Instigator / Con
11
1581
rating
38
debates
64.47%
won
Topic
#720

Theoretically, could vigilante heroes like Batman and Spiderman be allowed?

Status
Finished

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

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
3
3
Better sources
4
4
Better legibility
2
1
Better conduct
2
1

After 2 votes and with 2 points ahead, the winner is...

K_Michael
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
Three days
Max argument characters
30,000
Voting period
Two weeks
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Pro
9
1702
rating
574
debates
67.86%
won
Description

Could unprofessional law enforcers like Spiderman and Batman be condoned in actual practice?

Criterion
Con
Tie
Pro
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

So, con starts off by saying that having an unanswerable vigilante is undesirable - law enforcement is nominally accountable, whereas vigilantes are not.

He’s second primary argument is that these superhero’s have no training, whereas police and special enforcement groups undergo months of training to deal with specific scenarios.

Pro accuses con of conceding twice - though I’m not entirely sure what. Neither of the accusations appear to be particularly relevant.

Pros main response is - well I’m not entirely sure as his opening 3rd point is rather jumbled and unclear. It appears to be arguing that laws are all arbitrary so why shouldn’t vigilantes be allowed as their justice is as good as others.

Cons reply is basically to point out he didn’t concede anything, and then mainly to point out the accountability in our current system. I felt this was actually a re-enforcement of his position.

Pro argues con is claiming that vigilantes would end up the new government or police this would constitute “working”. He uses Mandela and Malcom x as examples. I can see no place in cons argument where he says that, nor any place where it can be inferred. Worse, no reasonable interpretation of “works” would encompass this in the context of the resolution either.

Pro continues by primarily arguing vigilantism can work for a time - pro doesn’t specify how long this would be, or in what scenarios - and given that any interpretation of “work” implies a longer term success - which pro doesn’t attempt to argue.

Continuing with a wall of quotes - for which pro provides no clear justification or relevance appears to argue that vigilantes can just dump criminals with the cops - which works; or be part of a team.

These seem more of a functional description rather than meaningful any attempt to show the behaviour and operation of these vigilantes would “work”.

Con refuted pros Malcom X and Mandela examples by arguing that they were not fighting criminals

Con also launches into a subsequent defense of democracy, nearly tearing apart pros highlight of problems with majority rule by showing its preferable to minority rule of vigilantes.

At this point, cons argument is clear cut and unrefuted - vigilantes are unaccountable, and untrained, and any meaningful interpretation of the resolution would imply this would not work.

Arguments to con.

Conduct:

While con is a bit snippy in r2, pro appears to be arguing in bad faith, offering mostly an attempt at a semantic victory, forfeited a round, bombarded his opponent with a wall of quotes. The forfeit alone on balance is sufficient to award conduct points in light of the above.

Conduct to con.

All other points tied: though R1 from RM was barely decipherable, subsequent rounds were better.

Criterion
Con
Tie
Pro
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

Michael’s arguments are based on the assumption that if some vigilante heroes were allowed, then all would have to be allowed, which is flawed in my opinion and RM counters by pointing to real-life “vigilante heroes” such as Mandela who are condoned by society. However, RM left many points by Michael unaddressed (i.e. that without a universal code, absolute anarchy will rule) but since Michael merely stated that this would be the case, without actually providing any fleshed-out arguments in favour of these assertions, these points are outweighed by RM pointing to Mandela, to whom these criticisms do not apply. Arguments to RM nonetheless as his Mandela example is a convincing example of a vigilante hero that in the end was supported by society. (more thorough description of arguments award in the comments).

Snarky comments and questions by Michael (e.g. “Are we going to make this a habit?, WOULD YOU LIKE TO TRY AGAIN?” and “ in case you didn't know”) were entirely irrelevant to the debate and could easily have been addressed in the comment section instead. This nonsense made the debate less enjoyable and degraded the quality of Michael’s rounds. However, RM ff’d, thus conduct is even.

RM managed to jumble together an 86-word sentence which is not only a complete pain to read but also doesn’t seem quite coherent (RM starts out explaining that there is something that defeats Con’s entire case, then lists examples from Con’s case but never actually explains what this “fact” that defeats Con’s case is):
“The entire case by Con is defeated by the fact that everything he is saying, from 'we selected' (who is we? Arbitrary) ignoring the minority who lose in every single democratic election or even the greater peace achievable either through tyranny or something superior to peace achievable by fighting those tyrants or, less severe but just as corrupt, oligarchs by being a brutal rebel who takes down the local pedos and leads a sort of 'peacekeeper by violence' which can work as a non-legislated police force.”
S&G to Michael as this is entirely incomprehensible and RM’s style of 50+ word sentences severely reduces the legibility of RM’s arguments (Grammarly marked 5 punctuation errors and 3 style errors in the first three paragraphs of RM’s round 2 alone; that’s more than 1 error that reduces legibility per sentence).

Pro’s sources supported his points and Con’s supported his own; no one repeatedly made outrageous assertions without providing sources and sources were largely irrelevant to the debate outcome. Therefore, sources even.