With over 10 million undocumented immigrants in the US (as of 2009), the issue of illegal immigration continues to divide Americans.

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http://www.procon.org Universal Health Care Law In March 2010, the US Congress passed HR 3590, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), and HR 4872, the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010. President Barack Obama signed them both into law, along with Executive Order 13535 restricting federal funds from being used for abortion services. On Thursday June 28, 2012 the US Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the PPACA in a 5-4 ruling. Proponents of the health care legislation have called it a "historic victory" and "landmark legislation" that reforms the US health care system by reigning in health care costs, making health care affordable, and protecting consumers from unfair insurance practices. They say the law will reduce the nation's deficit by more than $100 billion by 2020 and by $1 trillion by 2030. Opponents have called it a "socialist" and "unconstitutional" government takeover of the health care system that will increase the cost of health care and decrease the quality. They say the law will cost more than $2.5 trillion over 10 years and drive the US deeper into debt. Several congressional representatives and special interest groups have initiated attempts to repeal HR 3590. Read more... With over 10 million undocumented immigrants in the US (as of 2009), the issue of illegal immigration continues to divide Americans. Some people say that illegal immigration benefits the US economy through additional tax revenue, expansion of the low-cost labor pool, and increased money in circulation. They contend that immigrants bring good values, have motivations consistent with the American dream, perform jobs that Americans won t take, and that opposition to immigration stems from racism. Opponents of illegal immigration say that aliens who break the law by crossing the US border without proper documentation or by overstaying their visas should be deported and not rewarded with a path to citizenship and access to social services. They argue that illegal aliens are criminals and social and economic burdens to law-abiding, tax-paying Americans. Carrying a Concealed Handgun Carrying a concealed handgun in public is permitted for non-law enforcement officials in 49 states as of July 13, 2011. Illinois and Washington, DC do not allow concealed carry except by active and retired law enforcement officers. Proponents of concealed carry say that criminals are less likely to attack someone they believe to be armed. They cite the 2nd Amendment's "right of the people to keep and bear arms," and argue that most adults who legally carry a concealed gun are law-abiding and do not misuse their firearms. Opponents of concealed carry argue that increased gun ownership leads to more gun crime and unintended gun injuries. They contend that concealed handguns increase the chances of arguments becoming lethal, and that society would be safer with fewer guns on the street not

more. Read more... Should gay marriage be legal? Defintion of Marriage http://gaymarriage.procon.org/ Micro Site As of May 10, 2012, gay marriage has been legalized in eight US states (MA, CT, IA, VT, NH, NY, WA - effective June 7, 2012, and MD - effective Jan. 1, 2013) and the District of Columbia. 31 states have constitutional amendments banning gay marriage. Proponents argue that same-sex couples should have access to the same marriage benefits and public acknowledgment enjoyed by heterosexual couples and that prohibiting gay marriage is unconstitutional discrimination. Opponents argue that altering the traditional definition of marriage as between a man and a woman will further weaken a threatened institution and that legalizing gay marriage is a slippery slope that may lead to polygamous and interspecies marriages Carrying a concealed handgun http://concealedguns.procon.org/ Carrying a concealed handgun in public is permitted for non-law enforcement officials in 49 states as of July 13, 2011. Illinois and Washington, DC do not allow concealed carry except by active and retired law enforcement officers. Proponents of concealed carry say that criminals are less likely to attack someone they believe to be armed. They cite the 2nd Amendment's "right of the people to keep and bear arms," and argue that most adults who legally carry a concealed gun are law-abiding and do not misuse their firearms. Opponents of concealed carry argue that increased gun ownership leads to more gun crime and unintended gun injuries. They contend that concealed handguns increase the chances of arguments becoming lethal, and that society would be safer with fewer guns on the street not more. Read more... Privatizing Social Security The US Social Security program is intended to provide a safety net protecting American workers and their families in the event of retirement, disability, and early death. Moving Social Security benefits into private accounts is one proposal to prevent Social Security's predicted future financial shortfall. Privatization of Social Security would allow workers to control their own retirement money through personal investment accounts. Supporters of private accounts contend that retirees would have the freedom to invest their

retirement money in the stock market as they wish, theoretically earning higher returns than with government-invested funds. Critics of privatizing Social Security argue that investing retirement money is complicated and risky because individuals can lose Illegal immigration is a benefit/is not a benefit to the United States http://immigration.procon.org/ With over 10 million undocumented immigrants in the US (as of 2009), the issue of illegal immigration continues to divide Americans. Some people say that illegal immigration benefits the US economy through additional tax revenue, expansion of the low-cost labor pool, and increased money in circulation. They contend that immigrants bring good values, have motivations consistent with the American dream, perform jobs that Americans won t take, and that opposition to immigration stems from racism. Opponents of illegal immigration say that aliens who break the law by crossing the US border without proper documentation or by overstaying their visas should be deported and not rewarded with a path to citizenship and access to social services. They argue that illegal aliens are criminals and social and economic burdens to law-abiding, tax-paying Americans. Should Abortion Be Legal or not http://abortion.procon.org/ The debate over whether or not abortion should be a legal option continues to divide Americans long after the US Supreme Court s 7-2 decision on Roe v. Wade declared the procedure a "fundamental right on Jan. 22, 1973. Proponents, identifying themselves as pro-choice, contend that abortion is a right that should not be limited by governmental or religious authority, and which outweighs any right claimed for an embryo or fetus. They argue that pregnant women will resort to unsafe illegal abortions if there is no legal option. Opponents, identifying themselves as pro-life, assert that personhood begins at conception, and therefore abortion is the immoral killing of an innocent human being. They say abortion inflicts suffering on the unborn child, and that it is unfair to allow abortion when couples who cannot biologically conceive are waiting to adopt. Read more...

Can Alternative Energy Replace fossil fuels http://alternativeenergy.procon.org/ Whether alternative energy sources such as biofuels, hydrogen, solar, geothermal, or nuclear energy can meet energy demands better than finite fossil fuels such as oil and coal remains hotly debated. Proponents of alternative energy argue that fossil fuels are inefficient, unsustainable, environmentally destructive, and the primary contributor to global climate change. They say renewable energies are a viable and immediately needed alternative to fossil fuel use that could boost the US economy and reduce reliance on foreign energy sources. Opponents contend that many technological hurdles have to be overcome before alternative energy can replace even a small portion of the power provided by fossil fuels. They say that fossil fuels will last hundreds of years longer, be made increasingly efficient, remain the most economical choice, and that reliance on inefficient alternative energies will hurt the economy What is the solution to the Palestinian Israel conflict? Two-State Solution http://israelipalestinian.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceid=000632#2 One State Solution http://israelipalestinian.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceid=000632#2 The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is one of the world's longest standing conflicts. Many people feel that resolving this conflict is the key to resolving the various conflicts throughout the Middle East. Some observers see this conflict creating Arab resentment towards the "West" and fueling radical Islamic terrorism. Although the conflict generates massive public discussion and debate, there are relatively few (if any) forums that inherently maintain an impartial and non-partisan approach to understanding it. We intentionally expose the massive variations of opinion, narrative and fact, to give our readers the best "big picture" understanding of the conflict and its potential solutions

Should the death penalty be allowed? Standard Site 1,188 people were executed in the US from 1977 through 2009, primarily by means of lethal injection. Most death penalty cases involve the execution of murderers although capital punishment can also be applied for treason, espionage, and other crimes. Proponents of the death penalty say it is an important tool for preserving law and order, deters crime, and costs less than life imprisonment. They argue that retribution or "an eye for an eye" honors the victim, helps console grieving families, and ensures that the perpetrators of heinous crimes never have an opportunity to cause future tragedy. Opponents of capital punishment say it has no deterrent effect on crime, wrongly gives governments the power to take human life, and perpetuates social injustices by disproportionately targeting people of color (racist) and people who cannot afford good attorneys (classist). They say lifetime jail sentences are a more severe and less expensive punishment than death.

Serving on the 2011 Wording Committee were: Susan McLain, Oregon (Chairperson); Russell Kirkscey, Texas; Randy Pierce, Missouri; Michael Starks, Wyoming; David Glass, New York; Pam McComas, Kansas and Duane Hyland, Virginia. The Colorado High School Activities Association and Frank Sferra hosted the annual meeting and a reception the first night of the meeting for attendees and spouses. Paul Angelico and Bud Ozello served as the local coordinators. Balloting for the 2012-2013 national high school debate topic will take place in a two-fold process. During the months of September and October, coaches and students will have the opportunity to discuss the five selected problem areas. The first ballot will narrow the topics to two. A second ballot will be distributed to determine the final topic. Each state, the NFL, NCFL and the NDCA will conduct voting in November and December to determine the favored topic area. In January the NFHS will announce the 2012-2013 national high school debate topic and resolution. It will be posted on the NFHS web page at www.nfhs.org and sent to state associations and affiliate members. 1,188 people were executed in the US from 1977 through 2009, primarily by means of lethal injection. Most death penalty cases involve the execution of murderers although capital punishment can also be applied for treason, espionage, and other crimes. Proponents of the death penalty say it is an important tool for preserving law and order, deters crime, and costs less than life imprisonment. They argue that retribution or "an eye for an eye" honors the victim, helps console grieving families, and ensures that the perpetrators of heinous crimes never have an opportunity to cause future tragedy. Opponents of capital punishment say it has no deterrent effect on crime, wrongly gives governments the power to take human life, and perpetuates social injustices by disproportionately targeting people of color (racist) and people who cannot afford good attorneys (classist). They say lifetime jail sentences are a more severe and less expensive punishment than de Synopsis of Problem Areas and Resolutions for 2012-2013 PROBLEM AREA I: CIVIL RIGHTS Resolved: The United States federal government should amend Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, substantially increasing its protections against race and/or gender discrimination.

Despite Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. s dream nearly fifty years ago of making equality a reality, civil liberties for minority groups is still a daily struggle. Fifty years ago, Congress responded to King s demands for civil rights with the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Specifically, Title VII was written to combat discrimination in the workplace in areas of hiring, firing, promotion and harassment. Although Title VII has curbed some race and gender discrimination, the law has not evolved fast enough to respond to the new forms of discrimination that are occurring. Race and gender discrimination is still pervasive in the workplace and leaves many Americans suffering with inequality. An affirmative certainly has a range of plans in regard to expanding coverage to discriminated groups by having Congress clarify existing statutes or expanding the law to incorporate more individuals. An affirmative plan could argue for an amendment that eliminates current loopholes that have allowed the courts to interpret Title VII too narrowly in areas of race, such as with post 09-11 discrimination or new channels of electronic communication. Affirmatives can also address gender discrimination, including pregnancy discrimination, equal pay, sexual harassment and sexual orientation. Negative ground is equally robust. Negative case debate can focus on the effectiveness of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or on whether Congressional legislation has the ability to provide effective regulations. Negative case debate can also focus on whether the workplace environment is the correct avenue in which to address civil liberties. Generic counterplan ground would include a federal/states debate, a Congress/Courts debate and a regulation/voluntary compliance debate. This area is also unique in the critique ground it provides through identity politics. PROBLEM AREA II: INFRASTRUCTURE Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially increase its transportation infrastructure investment in the United States. Over the last ten years, there have been a series of significant transportation infrastructure failures indicating the nation s once world-class infrastructure is falling apart and other nation s are pulling ahead of the United States. Transportation infrastructure policy featured prominently in President Obama s 2011 State of the Union address and is likely to be a main component of his reelection campaign. This topic offers debaters a rare opportunity to consider how government and policy affect the physical structures of daily life; at the same time as the public at-large considers these investments. The national policy debate topic has only discussed transportation policy once, in 1939-40, and the national topic has never considered infrastructure. Proponents of increasing investment in transportation infrastructure argue there is a substantial need to invest in transportation infrastructure and that infrastructure is central to a modern economy, the United States leadership position in the world, the security of our nation and a high quality of life. Opponents argue that government spending in

this area is unnecessary and further complicates fiscal policy. Examples of affirmative cases include direct investment in high-speed rail, highways, bridges, airports and seaports. Other affirmatives might propose new federal structures to finance transportation infrastructure projects. Negative positions could focus on the economic consequences of additional spending, the effectiveness of various transportation solutions, the political implications of infrastructure investment and critiques of economic development. PROBLEM AREA III: IMMIGRATION Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially increase its legal protection of economic migrants in the United States. Immigration reform offers a rare example of federal policy where the key questions do not involve spending money. Instead, the debate will focus on matters of social justice and fairness. The United Nations defines the term economic migrant as a person who does not meet definitional requirements of the term refugee but who voluntarily leaves his or her native country under exclusive influence of economic considerations to establish residence elsewhere. Legal protection is often defined as extending citizenship, extending voting rights, improving conditions of employment, and limiting abuses in detention or deportation procedures. Defenders of immigration reform argue that America is a nation of immigrants, and that a progressive immigration policy will strengthen the economy. Opponents believe that immigrants take jobs from Americans and threaten public safety. Examples of possible affirmative cases include: comprehensive immigration reform involving amnesty for immigrants already living in the United States, reversing restrictive state laws such as those in Arizona and Georgia, treating economic refugees from Haiti the same as those from Cuba, passing the DREAM Act, providing health care for immigrant families, providing a more generous provision of work permits for immigrants with special skills in medicine or engineering, providing legal representation for detainees, providing food stamps for impoverished immigrant families, among others. Negative positions could focus on the economic and employment harms of increased immigration, increased risk of a terrorist attack, federalism positions and the political implications of immigration reform. PROBLEM AREA IV: ENTITLEMENT Reform Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially limit the growth of its Medicare and/or Social Security spending. Government debt is rapidly increasing. The primary cause is the structural growth of entitlement spending. Social Security and Medicare, which for decades have produced surpluses that were directed into trust funds, soon will start to produce deficits. Insufficient funds were placed in trust, and those trust funds were used

to finance government discretionary spending. The retirement of the Baby Boomers will break both systems and push government debt beyond stable limits. Within fifty years, all government revenue from taxes will be needed to cover entitlement benefits and the interest on the debt owed to their trust funds. The United States will be forced to cut all non-entitlement spending or increase taxes. Affirmative teams will argue that we have time to avoid catastrophe if we begin to act now, while negatives will argue that predictions of collapse are exaggerated and politically motivated. Affirmative teams would have a wide range of options for plan mechanisms. Reducing benefits, reducing who gets benefits, reducing administrative costs or limiting medical procedures that benefits will cover are all areas for different cases, with multiple different plan mechanisms in each area. Other affirmative teams will opt for privatization schemes or may choose to phase out entitlement spending entirely. Affirmative advantage areas will focus on the long-term financial stability of the federal government, with the attendant economic and national security implications. Affirmative teams can also claim advantages related to health and poverty from preventing system collapse. Kritik affirmatives can focus on the ethical concerns about mandatory government programs and taxation. The negative will be assured of ground related to restricting spending or benefits. This carries with it economic and retirement security impacts. Negative teams will have substantial opportunity to address the system collapse through a powerful set of topicspecific counterplans, from employment promotion to restructuring to increasing tax revenue, as well as other forms of entitlement reform that compete within the literature. There is substantial controversy in the literature over the fiscal health of Medicare and Social Security, allowing the negative to attack the case harms and solvency in depth. The political backlash disadvantage will be the most important issue on the topic, as Medicare and Social Security spending will be key issues in the 2012 campaign. Negative teams will be able to run kritiks of neo-liberalism, paternalism, ageism and the rhetoric of poverty. PROBLEM AREA V: HIGHER EDUCATION Resolved: The United States federal government should establish an education policy substantially increasing its support for postsecondary education in the United States. Postsecondary education is increasingly viewed as the engine of our economy and the tool to address issues of social and economic mobility. The U.S. is beginning to lag significantly behind other nations in the proportion of students earning a degree, and the longer-term impact of this decline creates a question regarding the United States' continued economic competitiveness and growth. This topic will allow teams to debate the federal role in higher education and whether support for postsecondary education would be better left to the states and/or private organizations. Teams will be able to discuss which is the best path to increase the U.S. postsecondary education system's ability to educate individuals and create a skilled workforce for the future. An additional benefit of this topic is that debaters will be able to explore the breadth of postsecondary

education: public institutions, private institutions, for-profit institutions, two-year vs. four-year institutions, technical institutions, graduate and professional education and online education. Possible affirmative areas include: educational quality, financial aid, scholarships, remedial education, increased support for STEM initiatives, access and completion (especially for minority, disadvantaged and rural students) and increased use of technology to enable access for all students to access postsecondary education. Negative arguments include: states, private actors, federalism, funding and case debates over the proposed affirmative plan mechanisms. Additionally, students can argue the political consequences of expanding the federal role in postsecondary educat