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<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>Content</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css">
<style>
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display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: 40px;
}
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border: none;
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color: white;
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<a href="progress.html">Progress</a>
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<li><a href="home.html">Home</a></li>
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<h1>Basics of Format</h1>
<div class="content-box">
<p><div class="text-white leading-relaxed text-base">
<strong><h1>🧩Basics of the Asian Parliamentary Format</h1></strong><br><br>
The Asian Parliamentary (AP) format is one of the most common debate styles used in schools and colleges. It’s a team-based format with two sides:<br>
• <strong>Government (Gov)</strong>: Supports the motion<br>
• <strong>Opposition (Opp)</strong>: Opposes the motion<br><br>
Each team has 3 speakers, and each person speaks for 7 minutes.<br>
During a speech, members from the other team can offer Points of Information (POIs) between the 1st and 6th minute. These are short interjections or questions to challenge the speaker.<br><br>
<strong><h1>EXAMPLES:</h1></strong><br>
________________________________________<br>
<strong><h1>🏛️Motion: This House would prioritize friends over romantic partners</h1></strong><br>
<em>first ask user and then give this analysis</em><br>
________________________________________<br><br>
✅ <strong>Government Case</strong><br>
<strong>Principle:</strong> Friendships are deeper and more stable over time. Romantic relationships often fade or break, but friends offer lifelong support.<br>
<strong>Practical:</strong> Friendships are plural and diverse. Prioritizing them prevents emotional overdependence on one partner. It creates a healthier, more balanced life.<br>
<strong>Examples:</strong><br>
• Friends stay through breakups.<br>
• Many people feel more emotionally safe and open with friends.<br><br>
❌ <strong>Opposition Case</strong><br>
<strong>Principle:</strong> Romantic relationships demand exclusivity and depth. Prioritizing others can break trust and emotional intimacy.<br>
<strong>Practical:</strong> Building a life with a partner (marriage, kids, shared finances) needs prioritization. Friends are important, but can't offer the same long-term commitment.<br>
<strong>Examples:</strong><br>
• Partner may feel neglected if friends are always prioritized.<br>
• Romantic bonds need effort and exclusivity to work.<br><br>
🧠 <strong>How to Think of Arguments</strong><br>
1. Define the context: What does “prioritize” mean? Time? Emotional commitment? Decision-making?<br>
2. Identify the clash: Emotional health, loyalty, long-term stability.<br>
3. Think stakeholders: How are friends affected? How is the partner affected?<br>
4. Weigh values: Stability vs intimacy, diversity of bonds vs exclusivity, emotional safety vs commitment.<br><br>
<em>Use real-life logic:</em><br>
• Gov: “Who stays with you through life’s ups and downs?”<br>
• Opp: “Who do you build your future with?”<br><br>
<strong>Always ask:</strong> Why does this matter? To whom? In what context?<br><br>
<strong><h1>🏛️Motion: This House believes exes can be friends</h1></strong><br>
________________________________________<br><br>
✅ <strong>Government Case</strong><br>
<strong>Principle:</strong> Emotional connections don’t need to end just because romance does. If the breakup was respectful, a meaningful friendship can remain.<br>
<strong>Practical:</strong> Exes often understand each other deeply. They can offer mature support, closure, and stability — especially if they were important in each other’s lives.<br>
<strong>Examples:</strong><br>
• People co-parent after divorce and remain friends.<br>
• Some breakups are mutual and end without bitterness.<br>
<strong>Why it matters:</strong> Promotes emotional maturity, breaks toxic “all or nothing” norms.<br><br>
❌ <strong>Opposition Case</strong><br>
<strong>Principle:</strong> Romantic history creates emotional baggage. Staying friends confuses boundaries and prevents full closure.<br>
<strong>Practical:</strong> One person may still have feelings. New partners may feel uncomfortable. It can lead to jealousy, drama, or emotional harm.<br>
<strong>Examples:</strong><br>
• Staying in touch delays moving on.<br>
• One-sided friendships after breakups are common and painful.<br>
<strong>Why it matters:</strong> Emotional clarity and clean breaks protect mental health and future relationships.<br><br>
🧠 <strong>How to Think of Arguments</strong><br>
1. Define terms: What does “being friends” look like? Regular contact? Emotional closeness?<br>
2. Identify stakes: Emotional wellbeing, maturity, boundaries, future relationships.<br>
3. Ask ‘why’ and ‘what if’: Why would someone want this? What if one party still has feelings?<br>
4. Compare impacts: Gov focuses on healthy emotional evolution; Opp on mental clarity and clean transitions.<br>
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<div class="step" id="step-basics">Basics</div>
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<div class="step" id="step-roles">Roles Module</div>
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