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INDIGO URBAN DEBATE LEAGUE


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How to start A DEBATE Club in your Society

In this blog its expedient of me to teach 7 good strategise on how to start a working debate club, wherever, whenever,anywhere,anytime. In school you can have a debate club and outside the school which is one I would lay more emphasise on. You know already what a debate league is but if you don’t VISIT https://www.blogger.com/new-debate-league-nigeria . SEVEN STEPS TO START A DEBATE CLUB 1.        Be highly inspired! In this first outline, I will like to let you know starting a debate club is not a very hard thing neither is it a thing to be compared with eating bread and egg. To be a leader its of great necessity that you have a knowledge that can not be contended with by anyone. This is because its only the one who knows better that leads better. Therefore make it a must to increase in knowledge. You can start from goggling through https://www.google.com/search/about-debate/ . and try to visit https://www.youtube.com/ and watch several taped ...

Should Iran be allowed to develop Nuclear Weapon?

But the US and Europe have argued that Iran has sought to develop nuclear weapons, is therefore in breach of the NPT, and thus legitimately subject to the full weight of international punishments.  Debate has been raging over the deal, and the impact it will have on oil prices, regional powers, regional stability, global stability, the war in Syria and so on. All of these are important subjects that should be understood and discussed. However, what has hardly been discussed is the fundamental principle at stake here – the right to have nuclear weapons. Regardless of what the Iranian nuclear programme has been for, Iran has as much of a right to have nuclear weapons as Britain or the US, both in terms of the principles of the NPT and the justness of the underlying international order that produced it. Iran’s nuclear programme was initiated during the days of the Shah, and built with US aid under the ‘Atoms for Peace’ programme. Following the Iranian Revolution in 1979, the...

Who Caused World War 1?

Beginning with the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, Dr Annika Mombauer explores the opposing debates about the origins of World War One. Is it possible for historians to arrive at a consensus? The hundred-year debate How could the death of one man, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, who was assassinated on 28 June 1914, lead to the deaths of millions in a war of unprecedented scale and ferocity? This is the question at the heart of the debate on the origins of the First World War. How did Europe get from the assassination of Franz Ferdinand and his wife to the situation at the beginning of August when Germany and Austria-Hungary were at war with Serbia, Russia, France, Belgium, and Britain? Finding the answer to this question has exercised historians for 100 years, and arriving at a convincing consensus has proved impossible.