Instigator / Pro
2
1571
rating
19
debates
65.79%
won
Topic
#5684

IID: Kamala Harris Would Be A Worse President Than Donald Trump

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
3
Better sources
0
2
Better legibility
1
1
Better conduct
1
1

After 1 vote and with 5 points ahead, the winner is...

Moozer325
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
1,489
Contender / Con
7
1600
rating
24
debates
72.92%
won
Description

STANCES:

PRO shall only argue that Kamala Harris will be a worse president than Donald Trump

CON shall only argue that Kamala Harris will NOT be a worse president than Donald Trump

* * *

DEFINITIONS:

All legal terms shall first be defined from The Law's Legal Dictionary, available here:
https://dictionary.thelaw.com/

All other terms not covered by The Law's Legal Dictionary shall be defined from Merriam Webster's Online Dictionary, available here:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/

Specific definitions for debate:

Kamala Harris: the person named Kamala Harris who is the chosen nominee of the Democrat party for the 2024 election.

Donald Trump: The person named Donald Trump who is the chosen nominee of the Republican Party for the 2024 election.

Worse: Resulting in a lower net negative quality of life for all American citizens and legal immigrants combined.

* * *

RULES:
1. Burden of Proof is shared.
2. No Ignoratio Elenchis.
3. No trolls.
4. Forfeiting one round = auto-loss.

Welp, thanks to all one of you who casted a vote

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@Barney

The rant is against the sweeping and obvious inaccuracies in so-called fact checks, and he is right.

Most fact checks these days border on fiction.

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@Public-Choice

When I checked JustFactsDaily, they had some rant against "fact checkers," totally missing the irony. I probably should have bookmarked that.

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@Barney

On a response to your actual critique. I wouldn't consider Politifact to be all that factual in most cases where fact checking has actually mattered.

Many times their sources are spurious or not all that rigorous. Just Facts tends to have better sources and a more solid methodology for fact checking than Politifact.

But, at the end of the day, one is conservative and the other is liberal, so you will get unconscious biases in both.

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@Barney

"I do not blame Trump for an international pandemic"

I don't blame him for a pandemic, but I do blame him for totally and completely ignoring the science and already-established protocols for pandemic responses.

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@Public-Choice

> I, personally, think that the immigrants who eat cats and dogs are not remotely close to a true representative sample of all immigrants.
It's not a representative sample of any known immigrants, at least those who exist outside of hallucinations suffered by a couple old men (assuming they're not just crying wolf in desperation for attention; which to me would still be unsound minds). The single case anyone could point to on it, was a US citizen who ate a cat (but she did have dark skin, so white supremacists love to claim that means illegal immigrant).

> I am the great-grandson of immigrants on my father's side.
Everyone who isn't an immigrant this generation, is descended from immigrants (arguably save for purebred natives).

> My real, honest, assessment of 2024 is that both prospects are not good. But Trump is diet fascism while Harris is full-blown fascism. I will take diet fascism over full-blown fascism any time.
Good take on it. I've been doing a lot of court stuff lately, and my research shows that judges and juries alike favor anyone who starts from a more middle ground (Johnny Depp's trial for example, he outright admitted to abusing alcohol and such, which not trying to come off as perfect made him believable).
FYI, I don't live in a swing state, so on presidential elections I will always vote third party as a vote of no confidence for the main two.

> The Trump of 2016 was about deregulation, lower taxes, and more individual bodily autonomy.
I'd disagree on the bodily autonomy part...

> The Trump of 2024 is not about many of these same things. And with his handling of COVID, the only reason he has my vote is because he said he would never do it again.
Covid was a shit sandwich, and still is. But I do not blame Trump for an international pandemic (the big blunders on it were usually local politicians, thinking about re-election rather than the wellbeing of their people).

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@Barney

Thanks for the feedback. Always nice to get critique on my debates.

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@Barney

I am sorry you feel Trump is targeting you personally. I, personally, think that the immigrants who eat cats and dogs are not remotely close to a true representative sample of all immigrants. All immigrants are not the same, and all immigrants are not even from Haiti.

I am the great-grandson of immigrants on my father's side. When I asked why I never learned much of Russia, my dad told me the same thing his father told him "you are American, not Russian." That truly stuck with me.

I guess what I'm saying is America is a land of immigrants. We can choose to identify as the cat eaters or as Americans. We can choose to vote however we please, for whomever we want.

My real, honest, assessment of 2024 is that both prospects are not good. But Trump is diet fascism while Harris is full-blown fascism. I will take diet fascism over full-blown fascism any time.

The Trump of 2016 was about deregulation, lower taxes, and more individual bodily autonomy. The Trump of 2024 is not about many of these same things. And with his handling of COVID, the only reason he has my vote is because he said he would never do it again. The other side has not said this. In fact the other side basically says we need MORE government involvement in this already putrid economy and supply shortage-ravaged landscape.

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@Public-Choice
@Moozer325

Note: As an immigrant (no one likes being accused of eating dogs and cats), I am too biased to fairly assign points... But I can give some feedback.

On the setup I would suggest have a more direct comparison with shared BoP. Trump > Harris vs Harris > Trump. This means if equal (or near equal) voters should leave it a tie (not that they're likely to on such heated matters).

Government Education:
"The Education system in America has consistently been on the decline since 1776" that instantly seems too broad to support. Like did we even have public schools back then? That I wonder this, speaks of biting off more than you can chew (or at least that the voter can chew), it's akin to breaking the suspension of disbelief. And the article does not speak of 1776, which ruins this from the onset...
Con's reply got to the heart of the matter that language subtly shifts, and while pro is right that we would have trouble understanding GW, he would not understand "skibidi," so this shift is non-indicative of anything other than a shift has occurred.
AFTERTHOUGHT: Trump has already been president, if he was going to have an impact in making education better than 1776, shouldn't that have already occurred? Or did it continue to get worse by the stated standard?

Price Controls:
Con catches that Trump and Harris are agreed on the need for it.

Economic Policy:
Con shows tariffs under Trump lead to inflation.
Pro does well defending that tariffs can be useful according to non-partisan economists.

Honesty:
I have really mixed feelings about this point even being brought up...
The best of this was just pro pointing out that Trump claims to shit gold (sorry, greatest economy ever, nothing went wrong, not even covid). It intuitively undermines any claim of success on any of his measures (but it's not Trump claiming them in the debate, it's pro presenting evidence to support points... instantly making him far superior than Trump by many standards).
Con shits the bed in his response, echoing many mentally stunted individuals who will not shut up about "what about Bill Clinton?" Once you start addressing Biden bad to prove anything about Harris, you've lost the audience. And this is while I wholly agree that the WP sucks donkey dick... The Justfactsdaily website is is course not the best because of their deranged commentary about off topic subjects (fact checking is bad, how dare anyone fact check, oh and here's a graph showing us fact checking... PolitiFact shows itself to be massively superior with a dry take on matters, and various times catching Harris and her team in blunders (less than the other side, but when it happens they seem to report it)).

Healthcare:
A good point raised by con that Trump harmed healthcare, but it would have been improved with showing what Harris' plans for healthcare are.
Pro is able to well defend this by showing harms to poorly implemented government plans.

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I can already tell that were I voting, I'd end up leaving sources a tie. Both have some poor sources and some good ones; it's in an area where I'd say both have done their due diligence, with neither is showing true comparative excellence.

Arguments would inevitably go to whomever can stay on topic longer.. But this is without knowing of any interesting contentions raised after those initially listed.

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@Public-Choice
@Moozer325
@Owen_T

**************************************************
>Reported Vote: Owen_T // Mod action: Not Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 5 to con
>Reason for Decision: See Votes Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action:

The vote was found to be sufficient per the site voting policy standards.

Special Rules in the description are not strictly enforced by moderation, but a voter may (and unless Kritiked in the debate, usually should) choose to abide. If doing so, that there are such rules should be explicitly stated to opt for alternative moderation.

note: Additionally that setup has plenty of leeway. One cannot argue that Art is a better clown than Homie, without referencing Homie for comparison (likely to include his shortcomings); to do otherwise would make the argument for Art somewhat non-sequitur (similarly you could argue he's a better cook than Bob, but without knowing if Bob is a good or bad cook it's indeterminant).
**************************************************

Reported the first vote for ignoring the debate rules when judging. The voter agreed that CON did not follow the debate rules and then said PRO lost anyways.

Also was biased when rating sources. Did not consider the merits of the sources bur instead voted based on their ideological leanings instesd of objectively weighing the sources themselves.

This was a good debate, great on both sides, but probably should have had more rounds since character limit seems to have prevented some arguments.

Sources Cited:

1. Macroeconomic Consequences of Tariffs - WP/19/9
2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7255316/
3.https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2021-02/56975-Minimum-Wage.pdf?ref=risingupwithsonali.com#:~:text=Under%20the%20Raise%20the%20Wage,projections%20underlying%20the%202019%20report.
4. https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w23532/w23532.pdf
5.https://www.epi.org/publication/why-america-needs-a-15-minimum-wage-2019/#:~:text=A%20%2415%20minimum%20wage%20would,the%20wage%20distribution%20since%201979.
6. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421522003779#sec6
7.https://labor4sustainability.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/cleanenergy_10212015_main.pdf

[1] https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2024/05/14/fact-sheet-president-biden-takes-action-to-protect-american-workers-and-businesses-from-chinas-unfair-trade-practices/

[2] https://www.cato.org/commentary/why-obamacare-so-expensive-how-lawmakers-could-help-lower-arizona-premiums

[3] https://www.aier.org/article/why-the-green-economy-is-suddenly-in-retreat-in-europe-america-and-on-wall-street/

[4] https://www.hoover.org/research/californias-electricity-nightmare-begins-and-will-only-get-worse

[5] https://www.aier.org/article/the-many-ways-bad-policy-worsens-your-daily-commute/

[6] https://www.cato.org/blog/minimum-wage-effects

[7] https://www.aier.org/article/193517/

[8] https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/just-facts-daily/

[9] https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/washington-post-fake-news-passports-media-bias/

[10] https://www.poynter.org/newsletters/2021/troubling-corrections-at-the-washington-post-new-york-times-and-nbc-news/

[11] https://www.dailysignal.com/2024/08/27/as-usual-the-washington-post-gets-an-election-story-wrong/

[12] https://www.allsides.com/media-bias/fact-check-bias-chart

[13] https://www.foxnews.com/media/politifact-job-listing-misinformation-team

[14] https://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/what_the_fact-checkers_get_wro.php

Round 2 Sources:

SOURCES:
[1] https://taxfoundation.org/blog/import-tariffs-affect-exports/
[2] https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/what-are-tariffs#chapter-title-0-8
[3] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/washington-post-buried-proof-of-joe-bidens-bribery
[4] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/the-washington-post-grossly-understates-the-crime-rate-of-illegal-immigrants
[5] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/the-washington-posts-slander-on-hurricanes-and-climate-change
[6] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/washington-post-misportrays-the-death-of-michael-brown
[7] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/wash-post-repeatedly-botches-fact-check-of-trumps-state-of-the-union-address
[8] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/substantial-numbers-of-non-citizens-vote-illegally-in-u-s-elections
[9] https://www.justfactsdaily.com/quantifying-illegal-votes-cast-by-non-citizens-in-the-battleground-states-of-the-2020-presidential-election
[10] https://www.aier.org/article/government-intervention-in-health-insurance-falls-short/
[11] https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1718793115
[12] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0160289607000463
[13] https://www.thirteen.org/openmind-archive/education/the-dumbing-down-of-america/
[14] https://fee.org/articles/americans-are-woefully-uneducated-about-basic-history/
[15] https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/how-government-funding-is-destroying-american-higher-education/
[16] https://mises.org/mises-wire/feds-fiat-money-real-cause-price-inflation

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@Public-Choice

I am interested in seeing how this debate goes. I hope to see more arguments on both sides.

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@Best.Korea

The polls are within the margins of error. With the difference between the two being less than 3% we can't claim the polls are saying Kamala will win.

Even so, the polls have been consistently wrong since 2016.

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@Public-Choice

Also, polls here even on national average show that support for Kamala is increasing, support for Trump decreasing.

https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/president-general/2024/national/

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@Public-Choice

The poll you have shown also shows Kamala winning. It is more likely that people want Kamala, not Trump.

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@Best.Korea

One poll doesn't equate truth. Polls are notoriously off. The aggregate data for all the polls we have shows a race within most polls' margins of error.

https://www.realclearpolling.com/

Yes, he is.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4846433-harris-leading-trump-by-7-points-poll/amp/

"Trump is losing by 6 percentage points"

No he isn't:
https://www.realclearpolling.com/

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@Public-Choice

Cool, thanks!

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@Public-Choice

"Resulting in a lower net negative quality of life for all American citizens and legal immigrants combined."

That pretty clearly draws attention to anything that affects American citizens and legal immigrants directly as the ones that matter most. I agree it's not just economic (don't think I ever said it was just economic, could be wrong), but it narrows it on the who and the where rather than the what.

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@Public-Choice

"The short of it is that popular consensus doesn't mean the best choice"

Actually, popular choice is the only proper choice, since there is no other way to determine what is best.

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@Public-Choice

"Trump isn't losing badly in the polls. The percentages are almost all within the margin of error for the polls themselves."

Trump is losing by 6 percentage points. Margin of error is meaningless because it goes in both directions.

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@whiteflame

Quality of life was never defined as solely economic means in the debate because it is a measure of ones life getting better or worse.

It appears you would have accidentally boxed yourself in inadvertently had you accepted the debate.

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@Public-Choice

I agree that there should be limits, I just wouldn't want to limit the lines of argumentation one could make in a debate about which person would be a worse president, at least not in this way. I think part of the strength of having a debate like this is in the discussion of what makes someone better for the role, which should include everything a president does as opportunities to make a point, but necessarily does include weighing certain aspects of the job differently depending on the side. I personally love a solid weighing calculus because it requires the debaters to convince the voters of what matters more, rather than just setting a definition that restricts access to certain points.

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@whiteflame

All debates have limits, though, by nature. Why would Americans nit consider their own wellbeing primarily when considering the best President?

Do we demand of Guatemala and Germany to vote based on what makes American citizens' lives better? Of course not! Because it is the government of their countries. It is their prerogative to choose leadership in their best interest as it is ours to choose leadership our best interest.

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@Public-Choice

*shrug* your choice I guess. I'm not saying that would be an argument I'd take up personally, I'm just not fond of setting up a definition that limits the scope of the debate in that way.

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@Moozer325

done.

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@whiteflame

It is my debate, after all 😂

If you want to debate whether Karris or Trump are better for, say, Guatemalans or Germans, then that is your prerogative.

But, to be clear, Germans and Guatemalans do not vote for President unless they are American citizens or somehow manage to fool the vote clerks at the polls or with absentee ballots...

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@Best.Korea

Trump isn't losing badly in the polls. The percentages are almost all within the margin of error for the polls themselves.

Also, most people voted for Biden in 2020 but wanted Trump back by large numbers in 2024 because they believed were wrong.

The short of it is that popular consensus doesn't mean the best choice.

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@Public-Choice

I’d love to accept if it wasn’t for the minimum rating.

Trump is losing badly in polls. Obviously, most people dont think Kamala is worse for quality of life.

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@Public-Choice

This depends on what "quality of life" is. Most people wouldnt say Trump increased their quality of life.

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@Public-Choice

See, to me, that looks like an argument for why certain tasks taken on by the President should be deemed paramount. I understand why you'd argue that. I just don't love that you would restrict your opponent's ability to argue about tasks outside that scope rather than just argue in the debate that they are necessarily outweighed.

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@whiteflame

Here is the way I see it:

The U.S. Constitution says America is for "We The People"

What we do for other countries is secondary to the duties of government toward American citizens. The Government is supposed to provide for Americans' common defense and promote Americans' general welfare.

Now, don't take this to mean that foreign aid and interventionism are bad, because they are more of a case-by-case basis. But American government is for America, not for other countries. That is why other countries elect their own governments.

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@Public-Choice

I do think the "job" of the presidency goes beyond just facilitating a better life for those specific groups, and though I understand why you'd prioritize them in any debate like this, I'd say it's at least a little restrictive. You or your opponent can always argue knock-on effects for anything external to those groups, I guess.

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@Public-Choice

I guess its better, still, you would be forced to argue that people want lower quality of life.

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@whiteflame
@Best.Korea

I deliberately made it more generic. I wanted to have some fun with it.

I don't think it is. I said "net quality of life" and for "all Americans and legal immigrants." So it is a whole-country thing, not individuals.

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@Barney

Yeah. It is for fun, emotions or not.

btw I saw you had quite a few more debates since I was gone. Nice job keeping your win streak.

Would you be open to debating something at some point or have you taken another hiatus from debating?

Auto loss for Pro. There is no way Kamala lowers quality of life of every citizen (including herself?).

I'd be tempted if this wasn't so inherently polarizing. I'd expect a lot of debate over what the word "worse" means, even if whoever takes this accepts the definition as written above, which does seem somewhat restrictive.

FYI, the outcome of debates like this get very subjective to emotions.