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1705134349 ·Sub-claim 3: Therefore, even if the United Nations created clean drinking water through desalinization plants, they would not be able to get the water to inland populations.
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1705134351 Frequently, arguments that suggest that the Government proposal will not solve the problem are good arguments, but they may not in and of themselves be sufficient to reject the proposal. For instance, even in light of these arguments, the Government Team may be able to suggest that their proposal is a good one even if it does not completely solve the problem. In other words, they would suggest that their proposal would solve a substantial part, if not the entire problem. Thus, that kind of argument will be more persuasive when combined with some of the arguments discussed below.
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1705134353 7.3.1.2 Principled Arguments Against the Model A second kind of argument that members of the First Opposition Team might consider is a principled argument against the First Government Team’s model. In some cases, as discussed earlier, the First Government Team may have used principles to recommend some actions that they proposed. In cases like this, debaters supporting the Opposition side might choose to explicitly support a different value system or a different principle than that supported by the opening Government Team. That kind of a stance is useful when the case for the motion centers on a principle that the First Government Team has associated with the action they are recommending.
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1705134355 If the Opposition chooses to support a different principle, they need to state that principle clearly, then give reasons why the principle they are supporting is better or more appropriate than those of the First Government Team. Then, the Opposition needs to show how that principle is consistent with the actions they believe should be taken. For example, if the First Government Team argues that, “Israel should change its policies toward Palestinians,” it could choose to support the principle of property rights. Using an alternative principle, the Opposition might choose to support the idea that the Government has the responsibility to provide safety for its citizens. The Opposition debaters would then need to think of reasons that safety was more important than property rights, and also would need to show how the current policy toward Palestinians is consistent with the principle of safety. The example of supporting a different principle is illustrated below:
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1705134357 Opposition Argument: Principled Argument Against the Motion
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1705134359 Claim: Israel should change its policies toward Palestinians.
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1705134363 ·Sub-claim 1: Safety is a more important principle.
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1705134365 ■ The most important principle for any government is to provide safety for its citizens.
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1705134367 ■ The current system allows the Israeli government to attack suspected terrorists at will.
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1705134369 ■ The model provides Palestinian citizens of Israel, and hence terrorists (from the perspective of the Israeli government), with complete security in their homes.
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1705134371 ·Sub-claim 2: Defending against terrorism fulfills the principle of safety.
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1705134373 ■ Attacking terrorists is consistent with providing safety for citizens.
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1705134375 ■ Giving Palestinian citizens of Israel complete security in their homes is inconsistent with providing safety for citizens.
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1705134377 ·Sub-claim 3: The status quo better supports safety.
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1705134379 ■ The current Israeli policy supports the principle of providing safety for citizens.
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1705134381 ■ The model proposed by the Government Team does not support the principle of providing safety for citizens.
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1705134383 Sometimes, debaters appear to be taking a moral high ground by arguing from principle. By supporting a different principle, the Opposition debaters show that they too stand on that high moral ground, even if the principle they support is different from that supported by the debaters arguing in favor of the motion. If the First Government Team is arguing that we should act on principle, the Opposition Team also can claim the moral high ground by arguing from principle.
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1705134385 7.3.1.3 The Model Will Create More Problems Than It Solves A potentially powerful argument against a model designed to offer a solution to a problem is one that claims that the model will create more problems than it solves. Constructing an argument of this type involves the Prime Minister crafting an argument of consequence. When the First Government Team constructed an argument of consequence, they described their proposal, then drew a causal argument from their proposal to some effect and finally, evaluated the effect. The pattern used to craft an argument of consequence for the Government Team operates exactly in the same way for an Opposition argument.
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1705134387 Such an argument can be illustrated using our earlier example of a motion that stated, “Nations should provide a minimal level of education to all their citizens.” In that example, the First Government Team presented a model that said all nations of Sub-Saharan Africa should provide at least a secondary education for all their citizens. In a debate involving this model, the Opposition might construct an argument that the model would interfere with efforts to solve the HIV/AIDS problem. Such an argument is illustrated below:
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1705134389 Opposition Argument: The Model Will Create More Problems Than It solves
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1705134391 Claim: Guaranteeing universal access to secondary education will interfere with the ability to solve the HIV/AIDS issue.
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1705134395 · Describe:
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1705134397 ■ The proposal envisioned in the First Government Team’s model has a substantial financial element.
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