Thank you, Chernobyl, for your timely response.
Preamble:
I will split my response up into four parts: the first will criticize my opponent’s structure, the second will rebut my opponent’s arguments, and the third will extend my own arguments.
Part 1: A flawed structure from my opponent in violation of the rules merits the loss of a conduct point.
As duly stated in the description, the structure of the debate includes “R1: Constructive arguments: no direct rebuttals.” (Emphasis added) A constructive argument is one that supports a case, while a rebuttal is one that attacks an opponent’s case. My opponent has clearly violated this structure, as shown by at least two direct rebuttals against my contentions.
The purpose of this restrictive structure is to compensate for the contender’s inherent advantage: having the last argument in every debate, which the instigator cannot respond to. By not adhering to this structure, my opponent has not followed the fair spirit of this debate, which I believe merits the loss of a conduct point.
Part 2: My opponent’s constructive claims fail to adequately uphold his burden of proof.
First, my opponent has argued that that “it [the legal precedent of upholding flag desecration] certainly does not prohibit the US Congress from editing the Constitution in a way that it would exempt burning the US flag from the conditions of freedom of expression.”
My opponent’s point fails to address the main point of my first contention: namely that, no matter how you justify it legally, outlawing flag desecration is clearly unconstitutional. As far as I can tell, not passing unconstitutional laws would, per the definition, be the “proper, reasonable, or best thing to do.”
Furthermore, this debate also touches on public policy – it's not a debate over whether flag desecration is disrespectful, it’s a debate over whether flag desecration should be outlawed. My opponent must adequately show how and why his policy should be implemented – otherwise, he has not fulfilled his burden of proof.
My opponent's first argument addresses the “How” part, but in what I believe to be an inadequate way. Per Bond vs United States, a Supreme Court case challenging the constitutionality of a federal law, the court said, and I quote, “A conviction under [such an unconstitutional law] is not merely erroneous, but is illegal and void, and cannot be a legal cause of imprisonment.” [1]
As this decision shows, if any law or amendment outlawing flag desecration was passed, it would not only be ineffective, but likely struck down.
Unless my opponent can convincingly show that outlawing flag desecration would be allowed and lead to a real impact, I have negated my opponent’s first argument.
Second, my opponent has cited several polls showing that a plurality of American people support an amendment outlawing flag desecration. Ii have no objection to my opponent’s sources, but this argument is flawed in two ways.
Primarily, popular approval is not something to base public policy on. Indeed, my opponent’s argument could be called an ad populum fallacy – just because people approve of something doesn’t mean it’s correct or right. As one famous public official said, “100% of people would like to not pay taxes.” Regrettably, lawmakers have declined to implement this.
Just as importantly, the popular opinion against flag desecration is a reason to fight even harder to keep it legal. The First Amendment protects opinions, no matter how unpopular they are. As the American Civil Liberties Union incisively noted, “Experience shows that the way to fight political expression with which one disagrees is not to outlaw it, but to express disapproval.”
The flag of America represents our country – and our freedom. This includes the freedom to express disapproval, however distasteful it may be.
Unless my opponent can demonstrate that popular approval is a legitimate basis for an unconstitutional constitutional amendment, I have negated my opponent’s second argument.
Furthermore, giving in to the public and outlawing flag desecration would set a dangerous precedent, an argument I will extend in Part 3.
Third, my opponent has argued that flag desecration is “highly offensive and a form of protest that aims to nothing else but cause further dispair [sic!] among the people of an already-turbulent society.”
While it’s true the flag desecration is offensive to many, outlawing it would create equal outrage. To curtail one of our fundamental civil freedoms that we hold dear as a country, could only lead to more trouble.
Part 3: My opponent has not convincingly refuted my arguments, so I extend them. I also add a new argument that builds on my previous points.
I extend my arguments regarding protection of flag desecration under the 1st amendment, as well as how outlawing flag desecration violates the freedoms it represents.
Outlawing flag desecration would set a dangerous precedent: in effect, “If you don’t like this viewpoint, then ban it.” Under the guise of banning “offensive” or “divisive” speech, any unpopular opinion could be shut down.
Since when has freedom of speech depended on popular approval? As the famous saying goes, “I may disagree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”
To make a rhetorical point, I’ll clarify my own position on flag desecration. I am a loyal citizen of the US, love my country, and I would never burn the flag. So why am I so fervently against outlawing flag desecration? It’s for the same reason why 74% think flag burning is a bad form of protest, but only 49% think it should be outlawed. Like that 25% difference, I understand how important freedom of expression is to our society. Freedom of expression should be a right, not a privilege, of a democratic society. It is a fundamental American value.
Conclusion:
In this response, I have done three things. First, I have validly criticized my opponent’s structure in violation of the rules. Second, I have refuted my opponent’s two arguments about how or why flag desecration should be outlawed. Third, I have extended my main argument to demonstrate why exactly allowing flag desecration is so important for freedom of speech.
I look forward to my opponent's response.
Sources:
As well as all other sources cited in the previous round.
Done
Can you remove my vote so that I can get the wording right in my analysis?
Oh shiznit... Good catch.
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>Reported Vote: RationalMadman // Mod action: Not Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 7 to pro
>Reason for Decision: See Votes Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action:
The vote was found to be sufficient per the site voting policy standards.
Any unexcused forfeited round merits an automatic conduct loss, but arguments must still be voted on or justified as a tie. Repeated forfeitures waives the need to consider arguments (you still may, but by the choice of one side to miss at least 40% of the debate, the requirement ceases. And yes, this does apply to Choose Winner, which otherwise would not allow conduct to be the sole determinant).
Should either side forfeit every round or every round after their initial arguments (waiving is not an argument), the debate is considered a Full Forfeiture, and any majority votes against the absent side are not moderated (a vote may still be cast in their favor of the absentee, but is eligible for moderation to verify that it is justified via the normal voting standards).
https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#forfeitures
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I'm somewhat confused by your vote - did you mix up PRO and CON somewhere?
Bump, it's literally a full forfeit, free vote for yall's stats
Bump, FF by opp - pls vote
I experimented with adding some bold text for emphasis - I'm just going to claim that in the preview, it looked better than this black-and-white chequered mess.
IMO I think this debate falls under public policy, so if I make a convincing case that my opponent's plan is impractical, it is a valid argument. I will, of course, also argue why fundamentally it's wrong to ban flag desecration. Thanks for the feedback.
'should' is almost always a moral argument. A good argument will not focus on law or precedent but the most basic human VALUES and whether or not flag desecration follows those values. Don't cite freedom of speech, point to the arguments the Founding Fathers gave when they decided that it was important enough to make it the First Amendment.
Take your time!
I am a bit busy tonight and won't be able to respond until tmrw - apologies for the delay.