Conduct shouldn't effect your points in a debate
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with 10 points ahead, the winner is...
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- Rated
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- 3
- Time for argument
- Three days
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- Two weeks
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
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No information
If a person makes a 100% correct and coherent point while being as rude as possible, it doesn't take away from the validity of their point on any level whatsoever. If their opponent is 100% incorrect and nonsensical but is as respectful as possible while doing so they are still doing 100% worse at debating in and of itself. The fact that they were nicer has absolutely zero relevance to how correct they were or how skillfully they argued their point therefore it is stupid to give the 100% inferior debater a point for anything over the 100% superior one.
Grammar is much more valid because good grammar helps with making your points coherently and helps demonstrate how educated an individual is.
Bad conduct is more entertaining and actually makes more sense in the context of debate.
When people are civil it can make debates more dry than they have to be. We're already here to debate rather than merely discuss, when you are debating someone the goal is to win and they are effectively an enemy that you are facing on the field of intellectual battle. If we were just having a conversation then maybe the goal would be to find points we can agree on and be pleasant to each other, but in a debate my goal is to intellectually castrate and mutilate your incessantly idiotic nutsack and nail your own scrotum to your dick head with the hammer of truth.
I am going to cut out your fucking retarded shit stained ass hole with a can opener and staple it to your forehead.
- Analysis: Without any vulgarity or rudeness, a forfeiture while harming arguments also calls for the deduction of a single conduct point (5). It is in fact the only surefire way to be penalized on conduct; regardless of which side is preferred by the voter, which allows said voter to pass a litmus test by unbiasedly assigning the penalty. Further, this is 1 point, whereas arguments are 3; meaning the “100% superior” debater in all other categories wins regardless of conduct issues. Should they not be notably superior, then conduct falls back on being a mere tie-breaker for otherwise closely matched debates which contain an egregious infraction by one side. Of course a debater massively superior in all categories except conduct, will be awarded 6 points from each detailed vote, making conduct of even lower impact.
- Link: Pro’s case both assumes conduct is solely for rudeness/vulgarity, and somehow undoes the argument allotment. A forfeiture side steps both of those, and further implies additional issues which merit penalizing conduct, aside from just vulgarity and rudeness.
- Implications: Were the K ignored, a useful voting tool would be lost; resulting in more tied debates, votes being less detailed, and low quality outright biased votes being harder for moderation to intervene against.
- Alternative: It’s sound to penalize conduct for various reasons pro did not consider; ergo, the status quo of an optional conduct award should be maintained.
“Awarded as a penalty for excessive abuse committed by the other side, such as extreme unsportsmanlike or outright toxic behavior which distracted from the topical debate. Common examples are repeatedly using personal attacks instead of arguments, committing plagiarism or otherwise cheating.”
“People lacking in intellectual integrity will always devise more ways to cheat. If you spot some true rubbish that invalidates their argument or the spirit of debate, call it out with a vote against them on conduct (or more as warranted by the comparative arguments) and move on.”
- Plagiarism
- Final round blitzkriegs
- Absurd special rules
- Flagrant misbehavior in the comment section
“Exploitive withholding of any category overwhelmingly against your majority point awardee, is evidence of profuse bias, and is therefore subject to vote deletion (e.g., someone forfeits half the debate and receives a favorable argument vote unmitigated by conduct).”
- https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_by_assertion#Argumentum_ad_lapidem
- https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Break%20it%20Down%20Barney%20Style
- https://terminallance.com/2015/03/20/terminal-lance-371-barney-style/
- https://info.debateart.com/kritik-guide#form
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#forfeitures
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#conduct
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#cheating
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#further-notes
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#casting-votes
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXrwSZJLYuw
- https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Not_even_wrong
- https://web.archive.org/web/20220521215644/https://www.debate.org/debates/You-called-me-fat-WTF/1/
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUlgwJNdu2I
a useful voting tool would be lost; resulting in more tied debates, votes being less detailed,
and low quality outright biased votes being harder for moderation to intervene against.
- Plagiarism
- Final round blitzkriegs
- Absurd special rules
- Flagrant misbehavior in the comment section
I could even trick the feeble minded to voting for me, by creating a thread whining that pro is a big meanie and I won for a bunch of reasons not mentioned in the debate.
A voter who thinks one side is 100% superior in every way and criteria they lost on shouldn’t be considered, is actually casting obvious vote bombs and/or fluff votes (fluffing should always be left to the capable hands of professionals), which ought to be deleted. That they vote so unfairly to not even consider the clear misconduct, is an obvious failing of the litmus test, which makes the decision easy for moderation.
no one is forced to have the optional conduct point available in their debates, since debates may be set to Winner selection
If someone who is 100% superior, then their conduct is better anyways
“As a penalty [conduct] discourages various bad behaviors without overriding argument allotments, and over time it results in better debates.”
“Offenses like the ones above, frequently deserve sanctions greater than the three argument points. For one thing, assuming only two voters show up and one falls for the ploy, the second who notices the bullshit can only bring the debate to a tie if they do not have an extra tool at their disposal to give victory to the actual superior argument.”
- More detailed votes
- Less ties
- Superior debaters even more likely to win
- Less voter bias
- Cheating discouraged
- Better debates
- Less biased votes going undeleted
- “elevates the quality of insults above lazy crass ones which distract from the topic”
- And more…
- “snowflakes [may be] harmed if given unbiased feedback to their cases”
- Some people who haven’t read the voting policy, mistakenly think it’s an award for being as “respectful as possible.”
- https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Non_sequitur
- https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argumentum_ad_nauseam
- https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/sauce
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlqjtqkoRdM
- https://www.debateart.com/debates/5319/votes/10107
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#fluff-votes-fv
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8ukak8P2vY
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#conduct
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hfYJsQAhl0
- https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/moderation#moderation-engagement-and-enactment-process
Pro and Con go back forth a lot, with Pro being unnecessarily crash and vulgar at times. The conduct was atrocious on both sides, with Con forfeiting the first round to undermine the resolution, likely thinking it was clever. This is just ridiculously immature. Con also makes subtle jabs at Pro even by implying that Pro is attempting to seek pity points, so this is enough for me to give Pro the point for conduct.
The arguments by both sides are not particularly convincing, even if I don't buy Con's argument about the conduct category being an effective counter-measure against plagiarism and chatgpt because using either usually forfeits you the entire debate rather than the conduct point, Pro does nothing to pushback on this. Pro instead retorts that plagiarism should be an argumentative offense rather than a conduct one, which is a serious missed opportunity from Pro. Con proceeds to dismantle Pro's case by calling attention to the obscure fallacies and definitions, and pointing out that most of Pro's arguments are self-contradicting and irrelevant. Namely, the plea to the incel example.
Pro's belief is that conduct can be misused for the intent of unfairly awarding an inferior debater with a point without much justification, if the voter is biased. Con's belief is that the conduct point is a good way of utilizing accountability to ensure that debaters are recognized for areas they perform well in or perform bad in.
(I'm leaving arguments tied because neither side spends any effort building their case and both get addressed.)
Con is the only one who provided links, so I'm giving Con the point for sources. Both sides had the same quality for spelling and grammar, so this is tied. Con admits to intentionally forfeiting, so the conduct point goes to Pro.
Not a lot to say on this one. The lack of sauce from Pro definitely didn't help his case since he needed some support for a lot of the claims he was making about how debaters are being negatively affected by the awarding of conduct. That might be true, but if you want to balance that against the claims your opponent is making, you need to establish how big of an impact that is and I don't see that happening anywhere.
Meanwhile, Con's impacts are just more striking. Preventing tied debates, addressing bad behaviors, and providing an avenue for more detail in votes are all relatively simple to weigh out and understand, yet I don't see a lot of response from Pro beyond "arguments can address this." At a certain point, you're just creating a multifactorial category for voting that includes conduct, which doesn't seem better. I need to see a balance between those two positions, but I don't really understand how you could meaningfully factor conduct in and still assess convincing arguments without weighing one more than the other, potentially turning the three argument points into the only conduct allocation and exacerbating all the problems Pro presents.
Also, since I'm voting this way, it seems only fair that I give Pro conduct. Con proved that conduct should "effect" your points in a debate, and he forfeited a round, so here we are.
Pro argues that conduct does not impact argument validity, but Con counters that if one side is clearly ahead in arguments, losing on conduct won't change that. In the first round, Pro argues that bad conduct is more entertaining, though both sides don't address this much for the rest of the debate. Con argues that conduct discourages bad behaviors, makes votes more detailed, and gives further penalties for cheating or final-round blitzkriegs.
Since conduct isn't going to swing a debate when one side is ahead in arguments, the trade-off here seems to be between entertainment on the one hand and discouraging low-effort votes or bad behavior on the other. Con's reasoning just seems more detailed here, since they go more into specifics with the voting policy and what kind of bad behaviors the conduct point is meant to discourage.
I can only give my subjective opinion based on how I would vote, but there are two avenues Pro could have taken that I think would have made this debate closer. First, if they had pointed out that conduct can indeed swing tied debates (while arguing that equal arguments should result in a tie regardless of conduct) and argued that this significantly outweighed the benefits Con is describing, that would have made their case stronger. Con argues that less tied debates are a good thing, and it harms Pro's case that they didn't argue for ties being preferable to a win based on conduct (they kind of imply this, but they didn't elaborate on it as much as I think they could have). Second, if Pro had gone into more detail on how conduct should be punished for biased reasons. Pro hints at both of these avenues, but more detailed justifications would have made me weigh their points more strongly.
Con is the only side to use sources to support their argument. Both sides intentionally violate conduct rules, so I'll leave that point a tie.
Thank you both for the quality votes!
Thank you for the detailed vote. And even more so for agreeing with me that my conduct was atrocious, plus ridiculously immature (which I didn't think of the maturity level, but it's a fair assessment).
Your vote is also a great example of what I believe to be optimal thought process for voting on closely matched debates.
I'm going to rip out your toenail and make you use it as a shovel to dig for water while stranded in the desert.
Any sources you wish to add?
Imagine if he took an L while sitting like L and smoking an L while getting smoked like an L.
rare Barney forfeit??? If he forfeits the next one its his first L
Chill. I was making a joke. I am sure Barney is going to give you some good counterarguments to chew on.
If I lose it's only because of unwarranted dick riding like this. Giving someone points for arguments for not making an argument is utterly ironic given that it would never happen in any other debate. Not posting an argument isn't a conduct issue, it is the total lack of an argument and that is the real issue. If someone were to come back after forfeiting and annihilate their opponent they shouldn't lose points because forfeiting was rude or whatever, however if they don't compensate it's their loss for not making arguments or making weak ones.
Barney is a genious. He sacrifices his conduct point, in order to make a statement about how conduct points are necesary, thus winning the argument points.
Well, I am not sure. If I were to vote, I would not assign conduct point because Pro by merely supporting the topic argues that conduct point shouldnt be assigned in any debate, this one included. But if Con provides enough challenge to those arguments, then maybe I could assign conduct point which Pro basically argues he shouldnt get.
Well, the conduct isnt going to determine this debate, but it was fun to think about it for some time.
I have ran into similar situations and it shouldn't be hypocritical for pro to argue for points but in my experience voters have a difficult time understanding arguments like THAT. for example if I accept a debate as pro on Pro should lose this debate and I argue for why I should be judged as winner, judges struggle to figure out that if I argue better for why I should lose than I should win because they are supposed to evaluate strength of arguments and not my opinion as to whether I win or not.
It's an odd strategy for either side because you don't have to argue for the conduct point. Voters generally award it automatically. And even if Pro argues that conduct points shouldn't be a part of DART policy, this debate still uses multiple criteria. Nothing in the rules of the debate says voters should not award conduct points. As a voter, I would be inclined to weigh the rules of the site and of the debate over the opinions of either debater, even if said rule is the subject of the debate.
But as Wylted said, I don't think either side here is going for conduct.
He thinks he's being clever by throwing a round but all that does is give you less of a chance to argue.
"I would not worry about the forfeited round. People will have a hard time justifying giving pro conduct points here."
Well, now Pro must argue that he should get conduct point while arguing that conduct point shouldnt exist in debates.
Its one of those "So what do we do now?" debates.
I agree given the spirit of his reminder of 3 hours being left
I'd assumed it was an intentional decision in the spirit of the debate. Hard to see Barney throwing away a round for no reason.
I would not worry about the forfeited round. People will have a hard time justifying giving pro conduct points here.
BIG FAT SWEATY BUTTOCKS
FYI, as a friendly reminder, you're down to less than three hours to post your argument.
/projection, gaslighting
If you want to be a dick just make sure you out logic your opponent. Conduct points only matters in close debates.
Spelling and grammar points should be extremely rare to award. Just to avoid unfair bias against non native English speakers.
Well, pro does have a point about the entertainment value 😂
For PRO's safety, I urge you to only use 2% of your roasting power.
Be forewarned: I am preparing an insult so good, that you'll be seeing red!
Only multiple criteria is used for rated debates. I'm not arguing for removal of multiple criteria, just for removal of the conduct part specifically or perhaps that it should be changed to mean something else. I don't think being rude to your opponent discredits your arguments and I think it's silly that someone can technically lose a debate because they were mean.
As in, are you arguing for the removal of the multi criteria method from the site, or are you arguing that the one based on arguments alone is just better?
DART has two voting methods you can pick, one has multiple criteria, the other is based on arguments only. What, specifically, are you arguing here?