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Debate: Ending US sanctions on Cuba
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- Debate: Sanctions
- Argument: Sanctions against Cuba only hurt the Cuban public
- Argument: US sanctions against Cuba cannot work unilaterally
- Argument: Cuba sanctions lost national security rationale after 1991
- Argument: Sanctions give the Cuban government an excuse for their failures
- Argument: Lifting sanctions against Cuba would benefit US exporters
- Argument: Enforcing US-Cuba sanctions entails punishing businesses and allies
- Argument: Travel ban to Cuba perversely punishes innocent travelers
- Argument: Sanctions damage the spread of democracy
- Argument: Why sanction Cuba so heavily and not other tyrannies
- Argument: Sanctions against Cuba are not democratically supported in America
- Argument: Ending sanctions will allow US to expand influence in Cuba
- Argument: Lifting US sanctions will not be a victory for the Cuban regime
- Argument: Sanctions undermine cultural exchanges between countries
- Argument: US sanctions harm Cuba's tourism industry
- Argument: Sanctions violate the principle of just war
- Argument: US-Cuba sanctions exist only to appease Republicans in Florida
- Argument: Media helps soften Cuban popular impressions of US sanctions
- Argument: US sanctions back Cuban people's fight against totalitarianism
- Argument: Sanctions are a protest of Cuban govt humanitarian violations
- Argument: The significance of the threat from Cuba justifies US sanctions
- Argument: The Cuban regime won't democratize so must be ended with sanctions
- Argument: Sanctioning Cuba is appropriate punishment for its flouting the UN
- Argument: Ending the tourism ban would help undermine the Cuban regime
- Argument: Sanctions should persist to leverage Cuban leaders that follow Castro
- Argument: 1996 sanctions justly followed Cuba shooting down 2 US civilian airplanes
- Argument: The Castro brothers won't democratize so sanctions must persist
- Argument: Changing legally etched Cuban human rights violations requires sanctions
- Argument: UN set precedent for sanctioning Cuba over human rights violations
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