Friday, October 25, 2019
Lincoln - Douglas Debate :: essays research papers
 Affirmative Case Introduction- "We must use every tool of  diplomacy and law we have available, while maintaining  both the capacity and the resolve to defend freedom. We  must have the vision to explore new avenues when familiar  ones seem closed. And we must go forward with a will as  great as our goal ââ¬â to build a practical peace that will  endure through the remaining years of this century and far  into the next.â⬠ Because I believe so strongly in the words of  U.S. Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright, when she  spoke at the Stimson Center Event, June 10, 1998, that I  ask you to affirm todayââ¬â¢s resolution, ââ¬Å"Resolved: The use of  economic sanctions to achieve U.S. Foreign Policy goals is  moral.â⬠ Before I go on, I feel it necessary to define some  key phrases in this resolution: ? Economic sanctions- the  deliberate, government inspired withdrawal, or threat of  withdrawal, of customary trade or financial relations.  "Customary" does not mean "contractual"; it simply means  levels of trade and financial activity that would probably  have occurred in the absence of sanctions. ? To achieve- to  fulfill ? U.S. Foreign Policy goals- to encompass changes  expressly sought by the sender state in the political  behavior of the target state. ? Moral- capable of right and  wrong action or of being governed by a sense of right;  subject to the law of duty. I ask you to affirm this resolution  in order to achieve my all-important value premise of  societal welfare. To make my position clear, I will define  societal welfare as the United States governmentââ¬â¢s duty to  act in the nationââ¬â¢s best interest. This also refers to what the  majority of the citizens want. To achieve societal welfare, I  shall utilize the criterion of national security. I will define  national security as the governmentââ¬â¢s obligation to protect  its citizens. It is in this way that the United States  government must proceed to achieve its greatest goal of  societal welfare by exercising the security of our nation.  Now on to the core of the affirmative case: My first  contention in this debate is that sanctions aim to modify  behavior, not punish. Sanctions do not exist to ostracize or  punish, but rather they encourage a change of policy that  leads to compliance with standards of international law.  One of our goals is to change or destabilize the targetââ¬â¢s  government, which means to change its policies that involve  human rights, terrorism, and nuclear nonproliferation.  Others are to disrupt a relatively minor military adventure  and to change the policies of the target in a major way,  such as, to surrender a territory. Our goals are NOT to go    					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.