worldwide?
Darth Vitiosus: #4. Who will pay for these drug tests across the globe?
Darth Vitiosus: #5. Why do we need drug tests?
Legion : #1 - I haven't used any examples besides the Tennesee drug test, which is arbitary evidence
Legion : #2 - To make sure that 1% aren't abusing the system and wasting taxpayer money
Legion : #3 - Evidence that correlates to a large amount of welfare recipients using drugs, and evidence that drug abuse negates any positives from welfare
Legion : #4 - You're either mistaken or this is a false ditchomony. Just because this debate isn't country specific, doesn't mean it is international. We are simply debating that the drug tests should be used.
Legion : #5 - You already asked that
Legion : Can you answer my 6 questions from last cross examination?
Legion : Q1)Since you conceded to the Tennessee study, where 1 out of 800 welfare recipients tested positive, would you also concede that in general, the amount of convictions would be very low?
Legion : Q2) Do you concede that if people break the law, then they should be tried in court?
Legion : Q3) Would the average drug addict, who knows he'll test positive for drugs, check in for his welfare check? If so, then is it likely that the only people who would actually go to jail are incredibly foolish?
Darth Vitiosus: Ask those six questions again here
Darth Vitiosus: R1)I would not concede the amount that the amount of convictions would be low since you said you wouldn't make country specific arguments
Darth Vitiosus: R2)They should be sent to jail
Darth Vitiosus: R3)I don't know the answer to that. There could only be speculation since illegal drug users are under reported due to illegalities.
Darth Vitiosus: #1)How is the Tennessee tests authoritative for the entire globe when it relates to drug tests?
Darth Vitiosus: #2 So spending $33,558 is worth finding one person on drugs($42 per drug test)?
Darth Vitiosus: #3 AGAIN, What evidence is there to prove that drug tests should be administered worldwide?
Darth Vitiosus: #4 AGAIN, Who will pay for these drug tests across the globe?
Darth Vitiosus: #5 AGAIN, Why do we need drug tests? No, I did not ask this question before
Return To Top | Speak Round
All five points I offered in Round 2 stand as is:
1. Drug abusers can plan for the tests by not using drugs leading up to the date of the drug tests.
This point has been thoroughly explained multiple times. If the drug tests are announced, drug users can simply plan for when the tests are supposed to take place. Before someone gets on welfare they can plan to not take drugs for a month to make it look like they are not a drug user.
2. Random drug tests would be too costly.
I will offer a rough estimate of the costs of the drugs tests. There are a total of a 109,000 people in the United States on welfare which is 35% of the population[1]. Roughly only a 5,000,000 of the people on welfare are persons under the age of 18[2]. Meaning the other 104,000,000 adults would need to be tested to be on welfare. As I said before in Round 1 a test is estimated to cost $42 per person. For one test for all 104,000,000 adults would cost the United States $4,368,000,000. This would only be $4 billion dollars for testing welfare recipients once. My opponent has stated he wanted random tests to happen to people on welfare If these random tests are quarterly, this will cost the country $16 billion dollars per year. Where would this money come from? The United States is one of the world's wealthiest countries but the United States is the most indebted country in the world. The United States has the most net liabilities in the entire world[3][4]. To encourage random drug tests will only push the United States into further debt because bonds and loans will be needed in order to pay for these new drug tests that happen throughout the year.
[1]http://www.cnsnews.com/commentary/terence-p-jeffrey/354-percent-109631000-welfare
[2]http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/00000.html
[3]http://online.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323353204578127374039087636
[4]http://www.newyorkfed.org/research/staff_reports/sr271.pdf
3. Drug tests if implemented would result in an increase in the prison population. This would be a direct contradiction to welfare since it exists to help people not jail them.
Drugs that are illegal and people test positive for will results in them going to prison or jail. The United States prisons are already overcrowded and with a limited number of resources. To add more people to the prison population would create more resourcing problems for prisons.
4. Drug tests may discourage people from seeking help for their addictive habits. After all, they would be going to jail if caught.
I explained this thoroughly already in Round 1.
5. Drug tests are useless since it has been show very few people on welfare use drugs. In Tennessee, only 1 out of 800 welfare recipients tested positive for illicit drug usage.
The example used by my opponent showed how the tests were a waste of money, time, and other resources. My opponent wants the United States on tens of billions of dollars on tests that have shown no significant results to speak of.
Throughout this debate my opponent resorted to dirty debate tactics, misleading voters, and even has gone so far as to attempt to even defame me. My opponent attempted to defame me in the cross-examination by claiming I was online when I wasn't. This was an outright lie because I only logged on twice that day, once in the morning and once in the evening. My opponent went on to point to contradictions that did not exist, see my Round 2 arguments about drug offenders and jail. My opponent pointed to evidence he did not provide, see my Round 2 arguments about drug addicts and jail as well. On top of all this my opponent said "Furthermore, if you concede that your arguments are irrelevant do to your case being entirely United States specific, then would you also concede your resolution is severely lacking?" He also said "This debate in non-country specific, therefore, his entire case is moot." Therefore, all of his points are invalid due to his own logic of stating that this was not a country specific debate. All of his examples were US specific or should I say his one example he used. What was even worse was that his only example related to one state out of fifty states in the United States of America.
Unlike my opponent, I definitively made the claim in Round 1 I would only offer United States examples in order to come to a decisive conclusion and prevent this debate from descending into the "crazy." Why? Not all countries in the world report drug figures. On top of this there are different drugs laws relating to each country. My opponent did not touch any of this nor explain any of it.
My opponent held the burden of proof since he was arguing in the affirmative of the resolution. If you believe he has failed to meet the burden of proof, vote Con please.
Return To Top | Posted:
2014-10-29 03:57:18
| Speak RoundI'm using this round to summarize my case. The Leader Reply round is for summaries, not making new arguments, and it is an unfair expectation for me to refute large chunks of new arguments. The arguments made in the leader reply round, one that wasn't ruled as a round for arguing, are as follows...
- Random drug tests would be too costly (he stated this, but did not argue it until the leader reply round) (it is also a false dichotomy because it refers to the United States only)
The opposition completely dropped the central reasoning behind drug tests in the first place,
- Drugs are counter productive to the goal of welfare in the first place (point dropped, possibly conceded)
- Drug tests get people off drugs for 2 weeks before the test, which 2 weeks coincides with most recovery rates, or at least sets it to a good start. (javascript:nicTemp();)
- Drug tests force people to decide between their own economic welfare and drugs
- Drug tests allow people to receive help from the government (80% of countries in the world provide special facilities for drug abusers, including the US)
Drug Tests Increase The Prison Population
Again, a false dichotomy, because only a portion of countries actually send drug abusers to jail. This point has been more than demolished, as again it has again been proven drug abusers get special facilities, which I will prove though more sources. (http://content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1893946,00.html)
The opposition dropped my question 3 times in cross examination, and I even asked it once in my round: Should people who break the law go to jail.
Dodging the question is a good sign the case his counter argument is fragile, so I'll assert again my dropped point. People who break the law should go to jail.
Drug Tests/Addictive Habits
This hasn't been close to refuted. I keep stating drug abusers receive special treatment in most countries. Why does the opposition keep dropping this? He knows that it is hurting his case.
We also established that by his own contradiction, people aren't forced to go recieve their welfare checks, so they are themselves deciding whether the money is more important than the bad habit. Unless that person is an idiot, they are likely to not go to a drug test with drugs in their system. It is purely an option for them to pursue. Drugs or money?
The BOP has been fulfilled. We have given literally 4 dropped reasons why drug tests will help people across the globe. We have proven the argument that prisoners will go to jail is false, because the opposition dropped the argument that people who are on drugs wouldn't attend a welfare test. We have also proven with the again dropped argument, that people on drugs do recieve help if caught.
The opposition also ignored most of my questions which were essential to sealing this case. The sheer amount of dropped arguments more than confirm that the opposition can't effectively refute my case, despite how rude it is to drop arguments without conceding them. Vote Pro.
Return To Top | Posted:
2014-10-29 21:17:59
| Speak Round
Alright, so here's the decision I came to: I decided this is not worth the drama we're creating, and I want to be done with it. As such, just a minute ago, I had Lars delete the vote. I hope this is satisfactory to Csareo, as admittedly, I did not know that banning me from his profile was also supposed to ban me from voting on his debates. Much as I feel that's unfair, I can understand why he'd be upset by it, and I'm not going to belabor the issue.
However, as I did spend 2 hours pouring over this debate and crafting the RFD and feedback, I'm loathe to let that work go to waste. I don't mind if either or both of you find my decision problematic, and if you want to take the time to discuss it, as Darth Vitiosus has, you're more than welcome to send me a message so that we can discuss it in private. I'll post it here to provide my feedback on the debate without any point value, and whether either of you does anything with it or it affects you in any way is entirely up to you.
Reasoning:
RFD:
While this was an interesting debate, the most problematic aspect is the lack of weighing mechanisms. Both sides are winning arguments, so it's really a question of which impacts are most important, but I don't really get that analysis out of either side. So that falls to me to some extent – I can work with what you've given me, but I have to make those comparisons.
Before I launch into the arguments, let's talk about the elephant in the room: what is this debate about? By the end, I'm still scratching my head to a certain extent. It's definitely about people being required to take a drug test in order to receive welfare, but each side seems to have very different perceptions of the context. Pro argues that this is just a broad principle debate, and that we should embody certain principles, though only two of these are clear – money comes with expectations, and drugs are bad. Con argues that this is a policy debate and that the devil's in the details, mainly focusing on economic impact. I think both arguments apply to this debate, despite Pro's attempts to make Con look non-topical. Pro is arguing a plan of action, even if it's just stated in the broadest sense, and whether it applies to just the U.S. or every country that provides welfare, the impacts to the U.S. and these other countries do factor into the debate. The broader principles may be the only things that truly factor in every single case (and Pro probably should have made that argument), but that doesn't mean that the problems with implementation are not relevant to the debate.
So, let's get into the points.
Pro is winning the principle debate. I don't think Con ever really attacks Pro's analysis here, essentially conceding the “money comes with expectations” aspect. The “drugs are bad” aspect is somewhat contested, but only in that Con asked why drugs are bad, which I think got at least some response from Pro. Con spends most of his time on the more practical issues of implementation and how people would respond, so that's where the debate goes after the first round. The only problem is that I'm not really sure what they do in the debate. The drug issue really doesn't get any weight until Pro starts arguing about reduced drug addiction rates, but how do I weigh enforcing a principle against cost harms? This becomes a problem as the debate goes on.
I buy that this will have some impact of removing drug users from the welfare rolls. I don't know how many people that comes to especially as the 1 in 800 statistic comes from a single state and is being broadly generalized, but even if I accept it, that's 0.1% of the welfare population. It would have been nice to provide some amount of spending that's recovered from ensuring that this small group is removed from welfare, especially as this could have been a strong counter to Con's financial argumentation.
Con's arguments on solvency really suffice solely as mitigation. The fact that drug abusers can plan ahead mitigates some benefit, as they can always start back up afterward. The fact that it seems to only catch such a small portion of the population mitigates some benefit. However, none of this really affects Pro's principle arguments. Even if his case fails to provide any meaningful, real world impact, the principles themselves still stand (though the mitigation fails to completely erase any such impact).
I buy that drug testing is costly. Pro's point that Con had only impacted this in the final round is relatively moot at the point where he's providing new impacts there as well (2 weeks coincides with recovery rates), so I buy that there's a substantial financial loss that accompanies this. However, while the monetary impact is made, Con never weighs this within the debate. Why should I care most about the monetary issue? From my perspective, a good reason would have been to show that the whole reason we're having this discussion is because we're worried about money being wasted on people who will proceed to spend it on drugs and ruin their lives, so at least a large part of the reason this debate is happening is because we're upset that welfare dollars are being spent on deadbeats. If the response to this engenders higher costs, that's counter to the basic purpose of implementing the plan. I can infer this to some extent, but lacking that explanation hurts Con's case.
The remaining two issues appear to be jail time and drug usage, which are inextricably linked by the end of the debate. I buy that, in countries that jail people who take illegal drugs, those who fail the tests will be jailed, increasing costs for those countries. I don't really buy the justice response Pro provides, since he doesn't give any reasoning for why jailing people is good beyond a general “justice is good” statement. I do, however, buy that people are unlikely to go to jail as they're unlikely to surrender themselves to these tests in order to get money if they know that the punitive measure will follow.
I also buy that some countries use rehab clinics, though Pro fails to prove that this is common, simply asserting that to be true in the final round (a little late for such a broad assertion). The concept that Pro brings up in the final round of a 2 week dry spell leading to recovery isn't supported by his link (it says 90 days, not 14), but he's right that it sets a start. I just don't know how meaningful that start is, especially when they're receiving money that could be used to further that usage. Nonetheless, I do buy that some people may get off of drugs or at least use less, so that presents a counter to the jail time issue. The decision between drugs and money may not be all or nothing, but at least it's requiring some measure of choice on their part.
By now, you guys may be able to see my problem. Here's what I've got:
Pro – upheld basic principles that he argues are important for society and reductions in drug addictions, albeit among a small subset of the drug-taking population that receives welfare.
Con – saving countries that would do this a lot of money and ensuring that fewer people rot in jail, thus harming their economic prospects.
I'm not sure how to weigh these impacts. Each of you garners a weak-ish impact that applies to everyone (principle vs. monetary), and each of you garners a stronger impact that applies only to much smaller subsets (weaning off drugs vs. jail time). The strengths of each of these arguments balance out, as does their likelihood. Both sides spend so much time emphasizing what the drops in the debate and preferring their own logic that I never see any real impact calculus, which would be fine if either of you were coming out way on top, but I'm not seeing it.
So, then, how did I decide? On the basis of how much of a role these arguments actually played in your concluding rounds. Three of them do, one of them doesn't. I see arguments on the monetary outcomes and jail time from Con, but only the drug argument appears in R3. That's a problem, especially since Pro's entire first round was centered on a principle that goes practically untouched throughout the debate. If he had spent practically any time here in the final round, talking about the importance of money coming with expectations and relating that principle to its effects on how people regard welfare, my vote would be going to Pro. Lacking that, Pro's argument loses its teeth, and can no longer counter-balance Con's arguments with regards to monetary costs. As such, I vote Con.
Feedback:
Both debaters:
Impacts, impacts, impacts. Explain them, make them as clear as possible. Both sides assumed harms. A debate on principle needs to be couched in what makes that principle important to society, and specifically how society is affected should that principle be substantially altered. It's not enough to assume that the principle is good, you have to state why it's necessary for society to adhere to it. A monetary debate is only as good as that money is. You need to explain why costs are detrimental to society, and not just based on debt. One could easily provide dozens of worthy causes for those tens of billions of dollars. It seems like some other impacts, like justice, go completely unexplained.
Some of the impacts for the various arguments did come out, eventually, but all of them seemed incredibly delayed, some even appearing in the final round (on both sides). That really weakens your case, since voters are much less likely to buy a new impact that appears there than they are to buy an impact that's been effectively defended throughout the debate.
Links, links, links. Again, it just seemed like many of the arguments were missing here to link to each debaters' major impacts. It's pretty much just assumed from the outset that drugs are bad, and the only support it gets is more assertions, leaving the argument with a solid impact, but limited link structure. Similarly, the story behind how people get jailed is bizarre. I recognize that some unknowing or uncaring individuals might get caught through this, but I don't see any reason to believe this number is substantial.
Plotinus:
From the outset, this debate lacked clarity, and I'm not sure why you left it so open to interpretation. If your case is focused on the principles involved in all drug testing for welfare recipients worldwide, then make that clear in R1. In many types of debate, this kind of vagueness is viewed as a breach of conduct, and it doesn't help your case to confuse voters as well as your opponent. It's not conducive to an educational debate with a reasonable level of back and forth.
Darth Vitiosus:
Remember, low impact isn't no impact. Plotinus often capitalizes on the fact htat much of your rebuttal is mitigation, using that to show that he still achieves his impacts, albeit with less strength. It's important to recognize when the link structure or the impacts are the weaker targets, and hit those specifically. Posted 2014-11-01 14:14:02
Let me just say, I'm embarassed with the amount of grammar mistakes in the final round. I was in a rush to make my arguments, because new plans with my family came into motion. Posted 2014-10-30 02:33:45