Judge Philosophies

Aaron Marineau - WWU

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Aaron T. Sherman - PacificLutheran

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Adam Key - Sam Houston

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Adam Krell - WWU

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Aly Fiebrantz - Texas Tech

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Amanda Taylor - Carroll

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Anantanand Rambachan - St. Olaf

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Annie Berry - Azusa

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Anthony Putnicki - Puget Sound


Antonio De La Garza - Utah


Ashley Nuckels-Cuevas - Pacific

<p> <!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <o:OfficeDocumentSettings> <o:AllowPNG/> </o:OfficeDocumentSettings> </xml><![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <w:WordDocument> <w:Zoom>0</w:Zoom> <w:TrackMoves>false</w:TrackMoves> <w:TrackFormatting/> <w:PunctuationKerning/> <w:DrawingGridHorizontalSpacing>18 pt</w:DrawingGridHorizontalSpacing> <w:DrawingGridVerticalSpacing>18 pt</w:DrawingGridVerticalSpacing> <w:DisplayHorizontalDrawingGridEvery>0</w:DisplayHorizontalDrawingGridEvery> <w:DisplayVerticalDrawingGridEvery>0</w:DisplayVerticalDrawingGridEvery> <w:ValidateAgainstSchemas/> <w:SaveIfXMLInvalid>false</w:SaveIfXMLInvalid> <w:IgnoreMixedContent>false</w:IgnoreMixedContent> <w:AlwaysShowPlaceholderText>false</w:AlwaysShowPlaceholderText> <w:Compatibility> <w:BreakWrappedTables/> <w:DontGrowAutofit/> <w:DontAutofitConstrainedTables/> <w:DontVertAlignInTxbx/> </w:Compatibility> </w:WordDocument> </xml><![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <w:LatentStyles DefLockedState="false" LatentStyleCount="276"> </w:LatentStyles> </xml><![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 10]> <style> /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin-top:0in; mso-para-margin-right:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:10.0pt; mso-para-margin-left:0in; line-height:115%; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;} </style> <![endif]--><!--StartFragment--></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <b><span style="font-size:14.0pt;line-height:115%">Ashley Nuckels Cuevas (University of the Pacific)<o:p></o:p></span></b></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size:12.0pt;line-height:115%">Experience: I debated for Palomar College and Point Loma Nazarene University. I have coached high school policy debate and this is my second year coaching for UOP. I am earning my Master&rsquo;s Degree in Political Communications with an emphasis on Feminist Criticism and Rhetorical Criticism.&nbsp; Overall I think that debate is a game of strategy so go for what you think is important but let me know why it deserves my ballot.&nbsp; I enjoy both Econ debates and Tix (both US and abroad).<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size:12.0pt;line-height:115%">Theory/ Procedurals: I default to an abuse paradigm but am fine with competing interpretations. I am fine with you using theory to get access to DA&rsquo;s and other arguments or just collapsing to theory in the block.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size:12.0pt;line-height:115%">K: I love the K but I also love on case debate. I do not like reject only alt&rsquo;s but I have voted on them. <a name="_GoBack"></a><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size:12.0pt;line-height:115%">I am fine with speed but I do not think that speed without clarity and substance is necessary or advantageous to the speaker or the event. Overall, be polite and respectful to each other and the event. Good luck and have fun.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p> <!--EndFragment-->


Ben Dodds - Oregon

<p>Name: Ben Dodds</p> <p>School: Oregon</p> <p>Section 1: General Information</p> <p>Please begin by explaining what you think is the relevant information about your approach to judging that will best assist the debaters you are judge debate in front of you. Please be specific and clear. Judges who write philosophies that are not clear will be asked to rewrite them. Judges who do not rewrite them may be fined or not allowed to judge/cover teams at the NPTE.</p> <p><strong>2014 NPTE 100% rewrite -- read me even if you know me</strong></p> <p>I think honesty in philosophies is one of the best ways to advance the activiy. Let me be perfectly clear what I am trying to accomplish by writing this: I want to be the top preferred judge at every tournament that I go to. I have judged every NPTE since 2009, and attended each since 2006.&nbsp;Seriously, I want to judge all the debates, all the types of debaters, and I want to judge seniors one last time before they go save the earth. I enjoy nothing more than seeing people at nationals when they are at the top of their game.&nbsp;I will stay in the pool until the tournament ends, Oregon&nbsp;debaters left in or not. That is a promise that may be relevant to you filling out your form, I&#39;ll stay till the end like a hired judge.&nbsp;&nbsp;While, there are people that I don&rsquo;t think I am an ideal ordinal #1 for, I work really hard to make sure that I get better at whatever flaws are the reason for that, so give me a shot to be your #1. I will proceed to explain why I think I am a good judge in most all&nbsp;debates, and why you may want to consider me for your ordinal #1. The exact question: what you think is the relevant information about your approach to judging that will best assist the debaters you are judge debate in front of you &ndash;</p> <p>I did policy debate for the majority of my career. I ended with a few years of parli at Oregon. I think flowing is a very important judging job that I try very hard at. I will use my flow as the official scorebook.&nbsp;I think letting the debaters use their arguments to win is important, so I try very hard to keep my own thoughts out of the debate. However, where there are thoughts that I think are better served by the debaters knowing them, I will let them know them. In my opinion, the number one reason I should be your number one judge is that you will know how I feel about your arguments far earlier than other judges will let on. I will try my absolute hardest to make sure I have communicated to you what I am thinking about your arguments as you make them. I will use verbal and non verbal communication to get this information communicated.</p> <p>This season I have:</p> <p>&nbsp;Asked for things to be repeated, asked for acronyms to be broken down, asked for things to be written, asked for people to be clearer, asked for people to be louder, asked for people to have more distinct tags, given people obvious signs to move on or told them to move on, and used other obvious nonverbal to verbal communication like:&nbsp;laughter and smiles, head shaking, exaggerated nodding and knocking, and even flat out telling folks that &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t get this, explain it better&rdquo;. Do not be astonished if I ask you a question like that mid speech. I do all of this because I love you all and love good debates. I want to you be in my head with me the whole debate. I don&rsquo;t think it is valuable for you to invest 25 min in something that I can&rsquo;t vote on because I couldn&rsquo;t hear. Similarly, I don&rsquo;t want anyone spinning their wheels for 20 min when I got it in two. So, I really want to be your top judge, and should be because you will not have a question about where I am at during a debate, but if you would rather debate in blissful ignorance, I&rsquo;m not your person.</p> <p>Also, there are things that I will not pretend to know about the world. I took the classes I took. Learned whatever I learned, I remember whatever I remember, but not more than that. There are issues that you, as undergraduates, know more about than I do. If there is a confused look on my face or I seem to asking for more explanation a lot, you have hit on something that I don&rsquo;t understand. You should not just read this argument to me, it should be clear to you that you have to teach it to me. These two things are not the same. Your ability to know the difference is the greatest skill of all. Reading the audience and dialing your message to their knowledge base. If you have not educated me well enough on your magic fission technology, don&rsquo;t get mad at me for voting on the argument that it won&rsquo;t work. Still sound like magic to me, that&rsquo;s on you. Any judge not willing to admit that there are things that they do not know about the world is lying to themselves, and to you. Strike them, pref me, and teach me your argument.</p> <p>I flow things in columns. I prefer to flow from the top of one page to the bottom of it. I&#39;ll be on the laptop, so &#39;4 pages or 1 page&#39; is up to you.</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries&nbsp;</p> <p>Please describe your approach to the following.</p> <p>1.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?</p> <p>27-30</p> <p>I have given 10-20 30s in competitive debates of consequence in my career. Most of them are at NPDA/NPTE. Every year there are one or two people spitting pure fire that weekend, so no, I am not the &quot;never seen perfect&quot; type. Debate is subjective, while there might not have been a perfect speech yet; I have seen people debate without a flaw that was relevant to the debate many times. If that is you: 30. Beyond that, I will say that reward good choices higher than pretty choices. I&rsquo;d rather watch you explain the double turn for 3 min and sit than explain it for two and then go for your DA for two. I don&rsquo;t like contradicting arguments being advanced in rebuttals, unless there is some explicit reason for it. I won&rsquo;t floor people at 27 or lower unless they are repugnant, and as articulated above, you&rsquo;ll get to know from me verbally before I let you just bury yourself in bad. It is very unlikely that you will get poor speaker points from me, because I will let you know what you are doing that I like mid debate. I am like the bowling bumpers of non-verbal communication. You should be able to score pretty well here.</p> <p>2.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?</p> <p>Anyone can do whatever they want. I think this is the right forum for debating about things with claims, warrants, and impacts. I am not scared of arguments based on the titles or format that they are delivered in. No on can make any argument without a claim, warrant and impact. If you have those three things, I don not care what you title it, how you structure it, or really anything more about it. You do you. As I stated above, I don&rsquo;t like hearing contradictory arguments advanced in rebuttals, as by that time, I prefer to hear one strategy that is consistent being advanced, but I will hold out for a well-explained reason that contradictions are ok. Not my favorite, but certainly a winnable argument, just like all arguments are and should be. If you claim that contradictions are ok, and have a warrant and impact, you have made an argument. If you win the debate over that argument, you will win that argument. If you win an argument, I will filter the debate through that won point.</p> <p>3.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Performance based arguments&hellip;</p> <p>Do whatever you want. I think I would be a good judge to try new things with. I have voted for all manor of performance debate as it has come into parli. I have seen parli evolve from the K being a fringe argument to performance being acceptable. I understand the theory that is in play in this debate as well. I am down to vote for either side of every issue on this discussion I am your judge for a new performance that Ks debate, but you&rsquo;d better be ready to answer debate is good, because I am your judge for that argument too. I reject the notion that the argument framework: Ks cheat, or the argument framework: fiat is bad, are all that different. Just two sides of a coin, I am totally into watching a debate about those two things against each other. I&rsquo;ll also entertain Ks vs performances, performance affs vs. performance negs, or whatever other arbitrary dichotomy you have to make between schools of thought. They are all just claims, warrants and impacts to me.</p> <p>4.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?</p> <p>I require a full shell to vote on T. The neg needs to prove they have an interp that should be preferred, that the aff does not meet that, and that I should vote on T. I will default to that interp until there is a counter interp and/or an argument that says that I should not evaluate interps against one another (reasonability). I will default that T is a voting issue until the aff convinces me otherwise. However, no, I do not require &ldquo;in round abuse&rdquo;, because that is arbitrary. Competing interpretations debate resolves this entirely, if that is how T is evaluated, then the interp is good or bad in theory, not practice, ergo, in-round abuse is irrelevant. If the aff wins reasonability, and has an interpretation of their own, that is usually a good enough out. Now, don&rsquo;t get confused, the reasoning for arguments about in round vs out of round have a place, its just in the reasonability debate, not just drifting in the ether of T is not a voter. Competing interps might be bad because they don&rsquo;t force the judge to evaluate in round abuse over potential abuse. See, just a claim, warrant, and impact, placed somewhere relevant. I think case lists make good topicality standards. That encapsulates your ground and limits claims well. This works for the AFF and NEG.</p> <p>5.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?</p> <p>This question is silly. You all determine all of these things for me. Do I have opinions on these issue, yes, and I will list them here, but they are hardly relevant to the debate, because theory is not a hard issue for me to just listen to you debate about and vote on. This is totally up to you in the debate, I promise I have voted on the exact opposite of everything I am about to say about how I feel about theory.</p> <p>PICS &ndash; Arbitrary distinction. Can&rsquo;t be good or bad if it is actually impossible to define. This argument usually boils down to complaints like you should not get that CP, or you should not get that many CPs, both are ok arguments to me, just not likely a reason why PICs are good or bad. There is likely another, better theory argument that your claim, warrant, and impact would fit under more intuitively. Perhaps the problem is that the CP is only a minor repair (CP - treaty without one penny)? Perhaps the problem is that the CP is competing through an artificial net benefit that only exists because of the CP (CP - aff in 3 days)?</p> <p>All arguments are conditional unless otherwise specified. While the neg should state this, and I could vote on the claim (with good warrant and impact :P); &quot;vote AFF, they did not specify the status&quot;. Or better maybe, &quot;err AFF on condo bad, they didn&rsquo;t even specify.&quot;</p> <p>This form does not ask my opinion on the actual statuses of CPs, but you are getting them anyway. I don&rsquo;t believe that conditional advocacies are bad. This is the status I think is best: an advocacy that is competitive should have to be advanced. If there is a perm, the NEG should be able to concede it to make their CP go away. A non-intrinsic, non-severance&nbsp;perm to an advocacy is 100% the same argument as no link. If the AFF and NEG advocacies can exist together without repercussion, the NEG advocacy is testing no part of the aff, and is irrelevant. However, this is just my opinion, you do whatever you want. I have, and will vote on condo bad. If it has a claim, warrant, impact, it&rsquo;s a winnable argument. If the impact to the voter is reject the team, so be it.</p> <p>A legitimate permutation has all of the aff and part or all of the neg advocacy. I will not insert my opinion on that meaning that the function or text of the CP in your debate, again, that is for you. My opinion is that text comp is an arbitrary tool made up to limit otherwise unfair feeling CPs that debaters have not been able to defeat with the appropriate theory arguments. Text comp and PICS bad are actually basically the exact same argument. They both arbitrarily eliminate a bunch of CPs to try to rid debate of a few.<em> Artificial net benefits are bad</em> is the argument that both of these poorly conceived arguments are trying to get at. <strong><em>You should not get the save a penny CP</em></strong>, but that is not a reason that we must use text comp or that we must reject CPs that include the plan in them. That is a reason to reject save a penny CPs, they are just hard to define. There is the rub on all theory, interpret the rules to restrict the exact set of argument that you intend to.</p> <p>6.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)</p> <p>Yes.</p> <p>7.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?</p> <p>This question is just sad. It should read, if the debaters you are watching fail to debate, how will you choose? Well, here goes. I will order things: some Ks, some theory, other Ks, some AFFs, other theory, DAs and other AFFs. Don&rsquo;t do this to me. Either make it clear that you all think the debate should be ordered the same, or debate about the order of these thoughts. If you let me choose, you have not completed the debate, and the decision will be based on something arbitrary, like me ordering issues on my own.</p> <p>8.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</p> <p>I won&rsquo;t. I also don&rsquo;t think the things listed are as abstract and concrete as the question leads on, nor are they necessarily diametrically opposed. In any case, this question, as phrased, is another example of something you should not do to me. Either, make it clear that you all think the debate should be ordered the same, or debate about the order of these thoughts. If you let me choose, you have not completed the debate, and the decision will be based on something arbitrary, like me ordering issues on my own. I think both of the things listed in the question, death and value of life, are important. I could be compelled to separate them based on number of people affected. I could be compelled to separate them on the time the impact occurs. I could be compelled to separate them based on the likelihood of each occurring. I could be compelled that one of these impacts is reversible while the other is not. I could be compelled that one affects other policy choices while one does not. If there was none of that for me to sort it, I would say death is bad, because that is what I think. If you let the debate get down to what I think, rather than something you said, you failed.</p>


Benjamin Brockman - WWU

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Bill Neesen - Long Beach

<p>Bill Neesen<br /> Cal. State Long Beach/IVC<br /> <br /> Years Judging Debate: 22+<br /> Years Competed in Debate: 7<br /> What School Competed at: Millard South/ OCC/CSU- Fullerton</p> <p>Section 1: General Information</p> <p>I think that debate is up to the debaters in the round. They the privilege of defining what debate should look like, but also the responsibility to defend that interpretation. I like Case debate (this is a lost great art), CP, DA, K and performance (but I really hate performance that is bad). I will listen to and vote on theory but you have to make it clear. Other than that I would say that debate is a game and I always play games to win and would expect you to do similar things. Also while I do not think that any judge can be truly non-biased and not intervene at all, I think intervention is a bad thing that the judge has a duty to try to resist as much as possible.</p> <p>Other things to think about: some people think that I am a hack for the K. While I have coached many great K people (or performance) I was a CP/DA/Case debater. This really does mean I love to see it all. I am a very fast flow.</p> <p>I hate lying in debate and would suggest for people to try to get facts straight. I do not vote against people who lie or make bad arguments (I leave it up to the other team to do that) but your points will reflect it.</p> <p>Well I do not mind critical arguments and think everyone can run them no matter the side. I treat them the same as every other argument. If they have a framework argument I will start there and see how I should frame the debate (and do not think I default crazy, many great debaters have won policy making in front of me). Once I decide how to frame the debate than I use it to evaluate the debate.&nbsp; As far as contradictory K positions with counterplans I do not like it if the K works on a level of discourse as a reason to vote for the k. I have a hard time with the whole language is most important and what we learn in debate is best, followed up by someone using bad rhetoric and saying the other team should not use it. I do not just vote for it but I do find the whole you contradicted it so either you lose or the K goes away persuasive.</p> <p>I would give some warning before I talk about Crazy in debate. 1. There is a winner and a looser in each debate, just because you were doing something crazy does not mean you get to avoid it. I have very few things I get to do and I enjoy the power (I give winner, looser, and speaker points). 2. Bad performance is not only horrible to watch (which kills speaker points) it also is easy to turn if the other team know performance or makes simple logical arguments. This means that it needs to be prepped and practiced it is not normally something that just comes to you in prep and if it does you might want to resist it because they go bad on the fly. Having said all of it I have seen some amazing performances over the years and it was cool when they were good.</p> <p>I have an old school approach to T. I do not mind it and while it does not have to have in round abuse it is always better to have it.&nbsp; To vote on it you need to win that there is a reason why what they did is bad and in the round the best thing would be to drop the AFF. As far as competing interps go I have a little rant. I do not know what else there is but competing interp. I mean both sides have their interp and the standards they use to justify it. In the end to win T you would have to prove your interp is the better one (hence the winning interp from the competing interps) and that topicality is a voting issue. I have no idea why people say t is about competing interps (because it always has been and will be) and I have no idea what that argument gets them in the round.</p> <p>I love counterplans. I have heard very few counterplans that are not pics (and they were really really bad). Topical counterplans are the best for debate and policy making because they are honestly the heart of most of the literature. &nbsp;If you plan on kicking the CP I would put the status in the cp because otherwise you run the risk of the PMR getting angry about the kick and it is always messy for the judge at that point. Perms need to have text unless it is do both (because the text is literally both). Types of competition are interesting text seems a little weaker than functional but both can be good and lame too. I want to remind you here that even though I have told you about what I think about theory arguments I still vote on them all the time. &nbsp;Even the silly argument that you only get one perm and it is always advocated (Yes cheesewright I am insulting you :P). I also think conditionality bad is a smart argument even if I don&rsquo;t always get to vote for it.</p> <p>MPJ:</p> <p>My recommendation for teams is to pref me based on the people they are debating that weekend. I see people who are not fast or cannot handle the K (or defend policymaking) well and that is sad because they ranked me an A. You should rank me biased on what is most likely to win you rounds and I would never be offended by this.</p>


Brad Krupicka - Lewis &amp; Clark


Brandan Whearty - Palomar


Brandiann Molby - Cedarville

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Name: Brandiann Molby</p> <p>School: Cedarville University</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Section 1: General Information</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>My debate experience is in NPDA, first as a student and for the past several years as a judge and coach.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I will listen to any argument as long as it is reasonably well-structured and well-thought out; I have no prejudices against any particular argumentation.&nbsp; I have arguments I like better than others, but all are valuable tools in this game.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries &nbsp;</p> <p>Please describe your approach to the following.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->1.<!--[endif]-->Speaker Points:&nbsp; I typically give speaker points in the 20-30 range, with 20 being extremely poor novice debate (which we will not see at NPTE), and 30 going to the most accomplished speakers.&nbsp; My average range for experienced debaters is 25-29 points.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->2.<!--[endif]-->Critical Arguments:&nbsp; Critical arguments are a fantastic, increasingly neglected strategy in debate.&nbsp; As an off-case position, I weigh it before case debate.&nbsp; Affirmatives are able to run critical arguments on the resolution, should the wording of the resolution warrant it; however, K is most effective when Aff or Neg use it as part of a larger strategy that informs their other positions.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->3.<!--[endif]-->Performance-based Arguments:&nbsp; Performative arguments should be used sparingly, although I will hear them as I will any type of argument.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->4.<!--[endif]-->Topicality: Topicality is a contest of competing interpretations; simply crying &quot;abuse&quot; does not do nearly enough work to address the complexities of this argument.&nbsp; Argue proven abuse by all means, but it must be predicated on the inadequacies of the Aff&rsquo;s interpretations.&nbsp; You must prove all aspects of your interpretation and its consequences for the round.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->5.<!--[endif]-->Counterplans:&nbsp; PICs are fine, but Neg needs to demonstrate clearly why changing only a portion of the plan is preferable.&nbsp; Any CP works best in conjunction with a cohesive Neg strategy.&nbsp; I do believe PICs need to be substantively competitive from the original plan, but whether that is on a functional or textual basis, or both, depends on the particular round.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->6.<!--[endif]-->Sharing Flowed Arguments:&nbsp; Partners should be able to share whatever flowed information they have; however, I think it is unnecessary for flows to be shared with the opposing team.&nbsp; If teams require clarification, they can ask for it.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->7.<!--[endif]-->Order of Evaluating Argumentation:&nbsp; I prefer to have debaters weigh the round themselves and demonstrate the ability to think critically about their own argumentation.&nbsp; In the absence of this very necessary analysis, I evaluate critical argumentation first, then procedurals like T, and finally look to the case debate and any advantages or disadvantages.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->8.<!--[endif]-->Weighing Arguments not Weighed by Debaters or Weighing Conflicting Claims:&nbsp; In a comparative advantage context, I tend to prefer probability over strict magnitude.&nbsp; I find it difficult to determine whether genocide is preferable to nuclear winter, and generally look a little further up the flow to more realistic impacts.&nbsp; I often prefer concrete impacts over abstract ones, but I will vote on either type depending on its context in the round.&nbsp; That said, impact calculus usually devolves into the world of fallacy, and while I will entertain any argument, I prefer to see a more sophisticated, substantive analysis from the debaters.&nbsp;</p>


Brent Northup - Carroll

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Bri Forni - WWU

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Brian DeLong - IU

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Brian Boyle - Notre Dame

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Caitlyn Burford - NAU

<p>Burford, Caitlyn (Northern Arizona University)</p> <p>Background: This is my eigth year judging and coaching debate, and I spent four years competing in college. Please feel free to ask me specific questions before the round.</p> <p>Specific Inquiries 1. General Overview</p> <p>I think debate is a unique competitive forum to discuss issues within our rhetoric about the state, power, race, gender, etc. in a space that allows us to rethink and critically assess topics. This can come through a net benefit analysis of a proposed government plan, through a micro political action or statement, through a critique, or through some other newfangled performance you come up with. In that sense, I think debate is a rhetorical act that can be used creatively and effectively. Running a policy case about passing a piece of legislation has just as many implications about state power and authority as a critique of the state. The differences between the two types just have to do with what the debaters choose to discuss in each particular round. There are critical implications to every speech act. Affirmative cases, topicalities, procedurals, kritiks, and performances can all be critically analyzed if the teams take the debate there. Thus, framework is imperative. I&rsquo;ll get there shortly. You can run whatever you want as long as a) you have a theoretical justification for running the position, and b) you realize that it is still a competitive debate round so I need a reason to vote for something at some point. (a.k.a Give me a framework with your poetry!).</p> <p>2. Framework This often ends up as the most important part of a lot of debates. If both teams are running with net benefits, great, but I still think there is area to weigh those arguments differently based on timeframe, magnitude, structural weight, etc. This kind of framework can make your rebuttal a breeze. In a debate that goes beyond a net benefits paradigm, your framework is key to how I interpret different impacts in the round. Choose your frameworks strategically and use them to your advantage. If the whole point of your framework is to ignore the case debate, then ignore the case debate. If the whole point of your framework is to leverage your case against the critique, then tell me what the rhetorical implications (different than impacts) are to your case.</p> <p>3. Theory It&rsquo;s important to note that theory positions are impact debates, too. Procedural positions, topicalities, etc. are only important to the debate if you have impacts built into them. If a topicality is just about &ldquo;fairness&rdquo; or &ldquo;abuse&rdquo; without any articulation as to what that does, most of these debates become a &ldquo;wash&rdquo;. So, view your theory as a mini-debate, with a framework, argument, and impacts built into it.</p> <p>4. Counterplan Debate This is your game. I don&rsquo;t think I have a concrete position as to how I feel about PICS, or intrinsicness, or textual/functional competition. That is for you to set up and decide in the debate. I have voted on PICS good, PICS bad, so on and so forth. That means that it all has to do with the context of the specific debate. Just make your arguments and warrant them well. Unless I am told otherwise, I will assume the CP is unconditional and my role as a judge it to vote for the best advocacy.</p> <p>5. Round Evaluation Again, framework is important. Procedurals, case debate, and critique debate should all have frameworks that prioritize what I look at in the round. In the rare case that neither team does any framing on any of the arguments, I will typically look at the critique, then topicality/procedurals, then the case. Because the critique usually has to do with some sort of education affecting everyone in the room, it will usually come before a procedural that affects the &ldquo;fairness&rdquo; of one team. (Again, this is only absent any sort of weighing mechanism for any of the arguments.) If there is a topicality/procedural run without any voters, I won&rsquo;t put them in for you and it will be weighed against the case. I will not weigh the case against the critique unless I am told how and why it can be weighed equally. A concrete argument is always going to have a bit more weight than an abstract argument. A clear story with a calculated impact will probably outweigh an uncalculated potential impact. (i.e. &ldquo;15,000 without food&rdquo; vs. a &ldquo;decrease in the quality of life&rdquo;). But, if you calculate them out and do the work for me, awesome. If I have to weigh two vague abstract arguments against each other, i.e. loss of identity vs. loss of freedom, then I will probably revert to the more warranted link story if I must. 6. Speed, Answering Questions, and Other General Performance Things I&rsquo;m fine with speed. Don&rsquo;t use it as a tool to exclude your other competitors if they ask you to slow down, please do. I don&rsquo;t really care about how many questions you answer if any, but if you don&rsquo;t then you are probably making yourself more vulnerable to arguments about shifts or the specificities of &ldquo;normal means&rdquo;. It&rsquo;s your round! Do what you want!</p>


Cassie Owens - Cameron

n/a


Cathy Glenn - SMC


Chris Pierini - UWash

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Background: I debated 4 years in high school, 2 years LD, 2 years Cross X. I debated Parli at UW for 2 years. I&#39;m now head coach at UW and been coaching the team for 5&nbsp;years. This will be my 15th&nbsp;year involved with debate.</p> <p>In General:</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My flow is strict and speed is fine.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I default &ldquo;net benefits&rdquo; if no other framework is engaged.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Read any textual advocacy twice (PMC plan, perm, K alt, CP, T violation, ect) or have your partner give me and your opponents a copy of the text during your speech. The last thing I want to judge is a theoretical argument predicated off of text I don&rsquo;t have word for word.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&rsquo;m willing to do a &ldquo;gut check&rdquo; on absurd arguments to protect the academic value of the activity. If Gov makes an argument that a country does not exist to no link a relations DA that argument is not going to fly. I want to vote for intelligent and strategic arguments.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Terminal defense: Sigh&hellip;..at some point I guess defense can win you the argument/round. A &ldquo;we meet&rdquo; on T or 0 solvency because of a plan flaw, come to mind. 0 risk of a link is just hard to prove. Defense combined with offense is a much easier way to win my ballot. In fact I think defense is undervalued in most debates.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If you and the other team have agreed to specific terms before the round like say &ldquo;we will provide a written copy of CP text if they provide a written copy of plan text&rdquo;. I must know about it before hand, those ethical debates are nearly impossible resolve.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I think debate is fun. Don&rsquo;t put me in a position where it&rsquo;s not fun.</p> <p>&nbsp;&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;POO&#39;s: Call them but I&#39;ll probably just take them &quot;under consideration&quot;.</p> <p>&nbsp;&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;POI&rsquo;s: You should probably answer a question or two. If a team can not engage your argument because it&rsquo;s unclear (usually I&rsquo;m thinking of a T violation or wtf the K alt means) and you refuse to answer a question&hellip;.I&#39;m probably going to give a lot a weight to any theory coming your way.</p> <p>&nbsp;&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If you have a question please ask, I&rsquo;m more than happy to answer it. chris.pierini@gmail.com</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries&nbsp;</p> <p>1.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26-29.5 standard range.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Points are awarded on the basis of strategic decisions made in round.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I will only go outside of this range if you are horrifically rude to me, your partner, or your opponents.</p> <p>2.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The &ldquo;level&rdquo; at which the K operates is dependent on the framework.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions? That&rsquo;s for the debaters to engage or not.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Kritiks are like any other argument, they can be run poorly and they can be run well.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If you start throwing out hyper specific buzz words (especially in your alt text) OR a melding of 16 different authors it would be prudent to define/terms and explain your argument more than going for laundry list links and impacts.</p> <p>3.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Performance based arguments&hellip;</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I will evaluate every argument made in round.&nbsp;&nbsp;Isn&rsquo;t all debate a type of performance?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I will vote for performance based arguments&hellip;if you win the performance should win you the ballot.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>4.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My threshold for pulling the trigger on a theoretical argument, I would not consider high or low. However, you must have all of the right components to warrant the trigger being pulled. Winning your interp and standards without winning a voting issue pretty much means I&rsquo;m not voting for the argument.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Make sure you&rsquo;re going for and impacting to the correct voting issues. You should probably have reasons why education/ fairness/ abuse/ jurisdiction/whatever is an impact-able argument.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I don&rsquo;t require competing interpretations to vote for T but it&rsquo;s probably helpful.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I don&rsquo;t require in-round abuse but it&rsquo;s probably helpful.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>5.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CP&rsquo;s they are an argument.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I have zero bias for CP theory. What arguments are run is purely a question of strategy.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I think solvency isn&rsquo;t necessarily binary. You can solve better or worse in a lot of instances. This means CP vs Case solvency is really important for weighing impacts.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>6.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Absolutely</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>7.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Theory (either throw out the argument or reject the team) then I do straight net benefits: K or/and CP or SQ impacts vs Case impacts&hellip;.in general.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If your losing a K framework without articulating how your K operates in the Gov framework I&rsquo;m probably going to reject the argument as it no longer functions in a decision making calculus.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If you have specific scenarios, I&rsquo;ll do my best to answer them but with the variety of how arguments interact I can&rsquo;t reasonably explain every permutation possible.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>8.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Without argument interaction, PMs and LOs will be punished in speaker points</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I have absolutely voted for positions like DeDev which went for value to life outweighing the nuclear war deaths and voted against when the warrants were not present.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If things are so diametrically opposed with ZERO argument interaction then my gut tells me I would default Gov as the Opp hasn&rsquo;t presented a compelling argument to reject the Gov case. This has NEVER happened to me. Someone makes an argument which demonstrates impact interaction which I will evaluate because at this point judge intervention has become necessary to resolve the debate. I will intervene using arguments on the flow not my own personal bias. Basically, the better warranted or more logical argument will win out.</p> <p>&middot;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;I give a lot of weight to specific scenarios vs generic impacts for reasons of probability.</p>


Colin Patrick - WWU

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Colin Patrick</p> <p>WWU</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Overview:<br /> I believe that the round is ultimately the debater&rsquo;s to control. I will default to Net-benefits unless otherwise told to do so. The best way for you to win my ballot is to compare impacts in the rebuttal. Also, I would like a copy of all plan, counter-plan, perm texts. I&rsquo;ve had multiple rounds this year where teams have referred to the plan text when making arguments and running procedurals/plan flaws off of misspellings and abbreviations on the written out copy. I feel that this is necessary in these hyper-technical debates.<br /> <br /> Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given.<br /> Anywhere between 25-30, but usually around 26.5-28, unless something extremely offensive is said, or there is general meanness exhibited.<br /> <br /> How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?<br /> I&rsquo;m open to all K&rsquo;s run by either side. That being said you will have an easier time winning my ballot if you properly elucidate on how your alternative solves. Unless otherwise told so, I believe that the Neg can run conditional contradictory positions.<br /> <br /> Performance based arguments&hellip;<br /> Again, I am open to all arguments, just be clear.<br /> <br /> Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?<br /> In-round abuse is not necessary for me. The reason for voting on topicality should be made by the debaters.<br /> <br /> Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?<br /> The legitimacy of a CP should be debated out. Unless otherwise told so, I believe the CP is conditional. If you want to lock the Neg into something, then ask a POI. Perms are always a test of competition.<br /> <br /> Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)<br /> Don&rsquo;t care.<br /> <br /> In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?<br /> The order of argument importance should be set up by the debaters.<br /> <br /> How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?<br /> I will default to Net-Benefits unless otherwise told to do so. If you want to win on a dehumanization impact, then argue why that is the most important. If you want to win on a nuclear war impact, then argue why that is the most important. If this is not done then I will probably have to intervene somewhere.</p>


Colin Laursen - WWU

n/a


Dan Falls - WWU

n/a


Dan Dexter - WWU

n/a


Dan Williams - WWU

n/a


Daniel Elliott - Biola

<p>Experience:</p> <ol> <li>Competing: I was trained for CEDA though our small school did not have the time or funds to keep up with the research so I did Parli for two years back when Parliamentary Debate was just getting started in the west, 1996-1998.</li> <li>Judging: I have since = judged in many different tournaments as an assistant coach. I took a couple of years off to get married and now I am back as the Director of Forensics at Biola University. I have judged too many rounds to sit down and try to do the math. I have been around a while.</li> </ol> <p>Decision making:</p> <ol> <li>I first make my decision according to my flow. I could totally disagree with you but if you say something is important or critical to the round I will write it down. If there is no response from the other team then that argument might win the round.</li> <li>I make my decision according to logic. I do not believe in tabula rosa. I will look at the arguments, especially in a round of a lot of clash, and decide what is supported with the best evidence and what makes the most sense.</li> <li>I accept procedurals. You do not need to prove abuse to run a T. You can run solvency presses, specs, Kritics, and tricot. I will listen to them all. I do not buy the risk of solvency arguments. If you have a plan that is likely not to solve that is the place where I will pull the trigger for the neg.</li> <li>Finally on Kritics, I do not like Kritics that are really nonlinear disadvantages in disguise just dressed up like K&rsquo;s so that you can kritic the mindset. They K itself is nonlinear. The harm is already in the status quoe. There is no bright line to suggest that the rhetoric will make it worse. So save yourself the trouble and do not run them because I do not want to hear them.</li> </ol> <p>Presentation:</p> <ol> <li>I think speed is antithetical to debate. Debate is about persuading your critic. Debate is supposed to train you for real world debates. How does talking at 200+ words per minute train students to argue in the real world? It robs debate of Ethos and Pathos which are just as important to logos in Aristotle&rsquo;s paradigm. Logos is the most important of the triad but I want to see the other two.</li> <li>So please rise and speak if there is a lectern available. If not then you may speak from your seat.</li> <li>Be as professional as you can. It makes you more credible as a speaker. The more credible you are the more persuasive your arguments will seem. There is plenty of great research to support this.</li> </ol> <p>On Case arguments:</p> <ol> <li>I like on case arguments. I don&rsquo;t want the debate to become like two ships passing in the night.</li> <li>I do not want the Aff to spend 30 minutes of prep only to spend the hour of our lives listening to Neg&rsquo;s off case positions. Since logic is very important to me I would advise Neg teams to try case turns and presses in addition to K&rsquo;s and DA&rsquo;s It can only help you.</li> </ol>


Dave Zimny - Los Medanos

<p>~~ZIMNY, DAVE &ndash; Los Medanos College, Pittsburg CA<br /> BACKGROUND:&nbsp; I earned my master&rsquo;s and doctoral degrees in political science from Yale University and have taught college courses in the social sciences for 40 years, so I should be fairly familiar with the factual and argumentative foundations of most parliamentary debate resolutions.&nbsp; I was a high school and college policy debater before there was such a thing as collegiate parliamentary debate.&nbsp; This is my third year as an intercollegiate judge.&nbsp; Over the last two years I have judged approximately 100 tournament rounds, including 16 preliminary and two elimination rounds at the NPDA National Championship Tournament.<br /> JUDGING PHILOSOPHY:&nbsp; I am a noninterventionist; I will not reject or accept any substantive argument on the basis of my own knowledge or values.&nbsp; In the absence of well supported voting criteria from either team, I will vote on the stock issues.&nbsp; I firmly believe in supporting assertions with evidence, even in parliamentary debate.&nbsp; Examples and hard data will go a long way toward persuading me.&nbsp; I prefer adherence to the trichotomy; if you choose to argue a value proposition as policy, be sure to justify your choice.<br /> PRESENTATION:&nbsp; Debate is a speech activity.&nbsp; Unclear locution and garbled syntax will definitely cost you speaker&rsquo;s points, and they could cost you my vote if I&rsquo;m unable to understand your arguments.&nbsp; Speed generally doesn&rsquo;t bother me.&nbsp; If I can&rsquo;t follow your speech, I&rsquo;ll let you know by saying, &ldquo;Clear, please.&rdquo;&nbsp; I will always try to rule on points of order rather than taking them under consideration, to minimize uncertainty for both teams.&nbsp; Prompting your partner is allowable, but excessive prompting will reduce speaker&rsquo;s points.&nbsp; I have no objections to sitting while speaking.&nbsp; As with any competitive activity, good sportsmanship will be much appreciated, and a touch of wit will definitely garner you more speaker&rsquo;s points.&nbsp; I will award 24-26 speaker&#39;s points for competent presentation, 27-28 points for above average presentation, and 29-30 points for outstanding presentation.&nbsp; I will never award fewer than 20 points.<br /> PROCEDURAL ARGUMENTS:&nbsp; I am open to topicality arguments, critiques and counterplans based on logical analysis of the Government&rsquo;s case, but I frown on generic arguments of all kinds.&nbsp; I will treat topicality as an a priori voting issue, but I will vote on actual, not theoretical, abuse.&nbsp; I am more open to assumption and reasoning-based critiques than to language critiques.<br /> DEBATE THEORY:&nbsp; Below are my personal opinions on some issues of debate theory.&nbsp; I will never apply these preferences preemptively without actual argumentation by the teams themselves.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m there to listen to your advocacy, not make your arguments for you.&nbsp; That said, debaters that I judge should be aware of my opinions.&nbsp; I am generally &ldquo;old school&rdquo; &ndash; substantive arguments hold my attention; &ldquo;metadebate&rdquo; bores me.&nbsp; I believe that:<br /> A counterplan may be either an actual alternative to the Government&rsquo;s plan or a means of arguing competitiveness and opportunity costs.&nbsp; If a counterplan is conditional or provisional, the Leader of the Opposition should announce that fact as soon as the counterplan is revealed.<br /> The Opposition should not present a topical counter plan.&nbsp; I have no objection, however, to plan inclusive counterplans.<br /> The Opposition should enjoy exactly the same fiat power as the Government.<br /> Argumentation begins with the enactment of the plan or counterplan.&nbsp; Neither team should base advantages or disadvantages on contingencies that precede enactment &ndash; e.g., particular voting alignments or bargaining in legislatures that might be required to enact a plan.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fiat turns the link.&rdquo;<br /> The Opposition should not &quot;split&quot; its 12-minute constructive/rebuttal block, with the Opposition Member&#39;s constructive presenting new arguments and the Leader&#39;s rebuttal responding to the Member of Government&#39;s constructive.&nbsp; This practice puts an undue burden on the Prime Minister&#39;s rebuttal.<br /> PLEASE NOTE:&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t claim to be familiar with all the recent developments in debate theory.&nbsp; If you&rsquo;re not sure about my knowledge of a particular theoretical argument, please ask me before the round begins.<br /> Debate is competition, but it&rsquo;s also an educational and social experience.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s all have some fun!<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Dayle Hardy-Short - NAU

<p><strong>Dayle Hardy-Short - Northern Arizona University </strong></p> <p><br /> <strong>Saved Philosophy:</strong></p> <p><br /> Background:</p> <p>I have not judged NPDA parliamentary debate this year--I have judged BP and Lincoln-Douglas. So my flowing is a little rusty.</p> <p><br /> On speaker points, I look to such things as analysis, reasoning, evidence, organization, refutation, and delivery (delivery being only 1 of 6 considerations I made for speaker points). Thus, I virtually never give low-point wins because if a team &quot;wins&quot;, then it has done something better than the other team (i.e., like had clearer organization or better arguments).</p> <p><br /> Generally:</p> <p>Generally, I am open to most positions and arguments. I expect the debaters to tell me what they think I should vote on, and why. I appreciate clash. I will not do the work for the team. I believe that the affirmative/government has the responsibility to affirm the resolution and the negative/opposition has the responsibility to oppose the resolution or the affirmative. Such affirmation and opposition can appear&nbsp;in different forms. I feel pretty comfortable in my understanding of whether or not something is a new argument in rebuttals, and I will not vote in favor of new arguments--just because someone extends an argument does not mean it&#39;s new, and just because someone uses a new term does not mean the argument is new (they may be reframing a previously-articulated argument based on additional responses from the other team).</p> <p><br /> I prefer debates in which debaters clearly explain why I should do what they think I should do.&nbsp;This includes explaining use of particular jargon and/or assumptions underlying it (for instance, if you say &quot;condo bad&quot;, I may not necessarily understand in the heat of the debate that you&#39;re talking about conditionality versus something you live in; similarly I do not understand what &ldquo;fism&rdquo; is&mdash;you need to tell me). Do not assume that simply&nbsp;using a particular word means I will understand your argument (argument includes claim, explanation, and evidence of some kind). Please consider not only labeling the argument, but telling me what you mean by it.</p> <p><br /> I will&nbsp;listen as carefully as possible&nbsp;to what&#39;s going on in your debate (I will try to adapt to what YOU say and argue). Do your debate, make your arguments, and I will do my best to weigh them according to what happened in the debate. I am not arrogant enough to think that I get everything on the flow, nor am I arrogant enough to claim that I understand everything you say.&nbsp;But if you explain important arguments, most of the time I can understand them. At least I will try.</p> <p><br /> Topicality is a voting issue for me, and I listen to how teams set up the arguments; I consider it to be an a priori argument. I have an extremely wide latitude in terms of what affirmative can claim as topical within the scope of any given resolution. I don&rsquo;t like T arguments that are ONLY about so-called abuse (indeed, I do not find them persuasive). I prefer that you focus on why the affirmative isn&rsquo;t topical. Thus, I prefer in the round you explain why something is not topical (standards, alternative definitions, etc.), but you do not need to articulate abuse (which I define as &quot;they&#39;re taking ground from us; they&rsquo;ve ruined debate; or similar arguments&rdquo;). I guess it does seem to me that if a case is truly non-topical, then it almost always follows that the position is unfair to the negative--as long as the negative came truly prepared to debate the topic. Thus, the negative does not need to belabor the point--say it and move on.</p> <p><br /> I will assume your counterplan is unconditional, and if you think it should be otherwise, please explain and justify that position. With an articulated counterplan, then my job becomes to weigh the best advocacy with regard to the resolution. Please provide me (and the other team) with an actual CP plan text, so I can consider arguments about it as they are made (I really do prefer a written plan text, or please repeat it 2-3 times so I get it written down correctly).</p> <p><br /> I certainly am not opposed to permutations, but please have a text that you can show me and your opponents.</p> <p><br /> I am not opposed to critiques nor performance debate, but please be very very clear about why they should win and what criteria I should use to evaluate them and/or weigh them in the debate as a whole.</p> <p><br /> Abstract impacts should be clearly demonstrated and explained, and concrete impacts need to have similar weight.</p> <p><br /> A final note on speed and civility. I don&#39;t have particular problems with speed, but clarity is essential--clear speakers can speak very quickly and I will get the flow. I believe that debate is an important activity, both as an intellectual exercise and as a co-curricular activity in which we get to test classroom learning in a more pragmatic way (application and reductio ad absurdum), including communication skills and the extent to which arguments can go. The way we behave in rounds often becomes habit-forming. So show some respect for the activity, some respect for your opposition, and some respect for the judge. I&#39;ll try to keep up with you if you&#39;ll treat me like a human being.&nbsp;I will think through your arguments if you will give me arguments worth thinking through.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Dena Counts - ACU

<p>&nbsp;<strong><em>I am the DOF at ACU.&nbsp; I have been coaching Parli for the last 7&nbsp;years.&nbsp; For those last 7&nbsp;years, I have judged on average 65 rounds per year. &nbsp;This year I have been judging less but still should be able to keep up with you.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong><em>I vote with the better quality of argument. When I say better quality, I am looking for depth of arguments and warrants behind your claim. I attempt to remove my individual biases from the round and make debaters tell me where and why to vote. I understand that biases do seep into my judgments, but I do feel that I should make decisions based upon your argumentation &ndash; not my worldview. Probably, I&rsquo;m more of a game player when it comes to a decision maker.&nbsp; Love new and unique strategies. I really think almost anything goes in this thing called debate. I say &quot;anything&quot; as I don&#39;t like cursing, nakedness, or slurs, but strategy wise, you can do what you need to do to win. Know that I&rsquo;m very expressive in my nonverbals. If I am getting your argument, you&rsquo;ll know. If you&rsquo;ve lost me, you should know from my nonverbals. I have only been coaching for five years, so there are times that super speed (not typically speed) can lose me. Again watch my nonverbals, and I&rsquo;ll let you know. I flow, judge on the flow, and don&rsquo;t do the work for you.&nbsp; Use your rebuttal to tell me why you win and where on the flow your arguments overwhelm the teams.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries &nbsp;</p> <p>Please describe your approach to the following.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>1.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?&nbsp; <strong><em>25 to 30</em></strong></p> <p>25 to 27 means you need work</p> <p>28 to 30 means you are pretty awesome</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>2.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?&nbsp; &nbsp;<strong><em>Kritiks are great from both Aff and Neg. Explain your framework, impacts and give me a realistic alternative. &nbsp;I do think you need an alternative and it shouldn&#39;t bite your story.&nbsp; No I don&rsquo;t think when you run other negative arguments they should contradict other neg positions unless through the running of those positions you are trying to make a point.</em></strong><br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong><em>3.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </em></strong>Performance based arguments&hellip;&nbsp; <strong><em>Great.&nbsp; Just tell me how I should interpret them, how they function in the round.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>4.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations? <strong><em>&nbsp;&nbsp;I will vote on T but would rather vote elsewhere. To pull that trigger in -round abuse is typically necessary. Also, competing interp is necessary.</em></strong><br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>5.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?&nbsp; <strong><em>CP&rsquo;s are fine. PICS are fine. That doesn&rsquo;t mean you shouldn&rsquo;t run argumentation of why PICS are bad though. Yes, ID the status of the CP. PERM the CP every which way you can. If you can think of a new way to PERM that would be super fun.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>6.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)&nbsp; <strong><em>Yes that&rsquo;s fine.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong><em>7.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </em></strong>In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?&nbsp; <strong><em>Topicality is first.&nbsp; Then I look to Criteria or Framework to tell me where to go.&nbsp; Usually it is impacts or turns on case.&nbsp; I REALLY like rebuttals that tell me where to vote and WHY to vote.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong><em>8.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </em></strong>How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)? <strong><em>If you don&rsquo;t tell me WHY your impact outweighs their impacts on timeline, magnitude or probability, you are gambling on my choice or priority.&nbsp;&nbsp;I would probably go with concrete impacts over abstract ones.</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Emily Graham - Sterling


Eric Garcia - IVC


Eric Maag - SWC

n/a


Gary Rybold - IVC

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Judging philosophy for Professor Gary Rybold</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h1>Retired Director of Forensics &ndash; Irvine Valley College</h1> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I debated for four years of high school and four years of college.&nbsp; I&nbsp;coached for 25 years (primarily at community colleges).&nbsp; Typically, in an average year, I judged over 25 rounds.&nbsp; Many years I coached both parliamentary and policy debate (but not since 2003).&nbsp;I view myself primarily as an educator in this activity.&nbsp; My great respect for academic debate comes from a traditional approach to coaching, judging, and following the rules. However, I will try my best not to prejudge your specific way of debating. Although I will listen to new ideas, please do not think I will necessarily like/understand them. Merely uttering a term and assuming its impact or how it functions will not be your best strategy in the round. This is what I would like debaters to know:</p> <p><strong>PREFERENCES &ndash; </strong>I hold that there is value in debating various types of propositions (not just policies).&nbsp; I think that most fact propositional debates are misplaced (and may require me to activate my knowledge to provide a check on the evidence for the positions advanced).&nbsp; I also feel that as a community we have lessened (perhaps intentionally) our ability to effectively debate value propositions.&nbsp; Still, I will try to start my evaluation of the round on the basis of stock issues, dependent on the type of resolution, as they function in the round.&nbsp; The key term for every team is justify.&nbsp; At all levels should you want me to accept your interpretation of the topic, definition, criteria, decision rule, plan, contention, or debate theory you should explain the superiority of your position.&nbsp; I love teams that refute before providing their rationale &ndash; clash is essential for high points. Therefore, the burden of rejoinder is the key element of my decision. I will listen to topicality should the government be unprepared to defend their interpretation (although it pains me to vote on trivial technicalities when there is little ground lost). Stellar delivery will get you extra points.&nbsp; I crave solid organization. I desire wit and a demonstration of knowledge from the debaters.&nbsp; Ultimately, I will vote on the basis of critical thinking skills exhibited in the round based on what you impact on my flow sheet.&nbsp; I will like your round more if you avoid: rudeness, ignorance, destructive verbal/nonverbal aggressiveness, shiftiness, Ninja-like tricks, whining, style over substance, viewpoint discrimination, profanity, politics DAs and extending numbers not arguments. I know that there are too many topic areas and a limited preparation time, but please try not to utilize a distorted interpretation of the empirical dimensions of reality; it really puts me in a bind on decisions.</p> <p><strong>CRITIQUES</strong> - A special note for those who care about critiques: I am probably a few years behind the trends. I disapprove of the tactic of pushing automatic privileging of any postmodern theory as the superior position, possessing the moral high ground over all other arguments (especially since I am a Christian). Therefore, please explain your position with solid justification. Let me know how the argument functions in the round (hopefully more than a non-unique DA). Trying to silence a team, because their language is boorish, seems antithetical to good debate and the first amendment. I have yet to hear a pre-fiat argument that changed me in a round (making pre-fiat just as illusionary as fiat for me).&nbsp; Should you want to take the discourse to a micro level, please be advised, I will activate my own voice through the ballot.</p> <p><strong>SPEED &ndash; </strong>I understand you may want to go really fast. But most of the gut spread parli rounds I see just don&rsquo;t allow for a genuine development of ideas. Often it seems like little more than unwarranted tags being thrown out.&nbsp; So, while I know intervening may be considered a violation of our social contract, I will just stop flowing if I can&rsquo;t understand you (&gt;225 wpm). Please don&rsquo;t expect me to yell &ldquo;clear.&rdquo; If it gets a little too fast I may not vote against a team because of dropped arguments. Please don&rsquo;t make me make those choices.</p> <p><strong>ULTIMATE GOAL</strong> - As a community college educator I hope for an optimal educational experience in each speech. As the debate culture changes we should also encourage discourse that allows the evolution to be rational and civil. Our community should encourage higher values.&nbsp; My hope is that all debaters will respect the activity so much that they would try to reach a bit further in the rounds I judge, so we can all fulfill our educational mission.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Geoffrey BrodakSilva - CSULA

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gte mso 10]> <style> /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-language:JA;} </style> <![endif]--><!--StartFragment--></p> <p>My comments in this paradigm should be understood as the horizon from my point of view--not dictates.&nbsp; I love debate because it allows teams to argue about what they feel is important.</p> <p>I have been active in debate for over 20 years at both the high school and the college level.&nbsp; In that time, I have watched as 2 documentary film crews followed two separate teams on mine (1 high school, 1 college).&nbsp; I have worked several summer institutes, coached in the Northwest and Southwest, started an English Language Debate League in Mexico City and continue working with the LA Metro League. &nbsp;I am currently the Director at Cal State LA and have judged about 15&nbsp;rounds this year.</p> <p>Many years ago I wrote an article about why I think the tricotomy, while conceptually helpful, fails to provide a fair and debater centered approach to topic interpretation.&nbsp; I feel much the same way about the stock issues, where inherency plays the role of fact, harms the role of value, and solvency playing policy.&nbsp; Like most of the policy-maker paradigm, I see significance and topicality as derivative of the coordination of other three.&nbsp; That is to say, I will use my real-world experiences both in and out of rounds, and therefore cannot feign ignorance of their import.</p> <p>I do not feel that the ability to speak quickly is even close to one of the most significant things I have learned from forensics.&nbsp; I can flow fast debate because I have been trained to, not because I enjoy the tactic.&nbsp; I do not feel that rate is a substitute for making strategic choices.</p> <p>I believe that the negative has the burden of rejoinder and, as such, must respond to the substantive arguments of the affirmative.&nbsp; I dislike the 1-off LOC because while tactical choices are made, it also necessitates a &ldquo;going for everything&rdquo; strategy that does not necessitate making strategic choices.</p> <p>I rarely vote on procedural arguments because they are usually pale shadows of a more important substantive issue.&nbsp; There have been times when there is clearly articulated in-round abuse; but it goes without saying that the procedural argument trades off with another actual position, not a potential position.</p> <p>A counterplan needs to test the solvency of the affirmative&rsquo;s advocacy, which is to say, it competes with the plan on the level of net benefits.&nbsp; Both textual and functional competition have the possibility of fulfilling this standard, if they can demonstrate an opportunity cost.&nbsp; Since uniqueness can be counterplanned, the status of the advocacy need not be unconditional.&nbsp; A permutation is the plan plus any part of the counterplan--&ldquo;Do both&rdquo; is not a permutation.</p> <p>Kritik is a label to describe arguments that do not easily fit into either the stock issues or the policy maker paradigm.&nbsp; Teams should feel free to use &ldquo;framework&rdquo; to ease this disparity, but not as a substitute for demonstration of an alternative.&nbsp; However, I do believe it is possible to defend rejection as such an alternative.</p> <p>Points of order should be called if you are worried that a rebuttal argument is not being understood as new.&nbsp; I will protect teams from arguments that create a new strategic field once rebuttals have begun.&nbsp; In preliminary debates, points of order will be well taken or not; in out-rounds, points of orders will be taken under consideration.</p> <p>At the end of the round, the best arguments win.</p> <!--EndFragment-->


Gina Lane - Jewell

<p><strong>Question 1 : Please enter your judging philosophy.&nbsp;</strong></p> <p>I try to be open to a variety of debate arguments, but I default to a policy analysis in a net-benefits paradigm.&nbsp; I think the critical element of any debate is for debaters to compare argument impacts in the round and tell me what my decision calculus should be.&nbsp; The most common mistake I see is debaters who run several arguments and leave them all in play to see what sticks.&nbsp; This nearly always creates shallow debate that invites judge intervention.&nbsp; The second most common mistake I see is debates that are&nbsp;<strong>both too fast and lack warrants</strong>.&nbsp; I have worn hearing aids for a decade, and I just invested in new ones.&nbsp; It is your responsibility to do what you can to make sure that all of the participants hear your arguments accurately.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;If I can&rsquo;t understand you, I promise you I will not see the round the same way you do.</p> <p>&nbsp;Please slow down for plan texts, counterplan texts, t interpretations, k alternatives, perm texts.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Other issues you want to know &ndash;</p> <p>&nbsp;1) I&rsquo;m not a fan of fact debate; I think it is difficult to weigh arguments on a preponderance of evidence standard.&nbsp;&nbsp;I will listen to this approach, but I will also listen to arguments that argue that policy advocacy is superior.</p> <p>&nbsp;2) Topicality: I vote on topicality when there are clear counter-interpretations that prove abuse of ground.&nbsp;&nbsp;I prefer not to vote on RVIs, but I have when they are mishandled.&nbsp;&nbsp;I am open to a variety of interpretations on T &ndash; both the ground abuse and the competing interpretations approach are ok with me (but if you use the latter, you have to debate out the standards).&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;3) Counterplans: I will vote on topical counterplans &ndash; they must be competitive via net benefits.&nbsp;&nbsp;I prefer not to hear a lot of theory arguments in counterplans, but I will listen.</p> <p>&nbsp;4) Kritiks: I always like kritiks on an abstract level, but to win a kritik in front of me I need to hear you conceptualize the alternative debate.&nbsp;&nbsp;You have to win that the alternative is more compelling that a net benefits approach.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;5) Narratives, projects, performance, alternative debate, etc.: These are creative approaches, but I prefer a clear explanation of how to weigh such arguments versus traditional debate arguments. I also prefer a link to the resolution.&nbsp;&nbsp;I&rsquo;m sorry, but I have a difficult time understanding the oppressive nature of fiat.&nbsp;&nbsp;I have voted for this argument, but I don&rsquo;t find it particularly persuasive.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;6) Speed.&nbsp;&nbsp;I flow at a pretty fast level, but you need to articulate well.&nbsp;&nbsp;Unlike other forms of debate, I can&rsquo;t ask for cards at the end of the round to reconstruct arguments, so I have to get your arguments on the first hearing.&nbsp;&nbsp;You have the responsibility to communicate. Again,&nbsp;<strong>a lot of debates are too fast and lack warrants</strong>.&nbsp;&nbsp;Please stop assuming that I will vote for this kind of behavior.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</p> <p>7) Points of Order and new arguments &ndash; I don&rsquo;t flow new arguments, but if you believe it is critical, you should call it.</p> <p>&nbsp;8) Impact calculus: I am hearing a lot of arguments in which the warrants and internal links between a relatively small plan action and human extinction in some form are glossed over or non-existent.&nbsp;&nbsp;Whose idea was this?&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a bad one.&nbsp;&nbsp;Although magnitude is attractive, I will listen closely to probability analysis as a means for determining whether to vote for a particular argument.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;9) Post-round behavior: Feel free to ask me a question or two about my decision.&nbsp;&nbsp;If you disagree with my decision and you feel like verbally assaulting me, please refrain.&nbsp;&nbsp;And if I am on the panel and you feel like verbally assaulting my judging colleagues, please refrain.</p> <p>&nbsp;10) Sitting, standing, cussing, etc.&nbsp;&nbsp;I don&rsquo;t care if you sit or stand.&nbsp;&nbsp;I personally think you have better air control while standing, but it is your call.&nbsp;&nbsp;If you talk during your partner&rsquo;s speech I will not pay attention to what you are saying, so your partner better repeat it if you want me to flow it.&nbsp;&nbsp;I know cussing in debate rounds happens, but I don&rsquo;t see why you would use empty, emotion-laden language that is often offensive when a word with content and substance is more strategic.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;Finally, if you know me at all, you know that I love the debate community.&nbsp;&nbsp;I believe we should respect and care for each other even as we compete against each other.&nbsp;&nbsp;I will do my best to treat you with respect and give you the best judging experience I can offer.&nbsp;&nbsp;Please give me and all the participants in the room the best debate experience you can offer.&nbsp;&nbsp;Have a wonderful tournament!</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Gina Iberri-Shea - USAFA


Grant Tovmasian - CSULA


Ian Sharples - PLNU

n/a


Jacki Evans - Utah


Jacob Stutzman - OKCU

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UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Intense Emphasis"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="31" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Subtle Reference"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="32" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Intense Reference"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="33" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Book Title"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="37" Name="Bibliography"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" QFormat="true" Name="TOC Heading"/> </w:LatentStyles> </xml><![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 10]> <style> /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin-top:0in; mso-para-margin-right:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:10.0pt; mso-para-margin-left:0in; line-height:115%; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;} </style> <![endif]--></p> <p>22 years in debate, HS policy, NFA-LD, but mostly NPDA (judging for the last 14 years).&nbsp; This year I&rsquo;ve been in tab a lot, so I haven&rsquo;t judged many rounds.</p> <p>I want the debaters to decide the form and substance of the round.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m not opposed to any particular argument or strategy that you feel fits the purpose of the debate. Framework debates are good, but rarely dispositive. Absent a specified framework for viewing the round, I default to whatever makes it easiest for me to render a decision. I get very frustrated by debaters who do not think their way through the round. This shows up when debaters don&rsquo;t make connections between positions or go after obvious deficits in the other team&rsquo;s arguments. If you can&rsquo;t compare solvency of the plan vs. the CP or give me specific link analysis on the K, then something is wrong. On the flip side, debaters who do those things usually make it easy for me to vote for them. Smart debaters are the ones who take the easy ways out of the round. I&rsquo;d like a copy of plan and CP/alt text. Perm text too, if possible. I tend to prioritize probability in impacts, so tell the better story on your positions. Regardless of how fast you&rsquo;re going, I&rsquo;ll let you know if you&rsquo;re not clear. Please take into consideration the size and shape of the room and any other atmospheric factors that may complicate my hearing you. I prefer that you only call points of order on arguments that are likely to be very important to my decision. Calling points simply to disrupt the speaker or to contest minor arguments will be given very little leeway before I start docking speaker points. Absent punishment for that sort of stuff, exclusive language, or otherwise improper behavior toward your opponents, speaker points are usually 25-29, very rarely above that, and are decided based on the amount of enjoyment I get out of your participation in the debate round. Make smart choices and explain those choices to me well, and you&rsquo;ll come in at the top of that scale. Don&rsquo;t assume I know your lit on the K. Explain the warrants to me and make the links very explicit.</p>


James Stanescu - Mercer

<p>Background: I have a PhD in philosophy, focusing on critical philosophy. I have published on figures like Judith Butler, Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, Jacques Derrida, etc. &nbsp;I have been involved in competitive debate for 18 years. I was the assistant policy debate coach at Binghamton University from 2005-2009. I won the 2008 CEDA Northeast Critic of the Year Award. I coached NPDA debate from 2010-2013.<br /> <br /> Like most judges, I strive to vote on what happens in the debate round. Take whatever I say as guidelines, instead of hard rules. I tend to default to judging all rounds as comparative net benefits (but, of course, that does not mean all benefits are body counts). I also tend to view everything in terms of offense and defense, so, terminal defense tends to be difficult to pick up my ballot.<br /> <br /> Case arguments: Are fine, they are not necessary.<br /> <br /> T/trichot/theory arguments: I am okay with strategic theory arguments for winning the round. If you win your theory objection, and win the impact for it, I will weigh it in the round. Important note specific for parli debate: I have a slight bias gov cases be reasonably topical. This is not a hard rule, but it will be easier for the opp to win T is a voter for me in parli debate, than in policy debate.<br /> <br /> Counterplans: Should be competitive. I am predisposed to think of consult, delay, and study counterplans as being abusive. Which doesn&rsquo;t mean you can&rsquo;t run them, but you will start behind on the theory debate.<br /> <br /> Conditionality: Important for parli debate: Due to the structure of the round, I lean against multiple contradictory worlds. This doesn&rsquo;t mean you can&rsquo;t run them, and I am not predisposed against limited conditionality.<br /> <br /> Kritiks: I have a background in critical philosophy. I try not to let that influence me in critical debates, but of course, there is a limit to that. Feel free to run kritiks.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Disads: Generic disads with specific links are fine. Terminalize out impacts.<br /> <br /> Performance debates: While I have judged a lot of performance rounds in policy, I have seen very few in parli. I am open to them. But you should know I do not know much about the parli community outside the Southeast of the US. That means performance rounds about the way parli constitutes itself in areas I am unfamiliar with will be hard for me to evaluate.&nbsp;</p>


Jared Bressler - Whitman


Jason Heck - WWU

n/a


Jeannie Hunt - Northwest

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mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif";} </style> <![endif]--></p> <p>I want to be able to judge the round with the least amount of&nbsp; intervention on my part.&nbsp; That means a couple of things.&nbsp; You need to establish a framework that I can follow to evaluate the round.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t care what that framework is, but I want one. If there is debate about that criteria, make sure that the theory is clear and there are specific reasons why one framework is preferable to the other.&nbsp; That framework is what I will follow, so please don&rsquo;t set the round up as a discourse round and then ask me to look at only net benefits at the end.&nbsp; More importantly, give me something to look at in the end.&nbsp; I would love to hear some impact analysis, some reasons to prefer, something tangible for me to vote on.&nbsp; Absent that, I have to intervene.&nbsp;</p> <p>There are no specific arguments that I prefer over another.&nbsp; I will vote on pretty much anything and I am game for pretty much anything.&nbsp; I do expect that you will not subject yourself to performative contradictions or present narratives that you don&#39;t want attached to the curency of a ballot, which is what presenting the narrative in the round really comes down to.&nbsp; If you run a k you should be willing to live in the round with the same k standards you are asking us to think about.&nbsp; However, it is the job of the opposing team to point that out&hellip;&nbsp; This is true of any theory based argument you choose to run.&nbsp; I am old, which means that I think the 1AC is important.&nbsp; If you are not going to address it after the 1AC, let me know so I don&rsquo;t have to spend time flowing it. You should have some offense on the positions you are trying to win, so it doesn&#39;t hurt to have some offense on case as well.</p> <p>Critical rounds invite the judge to be a part of the debate, and they bring with them a set of ethics and morals that are subjective.&nbsp; I love critical debate, but competitors need to be aware that the debate ceases to be completely objective when the judge is invited into the discussion with a K.&nbsp; Make sure the framework is very specific so I don&rsquo;t have to abandon objectivity all together.</p> <p>Finally, make your own arguments.&nbsp; If you are speaking for, or allowing your partner to speak for you, I am not flowing it. It should be your argument, not a regurgitation of what your partner said three seconds ago.&nbsp; Prompting someone with a statement like, &ldquo;go to the DA&rdquo; is fine.&nbsp; Making an argument that is then repeated is not.</p> <p>Delivery styles are much less important to me than the quality of the argument, but that doesn&rsquo;t mean you should have no style.&nbsp; You should be clear, structured and polite to everyone in the round (including your partner if it is team).&nbsp; You can at least take off your hat. Having a bad attitude is as bad as having a bad argument.&nbsp; Speed is not a problem if it is clear.&nbsp; Someone is going to be unhappy at the end of the round - that&#39;s how the game works. I will not argue with anyone about my decision. By the time I am disclosing I have already signed the ballot. I am not opposed to answering questions about what could have been done differently, but asking how I evaluated one argument over another is really just you saying think you should have won on that argument.</p> <p>Because I don&rsquo;t want to intervene, I don&rsquo;t appreciate points of order.&nbsp; You are asking me to evaluate the worth of an argument, which skews the round in at least a small way.&nbsp; Additionally, I think I flow pretty well, and I know I shouldn&rsquo;t vote on new arguments.&nbsp; I won&rsquo;t.&nbsp; If you feel particularly abused in the round, and need to make a point of some sort, you can, but as a strategy to annoy the other team, or me, it is ill advised.&nbsp;</p> <p>I have been coaching parli since 2005. I coached policy before that for seven years and competed in CEDA in college.</p> <p><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <w:LatentStyles DefLockedState="false" DefUnhideWhenUsed="true" DefSemiHidden="true" DefQFormat="false" DefPriority="99" LatentStyleCount="267"> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="0" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Normal"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="0" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="heading 1"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 2"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="0" QFormat="true" Name="heading 3"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 4"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 5"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 6"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 7"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 8"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="9" QFormat="true" Name="heading 9"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 1"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 2"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 3"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 4"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 5"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 6"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 7"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 8"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="39" Name="toc 9"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="0" Name="footer"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="35" QFormat="true" Name="caption"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="10" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Title"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="1" Name="Default Paragraph Font"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="11" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Subtitle"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="22" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Strong"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="20" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Emphasis"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="59" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" Name="Table Grid"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" Name="Placeholder Text"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="1" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="No Spacing"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="60" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" Name="Light Shading"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="61" SemiHidden="false" UnhideWhenUsed="false" Name="Light List"/> <w:LsdException Locked="false" Priority="62&quo--></p>


Jeff Stoppenhagen - Boise State


Jeff Jones - McKendree

<p>&nbsp;Jeff Jones Judging Philosophy</p> <p><em>Section 1: General Information</em><br /> I believe debate is fundamentally and, indeed, exclusively a game of academic competition in which you maneuver your pieces (ie. arguments) to convince a judge to circle your side of the ballot (or, I suppose, write A or N on an e-ballot). It may have ancillary benefits but I wholly reject the notion that it has any higher purpose or meaning, and I think you should not live your life assuming that debate will bring you to Truth or Understanding. Debate will bring you trophies if you&#39;re good, and if you&#39;re not, hopefully it brings you some fun and maybe a little education.<br /> <br /> <em>Section 2: Specific Inquiries<br /> How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions? </em><br /> Here&#39;s the deal with me and criticisms: I will vote for them if I can comprehend them. I don&#39;t find postmodern babble to be indicative of an argument, or even usually indicative of language. I have voted for many teams reading criticisms who I would consider to be very good and I find the common thread in those debates to be that those teams have gone in with the assumption that I am fairly to very stupid and explained critical arguments to me as such. I do fundamentally believe you must defend the implementation of your alternative, that your alternative should take a specific, describable action, and that the affirmative should have access to their advantages to weigh against the criticism. If your strategy relies on denying any of those things, you should at least not run a criticism in front of me, and probably not pref me at all because we likely view debates quite differently.<br /> <br /> <em>Performance based arguments&hellip;</em><br /> The aff should be topical and the neg should grant fair access to the debate (as indicated above) and I very much doubt performance arguments would meet those standards.<br /> <br /> <em>Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?</em><br /> I do not believe in round abuse is necessary and do believe the affirmative must have a competitive interpretation. I believe the round begins with prep time, not with the PMC. Good interpretations are, for lack of a better term, functionally competitive in the same way counterplans are. Your interpretation should have a net benefit with an impact, like anything else, and if you do sufficient impact calculus I will not hesitate to vote on topicality. Note that topicality is always a voting issue and never a reverse voting issue, and I have a very hard time believing it could ever be the internal link to any kind of structural violence. I think most SPEC arguments are pretty terrible unless coupled with a link argument on a substantive piece of paper. I have once voted for ASPEC in semi finals of what I would define as a national circuit tournament.<br /> <br /> <em>Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?</em><br /> PICs are good if they have an impacted net benefit. Too frequently affirmative teams fail to mention that a miniscule PIC does not have a net benefit and I should affirm on presumption. This can be a pretty useful argument, given the proliferation of miniscule PICs, and the increasing frequency of that occurring at a topic area tournament. Absent identification of the status of a CP, I will assume it is conditional. I have no problem with conditionality, and think the MG should be prepared to be strategic and flexible. A permutation is always a test of competition and never an advocacy, but should also have some sort of net benefit. If there is a functional disadvantage to the plan but a functional advantage to the permutation, it follows to me that the CP is not competitive and the permutation captures sufficient offense. I believe counterplans must be functionally competitive and may be textually competitive, but think that the amorphous nature of texts in parli precludes a requirement for textual competition.<br /> <br /> <em>Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)</em><br /> Yes. I will also note that I expect you to make a copy of any advocacy (plan text, CP, alt text) available to your opponents and preferably also to the panel. Texts of permutations can be necessary, but aren&#39;t always &ndash; Do Both is more than sufficient, for example, and I will not look favorably on teams complaining about a lack of text in that instance.<br /> <br /> <em>In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede costbenefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering)?</em><br /> Procedurals will be evaluated first, followed by a weighing of the impact debate. Absent framework arguments or impact calculus arguments to the contrary, I will weigh claims by magnitude. I view probability and timeframe as mitigating factors to magnitude.<br /> <br /> <em>How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</em><br /> Death is worse than dehumanization. To convince me otherwise would take a very clear win on that level of debate, or perhaps a concession of a uniqueness level claim (if we&#39;re all already dead, who cares if I kill everyone).</p>


Jerry Mooney - IDAHO


Jess Jensen-Ryan - IU

n/a


Jessica Williams - Notre Dame

n/a


Joe Provencher - Lewis &amp; Clark

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font-family:"Times New Roman","serif";} </style> <![endif]--></p> <p>Joe Provencher &ndash; Lewis and Clark</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The Quick hits for Prep time:</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Unless told otherwise, I default to net-bens/policy making.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>If you want me to evaluate topicality via competing interpretations, slow down a bit through your interpretations so I have the text exactly as you intend it. You should also probably take a question on your definition/interp if it&#39;s particularly long/nuanced/complex/crazy.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I used to tell teams I believed all advocacies in round should be unconditional. However, a lot of the conditionallity debates I saw were really terrible, and probably had PMRs going for the theory without really understanding it, and then expecting me to vote every time for the aff as a result of my philosophy. So I&#39;ll try my best to explain it more below, but for your quick evaluation of me now, know that I don&#39;t really think conditionality is necessary (maybe not even good), but will do my absolute best to be open to the theory arguments made in round.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I think that counter-plans must compete via net-benefits or mutual exclusivity. Other CP theory arguments are going to be an uphill battle for my ballot.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I don&#39;t think I&#39;m biased one way or another on the kritik. I think good K debate is good, and bad K debate is bad (and good theory debate is good, bad theory debate is bad, etc, etc). Just get small in the rebuttals, one way or the other, and pick your winning argument. Like any argument, if you suspect I may not be 100% familiar with the literature you are using, then make the tag line very clear so you can read your warrants as fast as you want.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Take some points of information. Be cordial.</p> <p>Call as many points of order as you want, but it should be limited to the individual calling the point of order, and a response from the opposing individual making the argument. There should never be a debate, or any back and forth, about whether an argument is new. Make your point, respond to it.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Some further reading for your strikes:</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>On conditionality: I would never explicitly tell a team not to run a certain argument in front of me. However, out of all the reading I&#39;ve done, and rounds I&#39;ve seen, I can&#39;t imagine a world in which the MG puts out a good Condo bad shell, the PMR goes for it sufficiently, and I do not vote for it. Maybe the reading I&#39;ve done is insufficient, but I&#39;m not convinced yet, and the limited condo debates I&#39;ve seen have been bad ones that only reinforce that opinion. However, I&#39;m trying to stay open to furthering my education in the activity and would encourage anyone to come find me and talk (maybe outside of round) so we can keep the discussion going.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>On topicality: I believe that T is a discussion to find the best definition of a word in the resolution. The standards debate is a debate about why a particular definition is very good. A lot of times, especially with teams yelling about ground to DAs they&#39;re supposed to have, I think that focus gets lost. If a plan doesn&#39;t link to your DA, it might not be because they have mis-defined a word. It might just be that the DA is not good. Consequently, the claim that NEG can read DAs is not a reason your definition is good. That just means they can run DAs. Most debaters are good enough to come up with some kind of offense on the spot.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>In general: Good debate gets small at the end of the rounds. Rebuttal speeches should be deep and specific, and focussed around why I must prioritize a single given story. Do that, you win.</p>


Joe Blasdel - McKendree

<p>Joe Blasdel</p> <p>McKendree University</p> <p>Section 1: General Information</p> <p>1. I competed in parliamentary debate and individual events from 1996 to 2000 for McKendree University.&nbsp; After a three year hiatus studying political science at Syracuse University, I returned to coach at McKendree (NPDA, LD, and IEs) and have been doing so since 2003.</p> <p>2. In a typical policy debate, I tend to evaluate arguments in a comparative advantage framework (rather than stock issues).&nbsp; I am very unlikely to vote on inherency or purely defensive arguments.</p> <p>3. On &#39;trichotomy,&#39;&nbsp;I tend to think the government has the right to run what type of case they want as long as they can defend that they are&nbsp;topical.&nbsp; While I don&rsquo;t see a lot of good fact/value debate, I am open to people choosing to do so.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m also okay with people turning fact or value resolutions into policy debates. For me, these sorts of arguments are always better handled as questions of topicality.</p> <p>4.&nbsp;If there are new arguments in rebuttals, I will discount them, even if no point of order is raised.&nbsp; The rules permit you to raise POOs, but you should use them with discretion.&nbsp; If you&rsquo;re calling multiple POOs, I will probably not be pleased.</p> <p>5.&nbsp;I do not think the rules permit splitting the block.&nbsp; Any responses in the LOR to MG arguments that were dropped by the MO will be considered new.&nbsp; Additionally, it is rare that I will vote on MO arguments that are not extended in the LOR.</p> <p>6. I&rsquo;m not a fan of making warrantless assertions in the LOC/MG and then warranting them in the MO/PMR.&nbsp; I tend to give the PMR a good deal of latitude in answering these &lsquo;new&rsquo; arguments and tend to protect the opposition from these &lsquo;new&rsquo; PMR arguments.</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries</p> <p>1. Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given).</p> <p>Typically, my range of speaker points is 26-30, with an average of 28.</p> <p>2. How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?</p> <p>I&rsquo;m open to Ks but I probably have a higher&nbsp;threshold for competition and alt solvency than most judges.&nbsp; I think critical affirmatives are fine so long as they are topical.&nbsp; If they are not topical, I have a very low threshold for voting on topicality/framework. As for whether Ks can contradict other arguments in the round, it depends on the context/nature of the K.</p> <p>3. Performance based arguments&hellip;</p> <p>Same as above.&nbsp; I&rsquo;d be hesitant to run them with me as your critic if they are not topical/competitive.</p> <p>4. Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?</p> <p>Having a specific abuse story is important to winning topicality, but not always necessary.&nbsp; A specific abuse story does not necessarily mean linking out of a position that&rsquo;s run &ndash; it means identifying a particular argument that the affirmative excludes AND why that argument should be negative ground.&nbsp; I view topicality through a competing interpretations framework &ndash; I&rsquo;m not sure what a reasonable interpretation is. On topicality, I have an &lsquo;average&rsquo; threshold.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t vote on RVIs.</p> <p>On spec, I have a &lsquo;high&rsquo; threshold.&nbsp; Unless there is in-round ground abuse, I&rsquo;m probably not going to vote on spec.&nbsp; I would only run spec arguments in front of me if you&rsquo;re using it as link insurance for another position and the affirmative refuses to answer your questions.</p> <p>5. Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? Functional competition?</p> <p>All things being equal, I have tended to err negative in most CP theory debates (except for delay), but am growing more frustrated with tiny PICs and other arguably abusive CPs &ndash; so this trend may change.&nbsp; I think CPs should be functionally competitive. Unless specified otherwise, I understand counterplans to be conditional. I don&rsquo;t have a particularly strong position on the legitimacy of conditionality. I think advantage CPs are smart and underutilized.</p> <p>6. In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?</p> <p>All things being equal, I evaluate procedural issues first. After that, I evaluate everything through a comparative advantage framework.</p> <p>7.&nbsp;How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</p> <p>I tend to prefer concrete impacts over abstract impacts absent a reason to do otherwise.&nbsp; If there are competing stories comparing impacts (and there probably should be), I accept the more warranted story. I also have a tendency to focus more heavily on probability than magnitude.</p>


Joe Allen - Washburn

<p>Generic information: I do not wish to impose my views on the activity through my ballot. What I mean by this is that I think you certainly ought to debate in front of me in a fashion consistent with what you&#39;re best at--and allow me to adapt to you. I fundamentally believe that nearly all aspects of debate are negotiable, and certainly a multitude of different kinds of strategies can be fun to watch and fun to do. I believe those who insist on debate conforming to their view of the activity are narcissistic and don&#39;t get the point. I also think that the notion of the inevitability of intervention does not remove the responsibility to evaluate issues in a fair and honest fashion--in fact it strengthens this obligation. I will do my best to make decisions which are not informed by my predispositions but rather a serious evaluation of the issues as they were debated. My burden of striving for non-intervention will not prevent me from passing judgment. This ought not be confused. I will make a decision based on judgments I make (clearly) but I will not be dishonest about the objective flow of the debate in order to cater to my own debate ideals. I am a debate nihilist (you might say), I begin with the assumption that what you can do in debate is only limited by your imaginative capacity to justify your argumentative choices. There is no strategy that I didn&#39;t try as a debater--who would I be to tell you that you can&#39;t do the same?</p> <p>Specific information: Despite my strong belief that our predispositions should have no effect on the outcome of our judging, I must admit that I obviously do have predispositions about this activity. I&#39;ve spent enough time doing it, and even more time thinking about it, that I am not a clean slate. I&#39;ll put my slate away for the sake of fair deliberation, but here&#39;s a glimpse of what my slate looks like.</p> <p>Topicality: Unless argued persuasively otherwise, I default to assuming that topicality is both a voting issue and an issue of competing interpretations. I truly believe that affirmatives who make a good faith effort to support the topic (even if for a very abstract or nuanced reason) are the most strategic. Even some of the most strategic critical affirmatives I&#39;ve ever seen affirmed the topic. I suppose a good general rule is that if you&#39;re not trying to be topical, you should have an exceptionally good reason why. I have never heard a definition of reasonability in my entire life that made more sense to me than competing interpretations (doesn&#39;t mean I&#39;m not open to the possibility). I believe that the specificity of the standards and how effectively they are compared (T debates are impact debates like everything else) is often the decider.</p> <p>Counterplans: I tend to assume that counterplans are a very useful strategy available to the negative. I am not predisposed against conditional counterplans, and frankly I&#39;m also not predisposed against multiple conditional counterplans. Do not mistake this with an unwillingness to vote for condo bad if you can&rsquo;t justify your instance of condo. Surprisingly perhaps, I also am not strongly against counterplans which don&#39;t compete textually (particularly if they are authentically within the scope of the topic). The reason I think textual competition is usually a good limit is precisely because most counterplans which textual competition limits out are those which detract from topic education. If yours doesn&#39;t and you can justify your counterplan you&#39;re fine. If you say there&#39;s a textually competitive version of the counterplan I will know if you&#39;re lying (just so you know). It&#39;s really all about what you can justify. The quality of your solvency evidence is generally a great indicator of how smart your counterplan is.</p> <p>The&nbsp;kritik: We shouldn&#39;t be afraid to have&nbsp;kritik&nbsp;debates because they serve as a way of making sure that our assumptions can be justified. That being said, our assumptions can be justified, and I appreciate people who do in fact engage critical teams and make an effort to defend the perspectives which inform their arguments. A few uphill battles critical debaters might find with me are that I often think critical framework arguments do not particularly limit the affirmative very much. There is no part of debate that isn&#39;t already a performance, and there is no part of debate that isn&#39;t already representational. It&#39;s about the desirability of those representations. Another roadblock critical debaters might find with me is that I have no problem signing off on topicality or evaluating the framework debate against the&nbsp;kritik. I&#39;m not opposed to framework if you cannot justify the way your&nbsp;kritik&nbsp;is framed. If they&#39;re responsible for their representations why aren&#39;t you? I don&#39;t like the fact that&nbsp;kritik&nbsp;debaters uniquely have to have a sheet of paper justifying the existence of their argument right out of the gates, but if you cannot win that your argument should exist I think you should find a different argument. I also am a sucker for sophisticated and clever permutation arguments. Perhaps this is why I think the best&nbsp;kritiks&nbsp;are topic specific and turn the case. &nbsp;<br /> &nbsp;<br /> Theory: I think theory serves a vital role in regulating debate trends, like a filter. Sometimes a strategy is a winning one precisely because it&#39;s not crafted in a fashion that is fair. Sometimes a strategy is antithetical to education to a degree that merits its total exclusion. Again, these questions are answered best through a framework of competing interpretations where sophisticated impact calculus happens at the level of the standards debate. If you can justify it, you can do it. Theory debates are one of the best tests of whether or not you can justify your given strategy. For this reason, I take it seriously and think it should be evaluated first. I will not evaluate it first only in the circumstance where you lose the priority debate (which sometimes happens). My default assumption is that fairness and education are both good, and keep the activity alive. This does not, however, remove the obligation to demonstrate why something is theoretically objectionable to a degree that merits the ballot. I also tend to fall further on the potential abuse side of the spectrum than the real abuse side. Just because you don&#39;t perform abuse (in the sense of how much of their strategy has in-round utility) does not automatically mean the way your strategy is positioned is suddenly educational or fair. &nbsp;<br /> &nbsp;<br /> Disads: A&nbsp;well argued&nbsp;disad&nbsp;can be a beautiful thing. If you can&#39;t outweigh the case, read a counterplan that pairs well with your&nbsp;disad. If you want, read two. You could also surprise me and debate the case effectively (I will appreciate this). I do not dislike politics&nbsp;disads, but those which do not have any real link specificity annoy me a bit. Sometimes the politics&nbsp;disad&nbsp;is the right choice, sometimes it&#39;s not. Depends on the topic. The greater the specificity and applicability the happier I&#39;ll be. I love a&nbsp;well crafted&nbsp;topic&nbsp;disad. If your&nbsp;disad&nbsp;authentically turns the case, then I&#39;ll probably be inclined to thinking it&#39;s a good&nbsp;disad. Be prepared to debate all levels of&nbsp;disad&nbsp;uniqueness (not just top level) including link uniqueness, internal link uniqueness, and impact uniqueness. &nbsp;</p> <p>Things that really annoy me: &nbsp;<br /> 1) Process&nbsp;disads. If your&nbsp;disad&nbsp;relies on the process of the plan passing, rather than the outcome of the plan, I will not like your&nbsp;disad. If you say things like &quot;the plan will be horse-traded for x&quot; or &quot;the plan will move x off the docket&quot; I will be utterly dissatisfied with your lazy and bankrupt&nbsp;disad. To be clear, it is the job of the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;to identify how absurd your&nbsp;disad&nbsp;is. I will not hesitate to vote for shitty process&nbsp;disads&nbsp;if the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;fails to correctly answer&nbsp;them, but it&#39;ll make me feel bad about myself and the state of debate.&nbsp;</p> <p>2) Theory debates which begin in the PMR. Sometimes really egregious things happen in the block. In this case, I may very well vote for theory which begins in the PMR. Example: the negative splits the block. However, I am more often than not wildly uncomfortable with theory debates in which the negative has no opportunity to contest your argument. The best example I can think of here is that the MOC should take a question. My intuition is that you get the last word, and so you should have the upper hand in dealing with these situations without putting me in an awkward position. This is one of my least favorite debate arguments. &nbsp;</p> <p>3) Spec arguments or T arguments which have no&nbsp;resolutional&nbsp;basis. If your spec argument has no basis in the topic, or requires the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;to be extra-topical in order to meet your interpretation, I will think it&#39;s a bad argument. E-spec is a good example of such an argument. This is especially egregious in instances in which T arguments have no basis in the topic since T is supposed to be explicitly premised on the language of the topic. &nbsp;</p> <p>4) Floating pics. Alternatives should not include anything resembling the plan. They should especially not literally include the plan text. If they do, and you do not win the debate on perm: do the alternative with appropriate theory arguments about how nonsense it is for the alt to include the plan I will be pretty&nbsp;sad. The negative should have to make alt solvency arguments in order to demonstrate why the alt solves the&nbsp;aff, and the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;should be entitled to argue that the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;is a&nbsp;disad&nbsp;to the alt. If the alternative does not enable this debate to occur, it&#39;s more than likely theoretically bankrupt. I would hope that the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;would identify this. A good question to ask the LOC when they read their alternative is whether or not the plan can pass in a world of the alternative.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>5) Incorrect permutation strategies. For every silly nonsense counterplan which shouldn&#39;t exist, there is a solid permutation text which makes such counterplan look pretty silly. I really appreciate it when the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;correctly identifies the appropriate permutation, and conversely, I really don&#39;t like it when the&nbsp;aff&nbsp;fails to problematize bad counterplans with the appropriate permutation. I am not principally opposed to severance or intrinsic permutations, but appropriate applications of them have a high degree of difficulty. Theoretical objections to them are a reason to reject the permutation, not the team, unless argued persuasively otherwise.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>6) Failure&nbsp;to offer impact comparison.&nbsp;It is up to you to ensure that the debate is resolvable in a way that doesn&#39;t require me to compare things myself. I will always decide debates based on what occurs in your own words. I will not put the pieces together for you. I will not assume your position to be a priority if you fail to demonstrate this for me. Impact calculus is the centerpiece of how you can accomplish this. &nbsp;</p> <p>7) Failure to identify things which are theoretically bankrupt. What bothers me the most about asinine strategies is when I&#39;m put in a position to have to endorse them with my ballot, and I absolutely will if you fail to allow me to do&nbsp;otherwise.&nbsp;It is your responsibility to filter out irresponsible debate trends with sound objections to them. Take your responsibility seriously so that I don&#39;t have to make decisions which I know endorse things which are not good for the activity. &nbsp;</p> <p>Summary observations: I suppose my views on the ideal strategy are almost always informed by the topic. The best K&#39;s turn the case and are topic specific, and the same can be said for the best&nbsp;disads. The best counterplans have very quality solvency evidence and a sensible net benefit.&nbsp;The best critical&nbsp;affs&nbsp;affirm the topic and discuss issues pertinent to the topic literature. There&#39;s always a good strategic option for a given topic, and it&#39;s up to you to find it. I will not be a hindrance to that process. Whatever you think is&nbsp;situationally&nbsp;best given the strengths of yourself and your opponent should be what you go with. I&#39;ll adapt to you. You&#39;ll probably debate better when you do what you&#39;re best at. Almost all debate is fun, it should be a question of what&#39;s the most&nbsp;situationally&nbsp;strategic option.&nbsp;<br /> &nbsp;<br /> One last thing: I am a very expressive judge. 9 times out of 10 you will know what I think of your argument. I will shake my head at you if you say something really absurd, and I will nod for arguments that I agree with. I can&#39;t really control this very well (I&#39;ve tried). On very&nbsp;very&nbsp;rare occasions I will verbally declare an argument to be&nbsp;silly&nbsp;during the debate. Do not take me too seriously. I vote for&nbsp;silly&nbsp;arguments when I would be intervening otherwise, and not all smart arguments are round winners. If it&#39;s very difficult for you to deal with non-verbal reactions to your arguments or this is very distracting for you, don&#39;t&nbsp;pref&nbsp;me. I literally could not possibly be less interested where I end up on your&nbsp;pref&nbsp;sheet.&nbsp;</p>


Joel Wilson - Whitman


Joey Mavity - Azusa

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong><strong>Notes collected over the 2012-2013 season</strong></strong></p> <p><strong><em>most up-to-date version at http://bit.ly/myrfd</em></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><br /> <strong>I fundamentally approach debate from a principle of charity: I assume the best arguments that can be made are the arguments you make. This makes it fairly easy for me to make my decision based on what you argue rather than what I think about an issue.<br /> <br /> Thus, while I speak at length on my biases and preferences, I&rsquo;ll vote on an argument even if I think its bonkers. When I say something like, &ldquo;the negative shouldn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; it&rsquo;s not an absolute rule.<br /> <br /> I probably over-value clever and snarky. I don&rsquo;t value taking it too far.</strong></p> <p><strong>Argument Quality</strong></p> <p><br /> <strong>Increasingly I&rsquo;m reaching the point where too many unwarranted arguments mean I simply don&rsquo;t flow them. I understand one or two or even 10 over the course of the debate. But 10 in a row, I&rsquo;m just going to peace out and probably start flipping my pen. This has not happened in the &lsquo;11-&rsquo;12 year, but it did twice in &lsquo;10-&rsquo;11. If you don&rsquo;t respect co-participants enough to <em>make an argument</em>, I have a hard time feeling compelled to push buttons on my laptop. I think I have a much higher threshold here than some people.</strong></p> <p><strong>Competition/Plan text</strong></p> <p><strong>My default perspective is that the affirmative has broad access to parametric limits on the advocacy they present. This means if the resolution is, &lsquo;Pass X piece of legislation,&rdquo; you must pass all or part of that legislation. I tend to think passing something not in that legislation is probably going beyond the scope of the resolution.<br /> <br /> As a result of your choice, I think you&rsquo;re responsible for the consequences of your plan text. More plainly: I tend to think &ldquo;textual competition&rdquo; is a silly standard. If you didn&rsquo;t want to defend the extent of your actions, you should have written a different plan.<br /> <br /> &ldquo;But the resolution made me do it!&rdquo; is probably one of the most asinine claims ever.</strong></p> <p><strong>CP text</strong></p> <p><strong>Don&rsquo;t read CP/alt text and not take questions. CP/alt in the last minute is absurd and has often been a voting issue in years past (though this practice is less common today).</strong></p> <p><strong>Neutral concerns</strong></p> <p><strong>I don&rsquo;t flow points of information unless you tell me to. POIs are binding.<br /> <br /> It&rsquo;s difficult for me to vote on RVI&rsquo;s. </strong></p> <p><strong>Points of Order</strong></p> <p><strong>I expect you to call points of order if an argument is new in a way that will affect my decision. For the one objecting, this consists of a clear articulation of what argument you think is new and why you think it is new. For the respondent, this consists of a clear articulation of why the violation identified by the opposing team is incorrect. For instance: &ldquo;Their argument that death trumps ethics is a new argument that radically alters the impact calculus of the round by mooting our critique,&rdquo; is a good point of order. &ldquo;This argument is new,&rdquo; on the other hand, is not. When responding, &ldquo;We answered this in the MG,&rdquo; is a fairly vague answer. I&rsquo;m not willing to look through every word of the MG and guess which line you think was a response. Instead, &ldquo;Our #2 on the alternative is that ethical obligations find their ultimate expression in the preservation of human life. That&rsquo;s a wordy way of saying &lsquo;life trumps ethics&rsquo; and hence is not new.&rdquo;</strong></p> <p><strong>Impact analysis</strong></p> <p><strong>Arguments about how to evaluate and weigh issues in the debate are themselves arguments and should be presented early and often.</strong></p> <p><strong>Past RFDs</strong></p> <p><strong>I&rsquo;ve made every single RFD since Fall 2010 available at <a href="http://bit.ly/myrfd">http://bit.ly/myrfd</a>. I think that gives you a much more detailed feel for my judging philosophy than this will because you can see what my recurring complaints are. </strong></p> <p><strong>Time use</strong></p> <p><strong>Don&rsquo;t feel compelled to fill time. If you&rsquo;ve won, end it. If you need the time, use it. Effective time management, though, can only help you. Saying &ldquo;let me review all our arguments&rdquo; and then spending 3 minutes repeating what you&rsquo;ve already said can only hurt you.</strong></p> <p><br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <hr /> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h2><strong>Coloring Book Edition</strong></h2> <p><strong><em>Special thanks to Mike Allen</em></strong></p> <hr /> <p>&nbsp;</p>


John Price - CMU

n/a


John Tao - IUPUI

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gte mso 10]> <style> /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Cambria; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;} </style> <![endif]--><!--StartFragment--></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">My background in debate has spanned six years now. &nbsp;I started out as a high school policy debater on the national circuit (as I novice my partner and I took Little Lex by a 13-0 decision in our favor and I qual-ed for the NFL and CFL and broke to the out rounds at both during my senior year), before moving on to coach parliamentary debate at the collegiate level. &nbsp;Currently I judge policy high school debate for the Chicago Urban Debate League and with that in mind, I have only witnessed a couple of parli rounds this year.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">Due to my background I come into a round with a tabula rasa paradigm; however, I will factor real world information into a round. &nbsp;If you misstate a fact which I know about I will not give you credence for the argument though it will, of course, end up on my flow. &nbsp;An example of this: in a round I witnessed recently one team argued that there were seaports between the US and Mexico. &nbsp;Of course if you advance an argument I &quot;don&#39;t agree with&quot; like an argument that we&#39;ve made contact with aliens and then proceed to support it with logic and evidence, then by all means, we&#39;ve contacted aliens. &nbsp;I am a huge fan of organization, line-by-line, sign posting, and impact calculus. &nbsp;Make the round easy for the judge and the ballot will likely go to your team.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">I think presentation and communication skills are important in life, but I am a fan of playing the game and using all the tools you have. &nbsp;I am used to speed and I can handle it well. &nbsp;Be clear when you&#39;re speaking, that&#39;s all I ask for. &nbsp;If you are mumbling I will clear you twice before I stop flowing (in the alternative, I keep flowing but the arguments I hear might not be the arguments you think you&#39;re saying).<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">On-case arguments are important, especially at a tournament where you can reasonably predict a good majority of the debate resolution topics. &nbsp;Sometimes the other team will throw you for a loop though and on-case arguments are very tough to come up with during your speech. &nbsp;I understand that. &nbsp;I think it is important in Parli to not have incredibly canned off-cases which you run. &nbsp;When you run an off case make sure you spin a really strong link story to the specific case. &nbsp;Specificity is always favorable.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">I like procedural arguments. &nbsp;I&#39;m an attorney, word definitions are important. &nbsp;I like counter plans, but in a parli round I think it is important to discuss each team&#39;s burden when debating a counter plan. &nbsp;Does it need to be untopical? What are the standards for running it? &nbsp;Is it okay to be conditional? &nbsp;etc. &nbsp;I also like Kritiks, but I am not as well versed with the literature as I would like to be. &nbsp;If you are going to argue a Kritik make sure you&#39;re not throwing philosophical jargon around or just name dropping. &nbsp;Foucault does not mean as much to me these days as he did when I had his books nearly memorized.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">Point of Orders are fine if you really feel the need for them but I&#39;d like you to trust me as the judge to determine whether an argument is new or not. &nbsp;If there&#39;s a pretty glaring issue then by all means Point of Order it, it won&#39;t hurt you. &nbsp;If you call a Point of Order more than three times though then there&#39;s a problem (either with your excessive Point of Orders or with the way the other team is debating). &nbsp;I am a fairly expressive judge, watch my reactions, and use your own discretion.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial;">Debate is a game, it is a sport where competitors throw words at each other and build up fantastic worlds. &nbsp;I think it is something which should be enjoyed, fun, and informative. &nbsp;I think everything is pretty much fair game and that the speaker has the control of the room when speaking. &nbsp;I haven&#39;t been involved with this activity an incredibly long amount of time (read: decades), but I am also no stranger to it, so do your best, make smart arguments, and compel me to vote for you.&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p> <!--EndFragment-->


John McCabe - Concordia-CA

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Jordan Innerarity - UT-Tyler

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Jordan Mills - SWC

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Josh Seefried - USAFA


Julian Plaza - CC


Justin Harris - Concordia-CA

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Kasey Gardner - Los Medanos

<p><strong>Gardner, Kasey</strong></p> <p>Los Medanos College</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Experience: 9 years of Parliamentary Debate (Moorpark/Western KY/LosMedanos)</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>In order to enhance your clarity you should use examples, theory, or well warranted analysis. The above being said I find myself not voting for a lot of performance or super generic critiques (cap, state) but that doesn&rsquo;t mean I don&rsquo;t think they can be defensible.&nbsp; Feel free to use whatever positions and arguments that you wish in front of me and I will do my best to evaluate them fairly and honestly</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Speed is typically not an issue as long and you are clear and make sense. This argument applies equally if you are not fast but unclear as a whole.&nbsp; I will probably look at you with an inquisitive look if you are going too fast, unlikely but possible.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I appreciate being told how to evaluate arguments especially if they are on different planes (critical, case, theory, ect.) Standard tools of impact calculus are paramount as well; such as magnitude, timeframe, and probability.&nbsp; I encourage the use of other methods or analysis too, irreversibility or systemic impacts as well.&nbsp; What I am not interesting in is hearing bad dueling oratory about which &ndash;ism is the root cause of problem.&nbsp; Be more specific.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I&rsquo;ve found myself being very disappointed with the consistent use of generic strategies instead of any critical thinking.&nbsp; Debating the case is a lost art that should be found. &nbsp;I will evaluate your fism/states counterplan, but it&rsquo;s not that great of an argument and the affirmative should defeat you on it.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Examples are the lifeblood of Parliamentary Debate.&nbsp; Please use them!!&nbsp; You should call points of order in front of me.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>There are a few things I don&rsquo;t find persuasive; excessive prompting and tooling of your partner, rudeness to the other team on a personal level as opposed to the argumentative level and not getting to my round on time. I will enforce the tournaments forfeit rule judiciously.</p>


Kathleen Bruce - Pacific

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Kathryn Starkey - Texas Tech

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Ken Troyer - Sterling


Kevin Calderwood - SIU


Kevin Garner (Hired) - Jewell

<p>Experience: 1 year of NDT at University of Kansas; 3 1/2 years of parli at William Jewell College; 2 year parli coach at Texas Tech University; 6 years parli coach at William Jewell College.&nbsp;</p> <p>Note: I have been out of the activity since the fall of 2015. I judged at one tournament since and kept up with the pace.</p> <p>Section 1: General Information<br /> - I am a flow critic who evaluates the round through net benefits unless told otherwise. If a distinction does exist between pre/post fiat, you should tell me how to weigh all the arguments. I generally do not find arguments that seek to prevent the negative team from competing compelling (i.e. &quot;you can&#39;t run DAs, etc). I am fine with discursive impacts, but make sure all can access the round. You don&#39;t get to win simply because you are aff. I also do not like fatr/value debate and have a low threshold for voting on &quot;Fact/Value bad&quot; arguments.<br /> - I am frustrated by the trend of parli to reward unclear, blippy debates that lack substance. I give preference to warranted arguments and clash as compared to a dropped blip that was not developed. An argument is not one line!<br /> The above is especially true concerning impacts; a quick blip on &ldquo;Resource wars = extinction&rdquo; does not mean anything nor will I just assume the number of people who die as a result of your impacts; YOU MUST DO THE WORK!<br /> - I can flow a pretty fast pace, but there is such a thing as too fast and really such a thing as unclear. If I do not flow your arguments due to excess speed/lack of clarity, your fault, not mine.<br /> - I will give you a few seconds to get a drink and order, but I am frustrated with stealing prep. I may begin time if I think you are taking too long (you will know I am irritated when I ask you for the order).<br /> - You cannot perm a DA&hellip;.period!<br /> - I believe that you should take a question if your opponent wants one concerning a new advocacy (plan, CP, alt text, and if perm is more than &ldquo;Do Both&rdquo;).<br /> - Slow down and read your plan texts/interps/counter-interps twice unless you plan on giving me a copy<br /> - If you say &ldquo;x argument is for cheaters,&rdquo; you will probably lose my ballot. There is a difference between claiming an argument is bad/should not be ran and making an attack against a team. If a team has cheated, that is to be determined by the tournament, not in round.<br /> - I do not understand rudeness. Being rude does not help your arguments and only gets me irritated. Sarcasm and<br /> banter are fine, but there are limits.</p> <p><br /> Section 2: Specific Inquiries<br /> How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical<br /> arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions.<br /> The aff/neg can run critical arguments; make sure you have a framework and alternative and be clear as to how I evaluate critical arguments with non-critical arguments. Also, dropping authors&rsquo; names and using big words does not mean the K is good;<br /> make sure you know what you are talking about or there is a good chance, I won&rsquo;t. The alt should be ran prior to protected time or allow time for questions.<br /> - I do not vote on Speed Ks (Update: There is a potential I could find this argument compelling, if framed correctly, when it becomes apparent that the sole purpose of using speed in a round is to exclude another team....but this is a stretch in most instances).<br /> - I will let teams debate out the legitimacy of contradictions.<br /> Performance based arguments&hellip;<br /> I will not exclude any arguments. Just make sure you have a clear framework to evaluate the argument and have an alternative<br /> Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing<br /> interpretations?<br /> I require you to win the argument and have a voter&hellip;.<br /> I do not require a counter interpretation; I just highly doubt you will win T without one<br /> Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual<br /> competition ok? functional competition?<br /> The opp should identify the status and if not, should allow the gov to ask what it is (without counting it as a question). The CP should also be ran prior to protected time or allow time for questions about the CP.<br /> I will let the debaters debate out CP theory for PICS, perms, etc.<br /> In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will<br /> use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede costbenefit<br /> analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?<br /> I default to the weighing mechanism established (so if you say net ben and I am not told when to evaluate T, I will evaluate it as a decision of cost/benefit instead of as an a-priori issue). In a round with T and Ks, teams would be wise to debate out which one comes first.<br /> How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are<br /> diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts<br /> (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?<br /> I love the buzz terms &ldquo;time frame,&rdquo; &ldquo;magnitude,&rdquo; and &ldquo;probability.&rdquo; Debaters should use these.<br /> One million deaths will always come before an unwarranted dehum claim. Debaters should also tell me which impact standard takes priority.<br /> I also do not consider internal links, impacts. Telling me &ldquo;the economy goes down&rdquo; does not mean anything. Also how do I evaluate quality of life?</p>


Kevin Cummings - Mercer

<p><strong>Section 1: General Information</strong></p> <p>Background:&nbsp; I debated policy in high school and CEDA from 1990 to 1993.&nbsp; I coached programs with policy and parli at Regis University (1999-2003) and Mercer University (2003-2009).</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Framework &ndash; &nbsp;&nbsp;I am willing to listen to debates about how I should judge and how I evaluate specific issues.&nbsp; Be clear about what criteria I should use and if you want to transform our activity be sure to explain how a vote for you will be meaningful.&nbsp;If you want me to be a policymaker, then offer reasons for why that approach is best.&nbsp; I am pretty open to considering widely differing judging paradigms and I&rsquo;ll try to adjust my approach to judging to whichever criteria or framework wins. &nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Section 2: Specific Inquiries&nbsp;&nbsp;</strong></p> <p><strong>Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?</strong></p> <p>27-30</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?</strong></p> <p>Aff can be a project or can run critical arguments.&nbsp; Whether or not critical arguments can contradict has to be resolved in the round.&nbsp; I evaluate the K based on development in the round. If the K is really just a solvency mitigator or linear disad then I would obviously not weigh it as a framework question. If you explain how the kritik functions prior to or independent of policy questions, then I will consider it prior to substantive issues such as solvency and disads. Framework arguments (as criticism) can be especially devastating. I usually take gov perms to a K as advocacy unless they are flagged as tests of competition.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Performance based arguments&hellip;</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;Yes.&nbsp; Especially when they are smart and well-crafted.&nbsp; It does matter to me that the performance is an argument and that I am given compelling reasons why to vote on it.</p> <p><strong>Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations? </strong>On T, good explanations are substantially better than a dozen blips.&nbsp; Gov, offer a counter-interpretation or be sure you are meeting their definition.&nbsp; Opp, I&rsquo;m kind of old school and I like a violation and standards and voters.&nbsp; I have a pretty high threshold for voting on non-T procedurals such as A spec. I generally only vote there if there is really serious in round abuse happening or if it is grossly mishandled by the gov. I&rsquo;d rather you run the c/plan to prove the abuse than say how hypothetically they might have tried to avoid it. That noted, I do think running non-T procedurals is a fantastic way to leverage link ground.&nbsp; They also work quite well as a time suck. Independent voting issues are a sore spot for me. I don&rsquo;t like rounds where there are six or eight ivis on both sides and none have been explained beyond a tag or unpacked in any way.&nbsp; If you go for an ivi, you should be spending a good chunk of time explaining in the final rebuttal why the ivi should decide the round. Does debate become more fair, educational etc. as an activity in a universe where you win the ivi?&nbsp; I tend to prefer throwing out the argument over punishing the team so keep that in mind before you go all in on a multiple perms are evil strategy that is not conceded.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?</strong></p> <p>I lean toward pics being fine but I suppose I could be convinced the other way by a really good set of arguments.&nbsp; Gov should ask status if they care about it.&nbsp; I expect that by the LOR the negative strategy is cohesive. I am not particularly fond of having to do evaluation work when both sides extend theory blocks without ever engaging the other teams arguments. I have judged too many rounds when both sides are extending dropped arguments by the other side on PICs, Conditionality,etc. I am left in the position of comparing drops by both teams and that sucks for me. Engage the arguments made by the other team and if you expect me to pull the trigger on theory you better be ahead. I think cplan + disad is tried and true. If you capture most of case and avoid the disad you are probably going to win. Gov teams &ndash; generate some offense &ndash; explain solvency deficits &ndash; and if your gov is critical I&rsquo;d spend a lot of time explaining if the cplan does not get the K part very well.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)</strong></p> <p>I have no problem with sharing.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?</strong></p> <p>Procedurals, k, substantive issues</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;Please do not leave it to me to weigh impacts.&nbsp; Do that intellectual labor for me.&nbsp; Give a rebuttal that I can use as my rfd.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Speed/Style - I really dislike teams that string together eight or ten blips without any explanation after them. It makes it impossible for me to get everything.&nbsp; Speed is fine, but give me a little pen time. &nbsp;As long as each tag has a sentence after, it should be fine.&nbsp; But if you spew out ten tags with zero analysis don&rsquo;t expect fantastic speaks.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Konrad Hack - Concordia-CA

n/a


Korry Harvey - WWU

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Background/Experience</p> <p>I debated a lot (CEDA, NDT), and have coached and judged even more (CEDA, NDT, NPDA, NPTE, Worlds). I teach courses in argument theory, diversity, and civil dialogue, and I am heavily involved in community service. While my debate background comes primarily from a &ldquo;policy&rdquo; paradigm, I have no problem with either good &ldquo;critical&rdquo; debates or &ldquo;persuasive communication&rdquo;, and am willing to listen to any framework a team feels is justifiably appropriate for the debate.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I think that debate is simultaneously a challenging educational exercise, a competitive game of strategy, and a wonderfully odd and unique community &ndash; all of which work together to make it fun. I think debaters, judges, and coaches, should actively try to actually enjoy the activity. Debate should be both fun and congenial. Finally, while a written ballot is informative, I feel that post-round oral critiques are one of the most valuable educational tools we as coaches and judges have to offer, and I will always be willing to disclose and discuss my decisions, even if that may involve walking and talking in order to help the tournament staff expedite an efficient schedule for all of us.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Unique consideration</p> <p>I am hearing impaired. No joke &ndash; I wear hearing aids in both ears, and am largely deaf without them. I think most would agree that I keep a pretty good flow, but I can only write down what I understand. I work as hard as just about any of your critics to understand and assess your arguments, and I appreciate it when you help me out a little. Unfortunately, a good deal of my hearing loss is in the range of the human voice &ndash; go figure. As such, clarity and a somewhat orderly structure are particularly important for me. For some, a notch or two up on the volume scale doesn&rsquo;t hurt, either. However, please note that vocal projection is not the same as shouting-- which often just causes an echo effect, making it even harder for me to hear. Also, excessive chatter and knocking for your partner can make it difficult for me to hear the speaker. I really want to hear you, and I can only assume that you want to be heard as well. Thanks for working with me a little on this one.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Approach of the critic to decision-making (for example, adherence to the trichotomy, stock-issues, policymaker, tabula rasa, etc.)</p> <p>Although I don&#39;t see absolute objectivity as easily attainable, I do try to let the debaters themselves determine what is and is not best for the debate process. Debaters should clarify what framework/criteria they are utilizing, and how things should be evaluated (a weighing mechanism or decision calculus). I see my role as a theoretically &ldquo;neutral observer&rdquo; evaluating and comparing the validity of your arguments according to their probability, significance, magnitude, etc. I very much like to hear warrants behind your claims, as too many debates in parli are based on unsubstantiated assertions. As such, while a &ldquo;dropped argument&rdquo; has considerable weight, it will be evaluated within the context of the overall debate and is not necessarily an automatic &ldquo;round-winner&rdquo;.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Relative importance of presentation/communication skills to the critic in decision-making</p> <p>As noted, clarity and structure are very important to me. It should be clear to me where you are and what argument you are answering or extending. Bear in mind that what you address as &ldquo;their next argument&rdquo; may not necessarily be the same thing I identify as &ldquo;their next argument&rdquo;. I see the flow as a &ldquo;map&rdquo; of the debate round, and you provide the content for that map. I like my maps to make sense.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>That said, good content still weighs more heavily to me than slick presentation. Have something good to say, rather than simply being good at saying things.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Additionally, 1) although I think most people speak better when standing, that&rsquo;s your choice; 2) I won&rsquo;t flow the things your partner says during your speech time; 3) Please time yourselves and keep track of protected time.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Relative importance of on-case argumentation to the critic in decision-making</p> <p>I find that good case debate is a very effective strategy. It usually provides the most direct and relevant clash. Unfortunately, it is rarely practiced. I can understand that at times counterplans and kritiks make a case debate irrelevant or even unhelpful. Nevertheless, I can&#39;t tell you the number of times I have seen an Opposition team get themselves in trouble because they failed to make some rather simple and intuitive arguments on the case.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Openness to critical/performative styles of debating</p> <p>See above. No problem, as long as it is well executed &ndash; which really makes it no different than traditional &quot;net-benefits&quot; or &quot;stock issues&quot; debates. To me, no particular style of debating is inherently &ldquo;bad&rdquo;. I&rsquo;d much rather hear &ldquo;good&rdquo; critical/performative debate than &ldquo;bad&rdquo; traditional/policy debate, and vice versa.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Topicality/Theory</p> <p>While I try to keep an open mind here, I must admit I&rsquo;m not particularly fond of heavy theory debates. I think most debaters would be surprised by just how much less interesting they are as a judge than as a competitor. I realize they have their place and will vote on them if validated. However, screaming &ldquo;abuse&rdquo; or &ldquo;unfair&rdquo; is insufficient for me. I&rsquo;m far more concerned about educational integrity, stable advocacy and an equitable division of ground. Just because a team doesn&rsquo;t like their ground doesn&rsquo;t necessarily mean they don&rsquo;t have any. Likewise, my threshold for &ldquo;reverse voters&rdquo; is also on the somewhat higher end &ndash; I will vote on them, but not without some consideration. Basically, I greatly prefer substantive debates over procedural ones. They seem to be both more educational and interesting.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Parliamentary procedure</p> <p>While I have no problem with them, I tend not to follow much of the traditional stylizations or formal elements of parliamentary practice: 1) I will likely just &ldquo;take into consideration&rdquo; points of order that identify &ldquo;new&rdquo; arguments in rebuttals, but you are more than welcome to make them if you feel they are warranted; 3) Just because I am not rapping on the table doesn&rsquo;t mean I don&rsquo;t like you or dig your arguments; 4) You don&rsquo;t need to do the little tea pot dance to ask a question, just stand or raise your hand; 5) I don&rsquo;t give the whole speaker of the house rap about recognizing speakers for a speech; you know the order, go ahead and speak; 6) I will include &ldquo;thank yous&rdquo; in speech time, but I do appreciate a clear, concise and non-timed roadmap beforehand.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I lean toward thinking that &ldquo;splitting the block&rdquo;, while perhaps theoretically defensible, is somewhat problematic in an activity with only two rebuttals and often only makes a round more messy.</p>


Kristine Clancy - Pepperdine


Kyle Kimball - Puget Sound


Kyle Dennis - Jewell

<p><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <o:OfficeDocumentSettings> <o:TargetScreenSize>800x600</o:TargetScreenSize> </o:OfficeDocumentSettings> </xml><![endif]-->Name: Kyle Dennis<br /> School: William Jewell College</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I record nearly all&nbsp;of the debates that I judge on my MacBook. During the&nbsp;debate, you will see me creating position/answer markers so that I can easily recall&nbsp;any portion of the debate during my decision. I have developed a basic system to&nbsp;govern the conditions under which I will review the recording&mdash; (1) if I think I have&nbsp;missed something (my fault) I will note the time in the recording on my flow, (2)&nbsp;if there is a question about exact language raised by the debaters in the round, (3)&nbsp;if there is a Point of Order about new arguments in rebuttals, (4) I will review the&nbsp;exact language of any CP/Alt Text/ Theory Interp. Outside of those circumstances, I&nbsp;typically will not review recordings.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>This new process has had a couple of important impacts on judging. I don&rsquo;t miss&nbsp;arguments. I will take as much time to review the debate afterwards if I believe that&nbsp;I&rsquo;ve maybe missed something. It has made my decisions clearer because I can hold&nbsp;debaters accountable to exact language. It does, however, mean that I am less likely&nbsp;to give PMR&rsquo;s credit for new explanations of arguments that weren&rsquo;t in the MG. It&nbsp;also means that I&rsquo;m more likely to give PMR&rsquo;s flexibility in answering arguments&nbsp;that weren&rsquo;t &ldquo;clear&rdquo; until the MOC. I don&rsquo;t provide the recording to anyone (not even&nbsp;my own team). Within reason, I am happy to play back to you any relevant portions&nbsp;that I have used to make my decision.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>If you have questions about this process, please ask. I encourage my colleagues to&nbsp;adopt this practice as well. It is remarkable how it has changed my process.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>If your team chooses to prefer (or, in the case of the NPDA, not strike) me,&nbsp;there are a couple of promises that I will make to you:</strong></p> <p>I understand that the debaters invest a tremendous amount of time and energy into&nbsp;preparing for a national tournament. I believe that judging any round, especially&nbsp;national tournament rounds, deserves a special level of attention and commitment.&nbsp;I try not to make snap decisions at nationals and it bothers me when I see other&nbsp;people do it. I know that my NPTE decisions take longer than I will typically take&nbsp;making a similar decision during the rest of the year. If you spend 4 years doing&nbsp;something, I can at least spend a few extra moments thinking it over before I&nbsp;potentially end that for you.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I flow on paper. I find that I am more connected to the debate and can deliver more&nbsp;complete RFDs if I am physically writing down arguments rather than typing. When&nbsp;I watch my colleagues multi-tasking while judging debates, I am self-conscious that I&nbsp;used to do the same thing. You will have my complete attention.&nbsp;I can also guarantee you that my sleep schedule at tournaments will not hinder&nbsp;my ability to give you my full attention. I have made a substantial commitment to&nbsp;wellness and, if I am being honest, I have seen/felt significant improvements in my&nbsp;life and my ability to do my job at debate tournaments. Once again, you will have my&nbsp;complete attention.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Finally, I can tell you that I have come to a point that I am unwilling to categorically&nbsp;reject any argument. I have voted for negative teams with a 1NC strategy of a K,&nbsp;CP, DA, and case arguments (who collapse to an MO strategy of the criticism only)&nbsp;more times this year than I ever thought I would. Smart debaters win debates with&nbsp;a variety of strategies&mdash;I don&rsquo;t think that I should limit your strategy choices. The&nbsp;debate isn&rsquo;t about me. If we can&rsquo;t embrace different styles of argument, this activity&nbsp;gets very annoying very quickly.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>If I get to judge you, there are a couple of promises that I want you your team&nbsp;to make to me:</strong></p> <p>Please slow down when you read plan texts, theory interpretations or perm texts&nbsp;unless you are going to take the time to write out a copy and provide it to me.&nbsp;Please do not get upset if I misunderstand something that you read quickly (an alt,&nbsp;for example) if you didn&rsquo;t give me a copy. I will review exact text language on my&nbsp;recording, if necessary.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Please do your best to engage the other team. I like watching critique debates, for&nbsp;example, in which the affirmative team engages the criticism in a meaningful way&nbsp;rather than reading common framework or theory objections.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Please make all of your interpretations on theory as clear as you possibly can. This&nbsp;isn&rsquo;t exactly the same as asking you to read it slowly&mdash;for example, a PICS Bad&nbsp;debate should have a clear interpretation of what a &ldquo;PIC&rdquo; is to you. I have generally&nbsp;come to understand what most members of the community mean by &ldquo;textual versus&nbsp;functional&rdquo; competition&mdash;but, again, this is a theory debate that you need to explain&nbsp;clearly.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Finally, please do not assume that any of your judges are flowing/comprehending&nbsp;every single word that you&rsquo;re saying at top speed. As long as I have been involved in&nbsp;this activity, the most successful debaters have recognized that there is an element&nbsp;of persuasion that will never go away. I think that the quickness/complexity of&nbsp;many of the debaters have far surpassed a sizeable chunk of the judging pool. I often&nbsp;listen to my colleagues delivering decisions and (in my opinion) many struggle or&nbsp;are unwilling to admit that portions of the debate were unwarranted, unclear, and&nbsp;difficult to understand.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I have often observed an undue burden to make sense of 2-3 second blips placed on&nbsp;critics by debaters&mdash;this activity doesn&rsquo;t work unless you help me to understand&nbsp;what is important. I have the perspective to acknowledge that if a critic doesn&rsquo;t vote&nbsp;for one of my teams, that there is something that we could have done better to win&nbsp;that ballot.&nbsp;I would simply ask that you dial back your rate of delivery slightly. Understand&nbsp;that there are times that slowing down makes sense to put all of the arguments in&nbsp;context. The most successful teams already do this, so I don&rsquo;t imagine that this is a&nbsp;very difficult request.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Other notes:</strong></p> <p>I flow the LOR on a separate sheet of paper.&nbsp;My speaker point range is 27-30. I don&rsquo;t give out many 30&rsquo;s, but I am happy to give&nbsp;quite a few 29&rsquo;s.&nbsp;I will protect you from new arguments (or overly abusive clarifications of&nbsp;arguments) in the rebuttals.&nbsp;I will be involved in all aspects of prep with my team. Regardless of what I would&nbsp;disclose, for me, clarity is your best bet. I generally advise my teams to assume that&nbsp;your judges don&rsquo;t know what you&rsquo;re talking about until you tell them. I generally&nbsp;try to remove my previously existing understanding from the debate as much as&nbsp;possible.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>TL, DR: </strong>I want to make the best decision that I can, given the arguments in the&nbsp;debate. 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Lewis Silver - McKendree

<p>-Three years policy debate at Puyallup High School</p> <p>-Four years policy debate at Whitman College</p> <p>-One year judging/coaching parliamentary debate at Whitman College</p> <p><em>Decision Calculus:</em></p> <p>Default Framework &ndash; The affirmative should win if the topical plan is preferable to the status quo or an alternative competitive with the plan. Apparently that wasn&rsquo;t clear enough for some people last year, so&hellip;</p> <p>&nbsp;Definitions-</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;preferable&rdquo; means that I evaluate the consequences of hypothetical enactment; comparison is your job, but utilitarianism is presumptively good</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;alternative&rdquo; means a specific policy proposal enacted by a specific agent</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;competitive&rdquo; means offense/defense; the proposal should compete with <em>both </em>the text <em>and </em>the function of the plan</p> <p>&nbsp;Alternative Frameworks &ndash; Fair warning, these are quite an uphill battle in front of me. My default framework is a semi-rebuttable presumption. That said, if you&rsquo;re technically sound enough to beat an opponent who is defending that presumption, it&rsquo;s almost certainly easier (not to mention better for your speaker points) to just suck it up and beat them in a &ldquo;straight-up&rdquo; debate. Still thinking about reading your rendition of Zizek? I consider all of the following arguments to be &ldquo;slayers&rdquo; in a framework debate-</p> <p>&nbsp;-education about policy-making and government institutions is good</p> <p>&nbsp;-topic-specific research is good</p> <p>&nbsp;-being able to read the same critique every round is bad (lazy hippy fuck-ups should lose)</p> <p>&nbsp;-the politics disad is <em>not </em>the same as the critique (surprise-surprise, you don&rsquo;t have to update a Baudrillard outline)</p> <p>&nbsp;<em>Predispositions:</em></p> <p>&nbsp;Read my decision calculus (above)</p> <p>&nbsp;&ldquo;Technique over truth, but truth makes me happy&rdquo; -Aaron Hardy</p> <p>&nbsp;The following arguments will be accepted as true when asserted in front of me-</p> <p>&nbsp;-The counterplan must compete with both the text and the function of the plan</p> <p>&nbsp;-The negative may advocate one conditional counterplan and the status quo</p> <p>&nbsp;-The phrase &ldquo;fuck off&rdquo; is a sufficient MG answer to _____-spec (the only exception to this rule is a spec arg justified by particular resolutions, e.g.- those of you who have researched the judicial process even a little should know that &ldquo;grounds-spec&rdquo; is probably necessary on a courts topic)</p> <p>&nbsp;-Teams are responsible for the consequences of the policies they advocate</p> <p>&nbsp;-The phrase &ldquo;reject the plan&rdquo; is not an advocacy, and the only thing it solves is a round with abysmal speaker points (yes, you do have the power to punish your opponents by asserting this in front of me)</p> <p>&nbsp;The following claims are &ldquo;uphill battles&rdquo; to rebut in front of me-</p> <p>&nbsp;-Hegemony prevents vertical-escalation of regional conflicts</p> <p>&nbsp;-Economic interdependence prevents war</p> <p>&nbsp;-Capitalism is key to incentivize growth</p> <p>&nbsp;-Growth is key to technological advancement</p> <p>&nbsp;-Technological advancement solves scarcity/consumption/pollution/etc.</p> <p>&nbsp;-Nuclear deterrence is effective between bilateral adversaries</p> <p>&nbsp;You should be embarrassed to even attempt the following arguments, and your speaker points will reflect my feelings about them-</p> <p>&nbsp;-A Spec</p> <p>&nbsp;-Consult/Condition/Delay</p> <p>&nbsp;-Consequentialism/Utilitarianism Bad</p> <p>&nbsp;-Biopower as a stand-alone impact in any context</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;Rejection opens up a space for ______&rdquo;</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;Economic decline causes the US to cut food aid&rdquo; (not necessarily wrong, just waaay down the list of reasons that economic collapse would be bad)</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;Dehumanization outweighs death&rdquo; (okay for impacts like real genocide, but invoking this claim merely for a hunger/exclusion/sadness impact will warrant zero speaker points for the round)</p> <p>&nbsp;-&ldquo;Rights outweigh war&rdquo; (surprise-surprise, war involves the loss of rights)</p> <p>&nbsp;-&quot;I&#39;m just going straight down &ndash; It&#39;ll make sense&hellip;&quot; (this is not a roadmap)</p> <p>&nbsp;<em>Presentational Preferences:</em></p> <p>&nbsp;Absent a complete and total lack of intelligibility, presentation has nothing to do with my decision calculus.</p> <p>&nbsp;However, presentation and delivery will have significant effects on your speaker points.</p> <p>&nbsp;Arrogance is not ethos, and mistaking the former for the latter will not help your speaker points.</p> <p>&nbsp;There&rsquo;s probably no risk that you&rsquo;ll speak too fast for me, but slurring-words and raising-pitch will annoy me.</p> <p>&nbsp;Efficiency always beats words-per-minute, and I will reward efficient speakers accordingly.</p> <p>Line-by-line is law, and &ldquo;creative&rdquo; flowing will not be tolerated. Separate arguments on different pieces of paper, and ALWAYS give an order. If you don&#39;t have a coherent roadmap, I&#39;ll assess that you don&#39;t care enough to organize your arguments, so I shouldn&#39;t either.</p>


Lucas Hall - WWU

n/a


Luke Landry (Hired) - Jewell

<p><strong>Question 1 : Please enter your judging philosophy.&nbsp;</strong></p> <p>Here are the important highlights: 1) I am most comfortable judging debates about public policy in a cost-benefit/policy-maker paradigm.&nbsp; You are absolutely welcome to tell me to do otherwise, just be aware that you&rsquo;re taking me out of my comfort zone.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll try my best to accommodate the debaters.</p> <p>2) Clarity is paramount to me, and I can&rsquo;t write especially quickly.&nbsp; This means that you ought to slow down a in front of me.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m not saying you have to speak at a conversational pace or anything like that, only that you need to speak clearly and in sensical sentences.&nbsp; What&rsquo;s most important to me is that I can understand all of the words you are trying to say.&nbsp; Sign post clearly, give me time to flip my papers, and know that very short arguments are very difficult to flow.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t write anything meaningful in under 2 seconds.</p> <p>For my ballot, speaking clearly and fully explaining your arguments goes much further than the quantity of arguments. &nbsp;</p> <p>3) Please, please, please: just give me a brief &ldquo;Explain Like I&rsquo;m Five&rdquo; at the top of each position.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m not asking for anything lengthy, just a sentence or two that tells me what your disad/advantage/K/etc. is all about.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries&nbsp; &nbsp;</p> <p>Please describe your approach to the following.</p> <p>1.&nbsp; Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?&nbsp; I tend to give a 27ish to poor speeches, 28ish to average speeches, 29ish to great speeches, and 30 to &lsquo;omg that was so amazing.&#39;</p> <p>2.&nbsp; How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?&nbsp; I approach all arguments the same regardless of whether or not they are &lsquo;critical.&rsquo; &nbsp;Their germaneness to the topic or the plan text is an issue for the debaters to resolve. &nbsp;I don&rsquo;t care if you run a K on the aff.&nbsp; The legitimacy of the plan text is an issue for the debaters to resolve.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m open to arguments on both sides.&nbsp;I can&rsquo;t imagine why you&rsquo;d want to run a K that contradicts other of your arguments.&nbsp; For me you should probably be self-consistent in the debate.</p> <p>3.&nbsp; Performance based arguments.&nbsp; This is the best way I can think to explain how I feel about performance args: just cut out the performance and say the arguments and call it a K.&nbsp; I will listen to your performance, don&rsquo;t get me wrong.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m just telling you that I only care about the arguments you make.&nbsp; In other words, there is neither reward nor punishment waiting for you if you choose to spend any of your speech time performing.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s just lost time for my ballot.</p> <p>4.&nbsp; Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations? &nbsp;&ldquo;Our interpretation of the resolution would have been superior for this debate,&rdquo; is not especially persuasive to me. &nbsp;&ldquo;Their interpretation of the resolution allowed them to do the following unfair things,&rdquo; is definitely persuasive to me.&nbsp; I like specificity and demonstrable abuse.&nbsp; I do not require a competing interpretation.</p> <p>5.&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?&nbsp; Honestly, I absolutely love a good CP debate and encourage you to run them in front of me, but please keep things relatively simple(ish) and explain your argument well.&nbsp; I would like a written copy of any counterplan text AND perm text read in the round.&nbsp; It makes things much simpler.&nbsp; Identifying the status of the CP immediately makes things much simpler.&nbsp; As for perms, I am only interested in functional competition.&nbsp; For any CP theory arguments you make, please be as specific as possible.&nbsp; Merely declaring that the CP is a PIC and listing reasons why PICs are bad won&rsquo;t get you anyplace for my ballot.&nbsp; Treat it just like topicality: define what they do and why it is different from what they should have done.</p> <p>6.&nbsp; Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)?&nbsp; Sure.</p> <p>7.&nbsp; In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?&nbsp; Procedurals, then everything else.&nbsp; I am not going to give your K impacts automatic preference.&nbsp; You have to make those arguments.&nbsp; I mean, they&rsquo;re super easy to make.</p> <p>8.&nbsp; How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?&nbsp; I always prefer concreteness and specificity when all else is equal.&nbsp; Abstract impacts certainly can be more important than concrete ones, and you are welcome to make those arguments in front of me.</p>


Matt Strawbridge - UCLA

<p>I competed in high school LD for 2 years, and I did 4 years of college parli, competing for Moorpark then UCLA. I also did some NFA LD. I now coach at UCLA while attending law school.<br /> <br /> I am open to any type of argument you want to make, in any way you want to make it. I don&rsquo;t want you to feel at all limited in what you can do. As much as possible, I&rsquo;ll try to remove myself from the round and adopt whatever paradigm the debaters tell me to. With only a few exceptions, the following should be interpreted merely as suggestions and explanations of my default decision-making process, rather than rigid rules you must follow to win or get high speaker points.<br /> <br /> Speed and Delivery<br /> I&rsquo;m fine with speed, although I don&rsquo;t especially like it and often doubt its usefulness. I don&rsquo;t really care about your delivery style, so do whatever is most comfortable to you, just make sure that everyone can hear you well. In the event that you&rsquo;re too fast or unclear for me, I&rsquo;ll let you know. If your opponent asks you to slow down or speak clearer, I expect you to accommodate that request.<br /> <br /> Procedurals<br /> For procedural arguments, I don&rsquo;t have any default thresholds or requirements like &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t vote unless there is in-round abuse.&rdquo; Feel free to make arguments one way or another, but I don&rsquo;t have an inherent aversion to voting on T/specs/etc without articulated ground loss, or even without any ground loss at all, if you want to give some other justification for voting on procedurals. If you tell me to vote on it, I&rsquo;ll vote on it, simple as that. It&rsquo;s probably fair to say that I enjoy T more than most judges, so don&rsquo;t be shy to run it (and go for it) in front of me.<br /> <br /> Trichotomy<br /> Unlike a lot of people, I don&rsquo;t hate the trichotomy. If you want to interpret the resolution as a value, or even fact, feel free to do so in front of me. Likewise, if you want to run &ldquo;this should be a value debate&rdquo; on the opp, go ahead. I say this as only a notification that the trichot debate is not an&nbsp;<em>uphill</em>&nbsp;battle when I&rsquo;m judging, in contrast to a lot of judges on the circuit. But you still need to win the argument, of course, and I certainly wouldn&rsquo;t say you have an uphill battle if you want to argue&nbsp;<em>against&nbsp;</em>interpreting the resolution as value/fact either. As with topicality, don&rsquo;t feel like your arguments&nbsp;<em>need&nbsp;</em>to be tied to ground, abuse, predictability, or the like. There are plenty of other interesting arguments out there on both sides and I&rsquo;ll entertain any of them.<br /> <br /> Counterplans and Permutations<br /> Similarly, I don&rsquo;t have any preconceived rules about which counterplans and permutations are &ldquo;legitimate&rdquo; and which aren&rsquo;t. I&rsquo;m fine voting on a PIC if it&rsquo;s well defended, and equally fine voting against it if it&rsquo;s not. By default, I interpret a perm merely as a test of competition, not as an advocacy.<br /> <br /> Kritiks and Critical Arguments<br /> I&rsquo;m open to any type of kritik or critical affirmative. I ran a few K&rsquo;s when I competed, and I was a philosophy major. But before you pull out your Zizek or Heidegger, keep reading: UCLA&rsquo;s major is exclusively analytic philosophy, and it was off of that type of literature that I based my positions. I know nothing about continental philosophy or critical theory. This doesn&rsquo;t mean you should be discouraged from running those arguments, just be sure to explain them clearly--as you should anyway, of course. Again, I don&rsquo;t have any automatic requirements for kritiks (like that they have an alt other than &ldquo;reject&rdquo;).<br /> <br /> Performance<br /> Performance-based arguments are okay, but you might have a harder time winning those in front of me. I&rsquo;ll probably be sympathetic to the other team if your framework is unexplained or unclear. I&rsquo;m not sure this is entirely fair on my part, as I&rsquo;m preferring more &ldquo;traditional&rdquo; arguments over performance, but I don&rsquo;t know how to be fair in this regard. At least everyone is familiar with frameworks, and although it&rsquo;s not ideal to force you at least to partially engage in that system in order to argue against it, that&rsquo;s the best solution I have, especially since debate is adversarial and voting&nbsp;<em>for&nbsp;</em>your performance also means voting&nbsp;<em>against</em>your opponent. But that said, I don&rsquo;t have any objections to performance per se, and if that&rsquo;s what you run normally you should run it in front of me too.<br /> <br /> Criteria and Impact Calculus<br /> Most rounds have a blipped out &ldquo;net benefits&rdquo; criterion which goes conceded. I find that this can lead to problems in rounds when the teams are claiming different types of benefits, e.g. increased utility versus lives saved. The best ways to avoid this problem, I think, are to do a little bit more work on the criteria level by explaining precisely what you mean by the vague, ubiquitous &ldquo;net benefits,&rdquo; and to give really specific impact analysis about why your impacts are weightier than the other team&rsquo;s (where &ldquo;weight&rdquo; = magnitude x probability). Absent a definition, I interpret &ldquo;net benefits&rdquo; to be a crude form of consequentialism, and will prefer utility over other desiderata. This means, e.g., that by default I would vote for a nuclear war impact over an equally probable dehumanization impact. But this won&rsquo;t matter, obviously, if you tell me to look at the round another way. Feel free to run any criterion you wish, and I&rsquo;m (more than) happy to listen to a discussion of non-consequentialist ethics as well. Along those lines, I&rsquo;m not of the opinion that all disadvantages need to end with nuclear war, or even any people dying. Systemic impacts, linear disadvantages, and moral arguments are fine with me. I prefer depth of analysis over blippy high magnitude assertions. You can of course make your risk of magnitude arguments, just don&rsquo;t expect me to make them for you. If you can go from the passage of a bill to the end of all life on Earth in 15 seconds, I don&rsquo;t think your opponent needs to spend more than 15 (well-used) seconds to refute that.<br /> <br /> Contradictory Arguments<br /> I can&rsquo;t really give you my concrete opinion about &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; arguments in a vacuum. Certainly I think teams can argue contingencies and dilemmas (&ldquo;Plan will have no effect, but even if it does, that will be bad because...&rdquo;). This can, at times, cross into the &ldquo;critical&rdquo; aspects of debate too (I can imagine a team consistently running a certain type of statism K and then an &ldquo;even if&rdquo; state-actor CP). Other times, a critical position pretty clearly prohibits you from doing certain things (here I&rsquo;m thinking linguistic K&rsquo;s). It really depends on the specific arguments in question. But, all these are still up to the debaters in the round. I won&rsquo;t vote down a team for being inconsistent, even with a language K, if the other team doesn&rsquo;t bring it up.<br /> <br /> Offensiveness and Unpopular Arguments<br /> If you are rude or intentionally exclusionary, I will dock your speaker points, but it won&rsquo;t affect the round outcome unless the other team wins that it should. The same goes for comments that are blatantly racist/sexist/etc. However, I don&rsquo;t want you to interpret this as excluding any legitimate policy proposals, and don&rsquo;t be afraid to run &ldquo;unpopular&rdquo; arguments in front of me. I know the circuit is pretty liberal, but that doesn&rsquo;t mean every round needs to be a race to the left--if you&rsquo;re given the &ldquo;conservative&rdquo; side of a topic feel free to argue it straight up. I don&rsquo;t find it inherently&nbsp;<em>offensive</em>, for example,<em>&nbsp;</em>if you want to defend a libertarian position that would allow employers to discriminate on the basis of race, sex, religion, sexual preference, and so on. It&rsquo;s a real position, after all, held by several members of Congress, and I think discussing the merits and disadvantages of it is useful and educational, regardless of what one might personally believe. The same applies for arguments about abortion, gay marriage, immigration, a flat tax, whatever. I wouldn&rsquo;t be involved in switch-side debating if I didn&rsquo;t think exploring all sides of an issue was valuable. I think I&rsquo;m pretty good at leaving my personal political biases completely out of the debate, so don&rsquo;t feel limited to &ldquo;popular&rdquo; positions. Just take care to present the arguments in a respectful, sensitive manner.<br /> <br /> RVI&rsquo;s<br /> As with anything else, I&rsquo;ll listen to them with an open mind. However, I think these should be well-warranted when used. If the MG simply blips one out in two seconds at the bottom of a very average T debate, I don&rsquo;t feel required to vote there. I&rsquo;m not saying it has to be persuasive for me to vote on it, just that you need to provide&nbsp;<em>some</em>&nbsp;reason, and explain that reason. Even then, as long as the other team addresses it, it&rsquo;s probably not going to win you the round. I&rsquo;ve only seen a couple rounds in parli where I personally thought an RVI was justified, and those were unusual circumstances.<br /> <br /> Order of Evaluation<br /> I&rsquo;m wary of giving a specific order in which I&rsquo;ll evaluate positions if left on my own to do so. I don&rsquo;t think I can say, irrespective of content, that T comes before K, or the other way round. Frankly, it depends on what T and what K they are, as well as the on-case arguments. I guess I&rsquo;d say that in most rounds the critical arguments would come before the procedural, which come before the case? But don&rsquo;t hold me to that. I hope, though, that none of my bias matters, and debaters will explain the order in which I should evaluate the different positions (and, I hope that explanation is warranted).<br /> <br /> Labels and Unusual Arguments<br /> As the above might indicate, I think that forcing common labels onto positions can be bad for the round. I don&rsquo;t believe that all the standard labels exhaustively cover all the types of arguments you could make in a round; I used to run a position that was sort of like topicality but also sort of a kritik, and just calling it one or the other was misleading and caused confusion. I also think that this type of pigeonholing is regrettable because it often leads to very shallow, uninteresting theory debates. Instead of saying your opponent&rsquo;s argument is a spec, and then reading generic theory about why specs are bad, I&rsquo;d prefer to see you engage the specific position and tell me why&nbsp;<em>it&nbsp;</em>is bad. More generally, I really appreciate creativity, and enjoy seeing the common assumptions of debate challenged. If you have a new, unusual case or argument that you&rsquo;re hesitant to run in competition just because it&rsquo;s very different, I&rsquo;m probably a good critic to try it out on.<br /> <br /> Misc.<br /> You should call points of order: normally I won&rsquo;t strike new arguments on my own. I don&rsquo;t mind if your extensions are &ldquo;blippy,&rdquo; as I see no need to reiterate every single subpoint that was dropped. Prompting your partner is fine, so long as they actually say the argument.&nbsp;<br /> <br /> I&rsquo;m missing school, work, and my wife to be at this tournament. I remain involved in the activity because I believe it&rsquo;s incredibly valuable and I want to see it flourish. I enjoy judging, but I don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m entitled to have you entertain me. Instead, in a very real sense, I&rsquo;m working for you: I&rsquo;ve been charged with adjudicating the round, and I take that role very seriously. I aspire to be an excellent critic, the kind that I loved having in the back of the room as a competitor. You have my undivided attention in the round, and I will do my very best to decide it in a way that is fair and pursuant to the principles described above. Please feel welcome to ask me about my RFD, and push me on it if you disagree. I&rsquo;m totally open to being wrong (and I hope you are too). I think it&rsquo;s much more productive and in line with the educational nature of this activity if we talk about our differing views rather than just walk away and dismiss the other as incorrect.<br /> <br /> Have fun. Be yourself. It&rsquo;s your round, not mine.</p>


Matthew Swanson - Palomar

n/a


Matthew Hogan - UNR

<p>Name: Matthew Hogan School: University of Nevada, Reno Section 1: General Information Please begin by explaining what you think is the relevant information about your approach to judging that will best assist the debaters you are judge debate in front of you. Please be specific and clear. Judges who write philosophies that are not clear will be asked to rewrite them. Judges who do not rewrite them may be fined or not allowed to judge/cover teams at the NPTE. To begin, I have about 12 years experience in the activity between competing in high school policy, competing in college parli, and coaching parli for 3 years. My general approach to evaluating the debate is that the government team has the responsibility to defend the topic and their case, while the negative can challenge either of those two burdens to win the round. I believe the affirmative team should defend the resolution. This means that if you want to run a critical affirmative, you need to explain to me how this position is topical under the specific resolution. I allow quite a bit of leeway when it comes to affirmative interpretations of resolutions, so the least you can do is spend the extra 30 seconds explaining how you are topical. My only exception to this burden is a project affirmative, but I need a good framework explaining why this is more important than the topic, and probably an explanation as to why you are not running the position just to skew your opponents out of the round (ie: disclose your project if it is that important to you). Opposition Teams, your Kritik should also be topical either to the resolution or specifically to the plan text. Generic links, links of omission etc, don&rsquo;t really do it for me. Link specific discourse, the plan text or the wording of the resolution. Really try to engage your opponent or the resolution with the kritik, don&rsquo;t run the kritik just for the sake of running it. Also, I believe in negation theory, so you can have contradictory arguments in the round. Just make sure you parameterize down to one of the two arguments by the rebuttals. If you are going for both arguments in the rebuttal and are winning both, I don&rsquo;t know what to do with the two competing claims you are winning and, thus, disregard them both (government teams should know this too). I am open to procedurals of all kinds, kritiks, diusads and counterplans. I am willing to vote for either liberal or conservative positions, so long as those arguments are not deliberately racist, sexist, etc. I am ok with speed, so far as you give a little pen time between claims, since this is parli after all. A good idea would be to give a warrant after the claim, so I can get pen time and so you can actually support your argument. Above all else, I expect both teams to be respectful to each other. Don&rsquo;t deliberately be mean, rude or patronizing. I am ok with banter, sarcasm, etc, but being rude just for the sake of bullying your opponent will upset me. Not enough for me to vote against you, but enough for me to dock your speaker points substantially. Points of order should be called in front of me. If something is blatantly new for me, I will do disregard the argument. If there is a grey area, I may allow the argument unless a point of order is called. I think it is better to be safe than sorry. My idea of net-benefits is probably not traditional, where whomever has a higher magnitude wins. Unless you tell me why I need to prioritize magnitude first, I will evaluate net-benefits to my default standard which is: probability&gt;timeframe&gt;magnitude. My political philosophy is that high magnitude debates stagnate real action and reform, which is why I prioritize probability. That isn&rsquo;t to say that I won&rsquo;t evaluate magnitude first if you tell me why I should abandon my default judging standard. If you have any specific questions, feel free to email me atmchogan86@gmail.com. Best of luck to you all!!! Section 2: Specific Inquiries Please describe your approach to the following. 1.​Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)? ​26-29 2.​How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions? ​Critically framed arguments are cool with me for both teams. Critical affirmatives should be topical to the resolution (see above), and still give the negative some ground in the round. Critically framed arguments should have a clear framework for both teams that tell me how I should prioritize the position. Without a winning framework that prioritize the critical argument first, I will weigh it equally to other positions. Yes the position can contradict other positions, as long as you collapse to only one of the positions in the rebuttal. My one exclusion to this rule is that if you run a critical position based off the discourse someone uses, and then you use that discourse, then your contradictory positions can cost you the round, since you can&rsquo;t take back your discourse. 3.​Performance based arguments&hellip; ​I am also ok with performance based positions, so long as they meet a standard of relevance to the resolution. However, it needs to be clear to me that I am evaluating the performance rather than the content, with reasons why I should evaluate performance first. The opposing team should have the right to know if they are actually debate the performance or the content, instead of being excluded by a team switching back and forth between frameworks. 4.​Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations? ​ ​I don&rsquo;t require competing interpretations. If you tell me why your opponent has a bad interpretation, I won&rsquo;t vote for it. If you want me to vote for your competing interpretation, though, I need counter-standards. I don&rsquo;t need in-round abuse as long as the standards and voters you are going for aren&rsquo;t related to ground (ie: grammar and Jurisdiction). However if you are going for a fairness voter with a claim to ground loss, then I need the abuse to be present in round. I do give government teams flexibility in being creative with the topic, as long as they can win topicality, but I am also more likely to vote on topicality than some other critics may. 5.​Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition? ​Counterplan is assumed dispositional to me unless told otherwise. If asked about the status of the counterplan, the negative team should answer their opponent. Counterplans of any kind are ok with me, as long as you can defend the theory behind the counterplan you ran. All theory is up for debate for both teams when it comes to counterplans. My favorite counterplans are plan exclusive counterplans, but I will entertain any kind. 6.​Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans) ​Yes, teams can share flowed arguments. 7.​In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)? Procedurals first, krtiks second, then net-benefits. You can easily tell me why I should prioritize differently in the debate. Additionally, if nobody is winning the theory as to why I should look to one argument first, then I will weigh procederuals vs. kritiks vs. plan/da/cp equally under net-benefits and weigh the impacts of each. So you should be winning your theory debate on your position.​ ​ 8.​How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)? ​As mentioned before, I prioritize probability first. I will still consider things like magnitude and timeframe, I just give more weight to more probable impacts. Therefore things like dehumanization can outweigh extinction or vice versa, as long as you are winning the probability debate. The other option is give me framework reasons as to why I should prefer magnitude or timeframe first. BOLDED TEXT REFLECTS CHANGES TO MY PHILOSOPHY ON 10/29/12 Case Arguments: Fact cases generally make me upset and uncomfortable because I feel I must always intervene. Value resolutions, a little less so. I am most comfortable with policy rounds because I think it incorporates the other two types of rounds and then goes beyond; however, I will listen to the round no matter how it is formatted. Affirmative cases should be well-warranted, clear, and solvent; after all, affirmative does get the benefit of choosing their case. I think inherency is a difficult battle to win for the negative; however the link and impact debate are incredibly important. I probably give more value to solvency attacks then other critics. I view solvency/advantage links as the internal link to all the impacts I weigh for the affirmative, so for the same reasons why proving a no link on a disadvantage make it go away, I feel the same is true for solvency. Lastly, I will default to a net-benefits framework until either team provides me with a different framework in which I should view the round. Disadvantage Arguments: Generally enjoy the disadvantage debate. Disadvantages must be unique, with well-warranted internal links and articulated advantages. I hate hearing big impacts like global warming or nuke war without a clear articulated scenario of how we get there and how the impact occurs (same goes for the affirmative case). Example of a bad impact: Emissions create ocean acidity and lead to extinction in the ocean and the world. Example of a good impact: CO2+H2O results in carbonic acid, eating away the calcium shells of shellfish and coral, which are the 2nd most biodiverse place on earth and a major food source for all animals. I WILL NOT DO THE WORK FOR YOU ON THE IMPACT DEBATE. Links are very important as well, and while a risk of the link will get you access to the impacts, probability will greatly decrease, which given the right affirmative rebuttal may still not result in me voting for large impacts. Link turns are only offense if the government is winning the uniqueness debate. Counterplan Arguments: The following are my default views on counterplans; however, counterplan theory is completely up for debate, and I will listen to any counterplan if you defend and win the theory debate. I actually enjoy very clear, competitive counterplans. Delay counterplans generally are unfair and honestly quite unnecessary, since if you are winning the disadvantage, the CP isn&rsquo;t required unless you have small impacts. Consult counterplans are a little less unfair than counterplans, but I feel somewhat the same towards these counterplans as I do towards delay. Consult CP&rsquo;s have a little more offense, though. PICs are fine, but a little abusive (just a little J). I would just hope that you have a specific disad to the part you&#39;re PICing out of. I&#39;m fine with topical counterplans. My default view is that perms are a test of competition, and not an advocacy. A perm is all of plan, and all or part of the counterplan. Anything outside of this, and I&#39;ll have a sympathetic ear to Opp claims of severance or intrinsicness. I prefer if you write out the counterplan and perm texts on separate pieces of paper to avoid debates about shifting perm/CP texts. I view all CPs as dispositional unless I&#39;m told otherwise. To be clear, this means that Opp can kick it only if Gov perms it. If Gov straight turns the CP, Opp is stuck with it, unless they&#39;ve declared it conditional at the top of the CP. Lastly, losing the counterplan doesn&rsquo;t mean a loss for the opposition. Multiple Conditional (and usually contradictory) Counterplans will probably lose you the round, if your opponents tell me why they are abusive. They force the gov team to contradict themselves, run multiple uniqueness scenarios and definitely skew your opponents out of the round. Please do not run them. You already get the option between the status quo and/or a competing advocacy. You don&rsquo;t need 3 more! (This applies to a kritik alternative and a counterplan, unless the counterplan is the alternative. Kritik Arguments: Framework of kritiks is incredibly important. Without a clear framework, I will simply weigh the kritik against the case, which generally means all you have is a non-unique disadvantage. I would much more prefer specific links to the aff case/rhetoric over resolution links (I am somewhat sympathetic to the affirmative when they don&rsquo;t get to choose the resolution or side). More local impacts (personal/individual) will get you further in terms of the solvency of your alternative than huge impacts like &ldquo;root of all violence&rdquo;. However, I will listen to larger impacts as well, as long as your solvency can convince me that I can solve the root cause of all violence simply by signing my ballot!!!. Your alternative should be written and clarified if requested, and your solvency needs to be articulated well. Best option for the affirmative to answer the kritik is to perm, answer framework, or challenge the solvency. Impact turning something like, &ldquo;the root of all violence&rdquo; is risky, and chances are, the kritik probably will link in some way to the affirmative case. T and Theory Arguments: I give a lot of flexibility to the affirmative to be creative with their interpretation and affirmative case. On the flipside, I enjoy topicality debate more than most judges. I guess the two balance each other out and will result in me being able to hear arguments from either team regarding topicality. Interpretations should be clear, and preferably, written out. Ground/Fairness claims should have proven in-round abuse in order to win them; however, you might be able to convince me that prep-abuse is important too. Otherwise, in-round is the only thing that will win you a fairness debate. Other standards and voters can still win you topicality, though. Your voters should be related to the standards for your interpretation. Short, blippy, time-suck topicality will make me very sad and less likely to vote for it. If you are going to run topicality, you should be putting in at least as much effort as your other arguments if you expect me to consider it. Other theory arguments like vagueness, policy framework best, etc are all up for debate in front of me. However, theory should be explained clearly, and you should give enough pen time on these arguments, since generally there are not as many warrants for theory arguments as there are for case arguments. Approach to Deciding: Net-Benefits paradigm until told otherwise. I cannot stress enough the importance of the rebuttal for evaluating impacts. Tell me where to weigh, how to weigh, and why I should weigh the impacts the way you tell me too. I prioritize impacts in the following order unless told otherwise: Probability of impacts comes first, Timeframe second, and magnitude last. I will not vote on a try or die of nuclear war that has low probability if the other team has a 100% chance of feeding 100 people and saving their lives. This is contrary to my personal political perspective that catastrophic rhetoric can lead to political paralysis. However, if you want to go for big impacts, you can convince me to change my prioritization of impacts by arguing why I should prioritize timeframe or magnitude. Convince me why timeframe matters more than anything, or probability, or magnitude. Any of these can be enough to win you the round, even if you are losing one of the other standards for weighing. Big impacts don&rsquo;t necessarily result in a win, unless you tell me. Without any weighing, I feel like I must intervene and do the work for you (which I don&rsquo;t want to do), and you may not enjoy the decision I make if I do. Without weighing being done, I will default to probability over timeframe and then timeframe over magnitude. If you fail to argue why I should change the way in which I prioritize impacts, you may lose the round despite winning the line by line because I will default to a more probable impact scenario. THIS IS IMPORTANT, since most judges evaluate magnitude first and this is not in-line with my own views on policy-making. So if you are a large magnitude impact debater, you must make it clear why the magnitude should come before a highly probable, small impact advantage for your opponents. Presentation Preferences: Speed is generally fine with me. There are only a few teams that may be fast for me, and I will let you know during your speech if you are going to fast. Should you decide not to slow down, then you may not get your argument on my flow. However, I believe that this is an educational activity while also a competitive one. Therefore, if your opponents are asking you to slow down because they can&rsquo;t engage, and you refuse to, you may win the round, but you may not get very good speaker points in front of me. I believe using speaker points is the best way of balancing my responsibility in making sure debate is inclusive and educational, but at the same time not being interventionist by giving somebody a loss for speaking to fast. Sitting is fine and won&lsquo;t affect your speaker points, but you&rsquo;ll generally speak clearer and quicker standing, so I don&rsquo;t know why you wouldn&rsquo;t want to stand for your own sake. I am fine with communicating with your partner, but will only flow those arguments that are coming from the speaker. If communicating with your partner is excessive, then your speaker points may be affected. The person speaker should be answering cx questions (but you can get input from your partner). CLARITY is the most important thing in terms of presentation.</p>


Melan Jaich - Santa Clara

<p>I can flow. &nbsp;I&#39;ve coached debate since 1975. &nbsp;I believe all Parli topics are policy or pre-policy. &nbsp;I&#39;m not interested in meaningless framework arguments that only serve to confuse your opposition. &nbsp;I&#39;m not sure what the LOR speech is for if the Opp cannot split the block. I will punish the team that uses Points of Order just to interrupt without cause. &nbsp;I enjoy Parllamentary debate but I basically always see the ballot as a policy decision.</p>


Melissa Franke - PacificLutheran

n/a


Michael Middleton - Utah

<p>Michael Middleton</p> <p>Judging Philosophy</p> <p><strong>A Quotation:</strong></p> <p>&ldquo;The present situation is highly discouraging&rdquo; &ndash;Gilles Deleuze &amp; Felix Guattari</p> <p><strong>A Haiku:</strong></p> <p>Debate is Awesome</p> <p>Judging Makes Me Cry Softly</p> <p>Do I weep in vain?</p> <p><strong>Some things to consider (when debating in front of me):</strong></p> <p>10.&nbsp; I DO NOT support speed as a tool of exclusion</p> <p>9.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I DO NOT like deciding for myself what is the most important thing in the round or how to evaluate the competing arguments; You should do this for me.&nbsp; You will like it less if you don&rsquo;t. On the other hand, I will like it more.</p> <p>8.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I DO like well-structured debates. I also like interesting structures.</p> <p>7.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I DO like creative interpretations; I DO NOT like when you don&rsquo;t explain/provide a rationale for why I your interpretation makes for a productive/rewarding/interesting/good debate.</p> <p>6.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I DO NOT like nor understand potential abuse arguments; I DO like and reward teams that demonstrate compellingly that the quality of the debate has been compromised by an interpretive choice made by the other team.</p> <p>5.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I DO NOT vote for any given argument or against any given type of argument.&nbsp; Run whatever strategy you like; Be clear about your strategy.</p> <p>4.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I am a participant in the round also.&nbsp; While I make my best effort to vote on who is winning and losing the debate based on the arguments, I use speaker points to evaluate and highlight both excellent and poor behaviors, i.e. if you create a hostile environment, you get massively low speaker points.</p> <p>3.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Jargon does not equal argument. Nor does it equal a good time.</p> <p>2.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cross-application does not equal new argument. It doesn&rsquo;t really equal anything.</p> <p>1.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Debate is not life.&nbsp; Losing a ballot will not steal your humanity.&nbsp; I tend to prefer rounds that demonstrate everyone in the room knows this.</p> <p>0. Have Fun</p>


Nick Griffin - Whitman


Nick Robinson - Willamette

n/a


Nick Russell - Long Beach

<p><strong>Judge Philosophy for Nick Russell</strong></p> <p><strong>DOF @ CSU, Long Beach</strong></p> <p>Years in Debate: 20</p> <p>Rounds Judged this Year: not many</p> <p>Months without a Weekend: 1.5</p> <p>I view debate as a laboratory for democracy, by which I mean that debate provides an opportunity for students to become agents of positive social transformation. As such, my view is that debate should be a forum for debaters to develop a voice to express the arguments about which you are passionate; it&rsquo;s your opportunity to positively transform society. And it&rsquo;s not my place to tell you how to do that (e.g., run a project, a plan, or a pomo).</p> <p>That being said, I&rsquo;m convinced that in order to transform publics, you must persuade your audience. And there are things that make arguments and debaters more or less persuasive as I audience them.</p> <ol> <li>I think that human beings are different from one another. And, for this whole democratic experiment to succeed, I think we need to be respectful of differences. I may be wrong and you may be right, but for debate to work, there has to be space for a dialogic exchange. And that means respect. I loathe hostility and am uncomfortable with aggression, so please find a way to make the debate friendly.</li> <li>I teach argumentation, so my brain has been socialized to understand arguments in a relatively formal sense: e.g., a claim supported with evidence&mdash;connected with a warrant. Please don&rsquo;t read this as a normative endorsement of the Toulmin model. Instead, it&rsquo;s a descriptive claim of the way that I have learned to think through my experience in debate and my livelihood teaching Introduction to Argument classes.</li> <li>While I enjoy reading critical theory and cultural studies, my brain is quicker to make sense of things that are tangible, concrete, and explained using examples. For critical teams, this means you ought to describe how your argument plays out in the world of the plan; for orthodox teams, this means you need to describe how the plan solves your harms (even if this is internal to an advantage); and for project teams it means explaining how your argument will concretely and meaningfully cause change.</li> </ol> <p>The bottom line is this: you are an active agent of social transformation. You should actualization that agency for positive social change&mdash;and not for social domination.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Nigel Ramoz-Leslie - Whitman


Patrick Muenks - UT-Tyler

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Name: Patrick Muenks</p> <p>School: UT Tyler</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Section 1: General Information </strong></p> <p><strong>Please begin by explaining what you think is the relevant information about your approach to judging that will best assist the debaters you are judge debate in front of you. Please be specific and clear. Judges who write philosophies that are not clear will be asked to rewrite them. Judges who do not rewrite them may be fined or not allowed to judge/cover teams at the NPTE.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I view debate as an educational activity that should supplement and enhance the collegiate experience of those who participate in it. As for my debate background:</p> <p>-3 years competing @ Washburn University. (2005 - 09)</p> <p>-4 years coaching @ Drury University, Washburn University, &amp; UT Tyler. (2009 - 13)</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Please slow down to roughly conversational pace and repeat any and/or all of these arguments: plan/cp texts, alternatives, perms, interpretations/counter-interpretations.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Always call points of order. I will protect in rebuttals, but I would rather have you error on the side of caution.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The term &ldquo;default&rdquo; in my philosophy. Default means that I will revert to that position or method of evaluating arguments in the absences of any arguments made to the contrary.&nbsp; Default does not mean that I hold an attachment to these predisposition. For example - while I default to evaluating topicality through ground, I would vote for the gov if they won arguments about why evaluating topicality through education is best.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>A couple of things to know about how I look at debate:</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>An argument = claim + data + warrant.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Depth is always better than breadth.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Debate is ultimately a strategic exercise.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Pen time &amp; speed: In most instances, speed is not necessary. If you&rsquo;re fast and unclear, I will start yelling &ldquo;clear&rdquo; until you become cogent. Additionally, making a lot of warrantless claims usually means I&rsquo;ll miss something which will no doubt upset you when it comes time for the RFD. When you&rsquo;re debating, make arguments as opposed to claims.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>This ensures two things.</p> <p>-I keep a much better flow because I can listen to an argument develop as opposed to trying to keep up with the ten claims you&rsquo;re attempting to shell in 45 seconds. Ultimately benefits you, the competitor, since a better flow means I can better evaluate your arguments.</p> <p>-You won&rsquo;t sound informed and/or will sound under researched. I do not find underdeveloped arguments persuasive or compelling. If you&rsquo;re disad turns case but you don&rsquo;t mention that, I won&rsquo;t do that work for you.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>When it comes to NPTE, I want to stress that while I have been researching and reading about the topics, it would be better for you to assume I know nothing. Just because I have been researching does not mean I&rsquo;ve been examining the same material you have.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Section 2: Specific Inquiries&nbsp; </strong></p> <p><strong>Please describe your approach to the following.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>25 - 30.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>27.5 = average performance. You made some arguments and did not do anything to &ldquo;lose&rdquo; the round.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>28 - 29 = You made deep well warranted arguments. You made smart tactical and strategic decisions within round to defeat your opponents. Usually associated with some level of risk taking as opposed to &ldquo;screwing up less&rdquo; than your opponent.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>30: I was in awe of your performance and will make a Facebook post immortalizing it.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>If you receive anything lower than a 25 from me, you were a terrible person in round.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Critical arguments, projects, etc are fine. I default to evaluating critical arguments through net-benefits.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Critical affirmatives are fine.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Its fine by me if a team runs a critical argument and double turn themselves with other negative positions.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Performance based arguments&hellip;</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Performance based arguments are fine. I default to evaluating performance based arguments through net-benefits. My only reservation to performance based arguments is I don&rsquo;t think you should &ldquo;win&rdquo; just because you &ldquo;preformed&rdquo;. The performance should solve something.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I default to requiring in round abuse to vote on topicality. I also default to evaluating topicality through a lens of ground. I do not require competing interpretations. The question of whether or not a counter interpretation needs to be deployed is a tactical consideration, not a necessity.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The above also applies to specification arguments.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I&rsquo;m fine with all types of counterplans. The theoretical validity of a given counterplan is subject to debate. In this area, I try to be as open as possible and come in without any predispositions. I default to assuming theory is a reason to reject an argument, not a team.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Yes</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I default to the following order:</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Topicality/Procedurals</p> <p>Net-benefits calculus of all other positions in the round</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>So unless the K framework sets forth arguments why it should be evaluated before the case, then I will default to weighing case versus the kritik.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I default to body count over abstract impacts.</p>


Peter van Elswyk - Carleton

n/a


Phil Sharp - UNR

<p>I competed in HS Policy and College NPDA. I was formerly the ADOF at WWU (3 years) and the DOF at Univ of Montana (2 years). I took two years off to go and teach debate in Korea. I am now the DOF at UNR (9 years).<br /> <br /> I evaluate the round as a flow-based policy-making critic of argument. Not a fan of the original argument being nothing but a tag with no warrant and the PMR back-filling. I hold you to the arguments you made and as a critic of argument, I will evaluate the degree to which you have warranted and convinced me of that argument. If your argument did not make sense the first time you said it, it is not likely to win my ballot. At the end of the debate, all judges must do work to make their decision. I feel that I attempt to make my involvement in the decision something I am consciously aware of as opposed to pretending that debates somehow decide themselves.<br /> <br /> In the event that the decision is not clear-cut, I will attempt to use a standard and fair method. Some things that you should know:<br /> A. I will weigh arguments through the frameworks the debaters provide. If a team wants me to vote on an Education standard on a T but they are losing an RVI on Education on the K, How do I weigh who has harmed Edu the most? Procedurals and kritiks are ultimately a request for me to employ a different paradigm in the debate (not post-fiat policy-making).</p> <p>B. In the event of clash, I will side with the team who has the more reasonable story and articulates the best standards to prefer their argument. In the absence of standards, I will default to the team whose argument is most intuitive as presented.<br /> <br /> C. In the event of dropped or under-covered arguments, I will vote based upon how well you warranted the argument. If a team drops a 20 second T that didn&#39;t make any sense, I won&#39;t vote on it. If you think your arguments are winners, make them sufficiently the first time you present them. Additional<br /> <br /> Considerations:<br /> 1. I DO think that an AFF should be an inductive proof of the res, but I also think that as long as they are reasonable, the NEG should be quick on their feet with arguments. I might not vote on T but I will consider how well a Neg team does when caught by surprise and give them the benefit of the doubt a little. I like creative and strategic movement within a topic area, AS LONG AS YOU EXPLAIN HOW YOUR CASE IS A PROOF OF THE RES BEING TRUE. I prefer a policy, if the res allows you to do it.<br /> 2. I think that the current policy of blipping and back-filling is yucky. I don&#39;t mind how fast you talk but I think it is intellectually bankrupt to simply spew out a bunch of buzzwords and taglines and try to win without actually knowing what your arguments mean or explaining them. Please note that I haven&rsquo;t judged a ton of rounds this year and so my pen is slow.<br /> 3. A lot of debaters get lost in the minutia and don&#39;t understand the purpose of the particular argument they are making. Then they say something like, &quot;The Uniqueness controls the direction of the link.&quot; Which is true but is NOT persuasive to hear in a rebuttal. Explain what you mean and how that affects the outcome of the debate. All arguments should be impacted to my decision.<br /> 4. Rebuttals should not be line-by-line repeatals. You must crystallize the debate and provide some guidance into my decision making given the negotiated frameworks. The less you do this, the more I have to figure out how to vote. I will flow the LOR straight down the page (like a big overview). Once the PMR is over, I will look back at the LOR arguments before I vote.<br /> 5. I find Kritiks to be interesting (if people explain the critical perspective in a way that makes sense) but I find debate to be a problematic format for them. If you run a K or performance on the aff, please provide a clear Role of the Ballot and defend the fact that you defend the topic. If you run a K on the neg, I expect to see a unique link in the debate with a functioning alternative and solvency. Case-turns from critical theory perspective often work better through the policy-making paradigm.<br /> 6. Over-reliance upon buzz words like dehumanization will not be persuasive to me. Explain what it is and why it is bad and don&#39;t say things like &quot;Dehum is worse than death&quot; unless you have a good reason that is true.<br /> 7. Your internal link story is more important than big, wanky impact stories.<br /> 8. I would like to be entertained in the back of the room. Judges all enjoy good intellectual throwdowns with solid clash and warranted arguments. Few of us enjoy the dry, combative, boring rehashing of theory blocks and race to the bottom that teams are choosing in an attempt to win.<br /> 9. Watch my freaking non-verbals. If you continue to say &quot;we are the most limiting interpretation&quot; and I am holding my hands up and shaking my head, I probably am looking for you to explain how you&rsquo;re obviously under limiting interp is actually providing for better limits.<br /> 10. I am liberal. I will vote in as unbiased way as possible based on the arguments in the round and my predisposition on questions of debate theory, but I thought it was fair to tell you my political leanings. 11. Don&#39;t be rude. Avoid sexism, racism, homophobia, general inappropriate behavior and all the other isms. Be a good sport. Some of the things you say are inevitably going to be less good comparatively. Don&#39;t act like you should win every single argument.&nbsp;</p>


Rachelle Harris - WWU

n/a


Rob Layne - Texas Tech

n/a


Sam Timinsky - UWash


Sarah Hamid - Oregon

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font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Cambria; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;} </style> <![endif]--><!--StartFragment--></p> <p>History/BG</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Academic: I completed my undergraduate degree with a double major in Literature (focus on Gender Criticism and Theory) and Post-Colonial Studies, minor in Art History, Gender Studies, History, and Film Studies. I am currently an MA candidate in Media Studies at the University of Oregon&rsquo;s School of Journalism and Communication. My research interests include nation branding, anthropology of the state, and &ldquo;globalization&rdquo;.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Debate: I am in my third year of coaching at the U of O&rsquo;s Parliamentary Debate/Policy Debate program. I also direct our fledgling IE program. As a competitor, I spent 3 years in the NPTE/NPDA circuit, 2 of which were spent debating for the University of the Pacific in Parliamentary Debate and NFA-LD.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Judging: This will be my third NPTE/NPDA, and the conclusion of my third season of judging.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Topic Areas: I was heavily involved in the research of all 3 topic-areas, though am most versed in science/technology and the Latin America resolutions. I am comfortable evaluating deep, well-researched debates on all resolutions.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Global</p> <p>I believe hard, educational debate is good debate. I like to see strong research ethics, clash, and a willingness to engage a variety of methods and arguments. I do not like to see blips, claims, lies, and attitudes that seek to exclude. I recognize the participatory disparities in this activity &ndash; the diminishing voice of representation from 2-year institutions and the ever present absence of debaters of color &ndash; and tend to approach rounds with the kind of ferocious open-mindedness that will allow as many people to participate as possible.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Local</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I have no hang-ups about voting for any &lsquo;type&rsquo; of argument, regardless of manner of delivery or genre of argument. I have voted for and against all arguments.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Rate of delivery is rarely a problem; I keep a neat flow and will audible for clarity with little hesitation if needed. IMO, ideal rate of delivery is determined by what is most conducive to the pedagogic value of the round.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Order of operations (unless convinced otherwise): (1) framework/theoretical legitimacy, (2) solvency or &ldquo;solvency&rdquo;, depending on nature of advocacy and (3) impact comparison.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I will not vote for an argument I do not understand. I am perfectly comfortable disregarding arguments that fail to meet a basic threshold of sense and explanation.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Theory is rarely a reason to reject the team, rejecting the argument should solve your impact.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->6&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Permutations are a demonstration of non-competitiveness, not an advocacy.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->7&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Framework is not a voting issue &ndash; that does not make sense to me.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->8&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->&ldquo;No warrant&rdquo; is an observation, not an argument. Gee wiz, I can flow too.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->9&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->More often then not, link controls the direction of the link. I am not compelled by uniqueness &lsquo;dumps; with no cohesion of comparative claims.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->10&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I do not &lsquo;believe&rsquo; in any theory argument. I enjoy watching multiple conditional negative advocacies, and do not consider counterplans that rely on normal means for competition to be &lsquo;cheating&rsquo;. That&rsquo;s silly.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->11&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I don&rsquo;t really understand what the distinction most teams draw between &lsquo;potential&rsquo; or &lsquo;articulated&rsquo; abuse on procedurals, and rarely see a demonstration of abuse at all, so don&rsquo;t care about how &lsquo;articulated&rsquo; your abuse is. This ought to be resolved via impact calculus.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->12&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I don&rsquo;t believe fairness takes primacy. I don&rsquo;t believe being topical entitles you to anything. I believe that should be debated and resolved in round.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->13&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Terminal defense exists and I will evaluate it.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->14&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I will not vote on an argument as &ldquo;dropped&rdquo; if it is intuitively answered by another argument in a speech.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->15&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I don&rsquo;t care if you call points of order, but will only allow 1 response before I deliberate.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->16&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Don&rsquo;t split the block.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Flowing</p> <p>I flow Kritiks on one sheet of paper, flow the LOR on its own sheet of paper, and tend to flow answers/MG/MOC arguments next to where I am directed to do so. I am a flow-centric critic as I find this helps me check subjective bias, so will not disregard the flow unless you provide a compelling reason to do so.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>RFDs</p> <p>This is NPTE, so I believe you can all flow and find explaining the nature and weight of every single argument that was conceived of during the debate to be a waste of time. I will do my best to clearly explain why I evaluated key arguments that helped resolve the debate for me the way that it did. If you would like to me reflect on how I felt about a certain argument, or why certain arguments did not weigh into my decision, the onus is on you to ask.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Theory</p> <p>You should strive to create as much of a distinction as possible between your opponents&rsquo; and your interpretation; case lists that demonstrate the nature and depth of the ground at stake are helpful. I err on competing interpretations absent being told otherwise, and will vote on the interpretation that provides the most offensive justification in its defense. I don&rsquo;t care how little your interpretation/violation relates to the topic, and have no gut-checks on fairness and theft of ground. I don&rsquo;t enjoy watching asinine debates, so just ask questions for clarification and avoid the spec debate entirely.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Disads</p> <p>Fine, no qualms.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Kritiks</p> <p>Fine, no qualms. Although, don&rsquo;t assume I&rsquo;ve read, agree with, or care about your authors.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Counterplans</p> <p>Fine, no qualms.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Speaker Points</p> <p>I am ambivalent to the practice of allocating speaker points. I have no problem with giving straight 28s. I usually range from 28-29, and will hand out a 30 every couple of tournaments if I see a particularly clever deployment of strategy.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I reserve the right to:</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Ask for any and all texts after the round.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Audible when something is unclear.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Deliberate on all points of order, even on a panel.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Deduct from speaker points if your language is offensive.</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Deduct from speaker points if you have nothing interesting to say besides generics on a given topic area; this is nationals, do research.&nbsp;</p> <!--EndFragment-->


Sherris Minor - PLNU

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mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} </style> <![endif]--> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right:-.5in;mso-pagination:none;mso-layout-grid-align: none;text-autospace:none"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;; mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;">Sherris Minor- PLNU</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right:-.5in;mso-pagination:none;mso-layout-grid-align: none;text-autospace:none"> &nbsp;<span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;; mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;">I have been in and out of debate since 2003. I competed in parli for 3 years and have since coached parli/ LD for 4 years, this is my 3<sup>rd</sup> year coaching since I came back to the activity in 2010. My background is in political science, anthropology and philosophy. My current course of study is in conflict management (specifically conflict transformation) and the rebuilding process through a critical gender lens.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes">&nbsp; </span>I have judged over 100 rounds of parliamentary debate this year and about 60 rounds of LD debate. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;; mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;">&nbsp;</span><span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">I would consider myself a flow critic I will listen to any round you would prefer to have.&nbsp;&nbsp;Unless told otherwise I will default to a net benefits paradigm.&nbsp;&nbsp;Framework is important to me because it sets up how you want me to evaluate the round and should help you prioritize what arguments you are winning and why that means I vote for you. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Rate of delivery doesn&rsquo;t really matter to me. Most of the time I can keep up with the arguments coming from the speaker. I will yell slow down if it does become an issue. <span style="mso-spacerun:yes">&nbsp;</span>However, The use of speed should not preclude you from making an actual argument. I shouldn&rsquo;t have to wait until the LOR/ PMR to know how your arguments function.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">Clarity is a separate issue for me. This goes for both speaking and what is said. If I cant hear you because you are mumbling and I am missing things on my flow I will say clear.&nbsp;&nbsp;If you are saying a ton of tag lines without warrants you will not win my ballot</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Procedurals are awesome, but I do not vote on potential abuse. Please have a clear interpretation. I default to competing interpretations unless I am told otherwise. I don&rsquo;t vote on RVI&rsquo;s especially if the justification for it on T is &ldquo;time suck they abused us.&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;I think critical discussions are great within the context of debate. That being said you need to justify your framework for evaluating the round, and tell me how I vote using this framework. You need to explain your links don&rsquo;t just say they link tell me how they link/ why that link is important. These discussions tend to get very convoluted it is your job to clearly explain your argument(s), I shouldn&rsquo;t need an interpreter to understand what your k says. &nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Counter plans are a great strategy tool but they should be competitive and have some sort of net benefit to them beyond this doesn&rsquo;t link to the disad. Don&rsquo;t kick an unconditional counterplan in front of me I will not vote for you. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Politics is a good strategy but please try to use a true or at least plausible scenario.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Theory is awesome please explain to me why your theory/ interpretation of theory means you win the debate don&rsquo;t just blip out any perm is severance/ or intrinsic. This is one not true but also doesn&rsquo;t explain how your theory works in the context of this debate.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes">&nbsp; </span>I believe all perms need to have a text. This helps to show me in a textual sense how your perm theory functions. Also it provides something stable in the round that I can look at when I am making a decision. I think for the most part that Perms are a test of competition and not an advocacy but if you have a compelling reason why your perm could be the latter please run it.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;I believe the debate should be smaller by the end of the round don&rsquo;t be afraid to kick arguments. Issue selection is great because you can get more in depth on arguments you think you are winning. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Warrants for your claims are awesome because that means your arguments are not just tag lines. I will not fill in the blanks for you so please give a clear tag and warrant for why you argument is true. This is critical in debates with competing uniqueness stories where the objective is for me to decide which scenario is the most true. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Impact calculus and prioritization are important to me. It allows you to tell me where to vote and why I look there before I look at other arguments. Don&rsquo;t expect me to do the work for you, you set the framework for the round I expect you to tell me how I vote in the world of your framework. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri;mso-bidi-font-family:&quot;Times New Roman&quot;;color:black">&nbsp;Overall, if you do the work you should be able to win my ballot. I don&rsquo;t care what you run.&nbsp;&nbsp;I expect that your k, ad, disad has impacts and I want you to tell me how I weight them at the end of the round. Don&rsquo;t be afraid to collapse to arguments you are winning, and be clear in what your case is and how it functions in the round.&nbsp;&nbsp;If there is anything I missed please feel free to ask. </span></p>


Simone Walter - WWU

n/a


Skip Rutledge - PLNU

<h1>Skip Rutledge&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Point Loma Nazarene University</h1> <p>25 +/- years judging debate&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14+ years judging NPDA Parliamentary</p> <p>6 +/- years as a competitor in policy debate (college and high school)</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Academic Debate Background:</strong> Competed 6 years +/- in team policy in High School and College (NDT at Claremont). Then coached and judged at the high school level for a number of years as a part time volunteer.&nbsp; Returned to academia and have coached since 1989 in CEDA, we switched to Parli in about 1995. In addition to coaching teams and judging at tournaments I have been active in NPDA and helped at Parli Summer Workshops to keep fresh and abreast of new ideas.&nbsp; I have also tried to contribute conference papers and a few journal articles on debate.&nbsp; I love well reasoned and supported theory arguments where debaters are aware of the foundational issues and prior research on topic.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Judging Paradigm:</strong> For lack of a better term, I embrace what I know of as the Argumentation Critic paradigm, but certainly not to the exclusion of appreciating strong delivery skills.&nbsp; I encourage fewer, well-developed arguments with clear claims, reasonable warrants, and strong evidentiary support to back up those warrants, rather than the shotgun method of throwing lots of claims out, hoping something slips through the others&rsquo; defense.&nbsp; That probably makes me more of a big picture critic, rather than one that gets fixated on the minutia. I do recognize too, that big pictures can be defined by small brushstrokes, or that details can count heavily in proving big arguments. I don&rsquo;t hold Parli case/plans to the same level of proof that I might in CEDA/NDT since they are constructed in 15 minutes without direct access to deep research, so spec arguments are not very compelling in many cases.&nbsp; Disadvantages, solvency arguments, or counter-plans share the same burden of proof that the government does. Impacts are very important, but the establishing the links are critical.</p> <p>Debaters should be well read in current events, philosophy and especially political philosophy.&nbsp; Poorly constructed arguments and/or blatant misstatements will not prevail just because someone happens to not respond to them.&nbsp; While I attempt to minimize intervention, claims like &ldquo;200 million Americans a year are dying of AIDS&rdquo; does not become true just because it might be dropped (taken from an actual round).&nbsp; I think your word is your bond.&nbsp; If you say it with conviction, you are attesting that it is true.&nbsp; If you are not quite certain, it is preferable to frame a claim in that manner.&nbsp; The prohibition on reading evidence in a round is not carte blanche to make up whatever unsubstantiated claims you think may advance your arguments.</p> <p>I enjoy case clash, smart arguments, exposing logical fallacies, using humor, etc. . .&nbsp; I dislike rudeness, overly quick delivery, or presenting counter warrants rather than engaging case straight up.&nbsp; I will try to make the decision based the content of the arguments and also rely on delivery for determining speaker points.&nbsp; It is not uncommon for me to give low point wins.&nbsp;</p> <p>I also think it is the debaters&rsquo; job to debate the resolution, not my own views on styles of debate I prefer to hear.&nbsp; If a resolution has strong value implications, please debate it as such. Likewise if there is a strong policy slant, debate it as such.&nbsp; Additionally, I do not feel that there is only one way to debate.&nbsp; I will not try to implement unwritten rules such as the Government must argue for a change in the status quo.&nbsp; They certainly should if the resolution requires it, but may not have to if it does not.&nbsp; I think the resolution is key to the debate.&nbsp; This does not negate Kritiks. It invites sound logic and framing of Kritiks and alternatives.</p> <p>I do have some a priori biases.&nbsp; I believe the resolution is what is being debated. That has implications on counter plans.&nbsp; My a priori bias is that they should not be topical and should be competitive.&nbsp; Just because the negative team finds another, perhaps even &ldquo;better way&rdquo; than the affirmative chose, to prove the resolution is true, does not seem to me to automatically warrant a negative ballot. I am though open to good theory debates, You should first know my beginning basis of understanding on this issue.&nbsp; And although I enjoyed debating in NDT and CEDA, I think the speed of delivery in that format was built around the need to read evidence and specific research to back up the claims and warrants.&nbsp; The absence of such evidence reading in NPDA should invite more considerate and slower argument analysis, not provide opportunities to shotgun out many more, less developed arguments.&nbsp; I believe the reason for not allowing researched evidence briefs to be read in this particular format of debate was to encourage public focused debate, which implies a slower rate of delivery and genuine consideration of case.&nbsp; The gamey technique of negatives throwing out lots of flak, or obfuscating issues to throw off governments time use, only to collapse to a few key arguments, does not seem to advance strong argumentation development, a fair testing of the resolution, or solid speaking skills..</p>


Steve Doubledee - Washburn

<p><em>Debate is a game of strategy and persuasion. Those who can strike the perfect balance between these two will always win my ballot.</em></p> <p><strong>Things I prefer...</strong><br /> 1.I prefer debaters embrace the topic... Topic specific Aff, DA, K, CP, Politics-(specific links), Case, T, Specs etc...are all appreciated. I also understand sometimes you have to run a critical aff via poor ground for the Aff.If you like running identity based arguments I am probably not the judge for you but I will listen.<br /> 2.I prefer debaters give impact analysis via timeframe, probability, and magnitude. I will always privilege high probability small impacts over low probability big impacts.<br /> 3.I prefer debaters not attempt to speak at a rate they cannot handle.</p> <p><strong>Things I demand...</strong><br /> 1.I want a written copy of all texts Plan, CP, Alts, Perms etc... if overly complicated...if plan is the rez then no need.<br /> 2.Be kind to each other. If you are rude it will hurt your speaker points. I am not a big fan of cursing in debate rounds.</p> <p>Theory thoughts...All theory arguments are fine. Below is my only &quot;theory pet peeve&quot;.</p> <p>Conditional strategies are fine but should be justified through the lens of Aff/Neg flex. So many times debaters want to list off all the advantages of conditional strats but fail to justify why they deserve the right to conditionality in the first place---Aff/Neg flex is how you do so. If the Aff has high flex--(meaning a lot of possible Affs, bidirectional resolution etc...) then the Neg probably has some good justifications for why they need the reciprocal right of conditionality to counter the Aff&#39;s use of parametrics.. If the Aff has low flex--(meaning one possible Aff) then the Neg probably will have a harder time justifying why they should have the right to conditionality....Seems like a PIC would be better in this instance.</p> <p>peace<br /> dd</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Steve Bonner - UWash

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Name: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Steve&nbsp; Bonner&nbsp;</p> <p>School: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;University of Washington</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Section 1: General Information</p> <p>Please begin by explaining what you think is the relevant information about your approach to judging that will best assist the debaters you are judge debate in front of you. Please be specific and clear. Judges who write philosophies that are not clear will be asked to rewrite them. Judges who do not rewrite them may be fined or not allowed to judge/cover teams at the NPTE.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The most important thing about debating in front of me is to know that I try to vote exactly as I&rsquo;m told. Please take time in the rebuttals to explain which arguments matter and why. I&rsquo;m open to pretty much any framework for debate.&nbsp; Just please tell me which one I should use and how arguments should be weighed. Please clearly compare arguments and how they interact. The team that does a better job of that will normally get my ballot. I&rsquo;ll vote for the most probable arguments if I&rsquo;m not told to otherwise.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Section 2: Specific Inquiries</p> <p>Please describe your approach to the following.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->1.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Speaker points (what is your typical speaker point range or average speaker points given)?</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I normally give 26-29 with the majority being 27s. Normally give one 28 or 29 each round.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->2.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->How do you approach critically framed arguments? Can affirmatives run critical arguments? Can critical arguments be &ldquo;contradictory&rdquo; with other negative positions?</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Critical arguments are just like any other argument, I will vote for them if they are well argued and make sense. I am ok with Critical Aff&rsquo;s but keep in mind that you still have to win Topicality. (unless of course you run your K topically) Contradictory arguments are only a problem if the opposing team makes them a problem. If you run a performance or rhetoric based criticism, you should probably not be contradictory, but only because it guts your solvency. Though if the other side doesn&rsquo;t make the argument, I won&rsquo;t make it for them. I really like good K&rsquo;s (especially ones that are relevant to the topic and function in a Policy/Fiat world) BUT I really dislike bad K&rsquo;s.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->3.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Performance based arguments&hellip;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I haven&rsquo;t seen any of these done well, but if I see one, I can think of no reason I wouldn&rsquo;t vote for it.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->4.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Topicality. What do you require to vote on topicality? Is in-round abuse necessary? Do you require competing interpretations?</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->To vote on T I only need arguments for why I should. I think that T&rsquo;s need frameworks so that I know what to do with them. I guess I would say that my default way of resolving them is to decide if the Aff is so abusive that a fair round was impossible. I am more than happy to dump that framework and adopt any that either team makes.&nbsp; In round abuse is not necessary to get a ballot, but you need to give me some reason to vote for the T. In-Round abuse, Prep skew, Lost DA&rsquo;s and CPs, &nbsp;and such are all good reasons to vote for a T, but not the only ones.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->5.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Counterplans -- PICs good or bad? Should opp identify the status of the counterplan? Perms -- textual competition ok? functional competition?</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->I am open to all kinds of CP&rsquo;s and all the Theory arguments for why they are good or bad. PICs are fine, but I&rsquo;d vote for a theory position that claims they are not. Same with Agent CP&rsquo;s, Timeframe CP&rsquo;s, etc. Fair warning though, it would be pretty easy to win that Delay CP&rsquo;s are abusive.&nbsp; As for identifying status, competition etc, I think it is a good idea and it makes for better debate, but not a must. I&rsquo;ll vote however I&rsquo;m told to.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->6.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Is it acceptable for teams to share their flowed arguments with each other during the round (not just their plans)</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->Yes. Just keep in mind that I won&rsquo;t be seeing them.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->7.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->In the absence of debaters&#39; clearly won arguments to the contrary, what is the order of evaluation that you will use in coming to a decision (e.g. do procedural issues like topicality precede kritiks which in turn precede cost-benefit analysis of advantages/disadvantages, or do you use some other ordering?)?</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE tell me how to vote. I hate making decisions. Make them for me. But if I have to, I first would vote anywhere someone says &ldquo;A priori&rdquo; or &ldquo;most important argument in the round&rdquo;. If there are multiple I guess the order would be Theory, K&rsquo;s, High Probability Impacts and then High Magnitude Impacts.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->8.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->How do you weight arguments when they are not explicitly weighed by the debaters or when weighting claims are diametrically opposed? How do you compare abstract impacts (i.e. &quot;dehumanization&quot;) against concrete impacts (i.e. &quot;one million deaths&quot;)?</p> <p><!--[if !supportLists]-->a.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!--[endif]-->If arguments are not compared at all, then the only way to compare them is to intervene. I don&rsquo;t like doing that. I read a lot and if forced to I will use the things I know to figure out which argument should carry more weight. Please don&rsquo;t make me do that. My bias for weighing arguments is toward more probable impacts. If I have to weigh Dehum v Death, I slightly lean toward Dehum, but again, I&rsquo;ll err on the side of probability.</p>


Than Hedman - CU

<p>I&rsquo;ve been increasingly out of the game, so I know I&rsquo;m an unknown quantity. I hope I judge debates most like Will Van Treuren, Jon McCabe and Corey Freivogel, so you are likely to do well if you debate like you would in front of them.</p> <p>My flow is much faster since I switched to a computer, but I&#39;m still the slowness. Repeating and/or reading your interpretations slowly on theory is necessary in front of me. Slowing down or inflecting to emphasize key warrants or arguments is a good idea in general but especially in front of me.<br /> <br /> &nbsp;I default to LOC theory being &quot;a priori&quot; and all theory being evaluated on competing interpretations. I definitely don&#39;t need articulated abuse on T. On spec, you should have either asked the question or have a reason you couldn&#39;t, or I&#39;m disinclined to vote for you. Contextualizing standards to the actual round in question makes me inclined to vote for you. You probably need to take a question in each constructive speech if it&#39;s asked of you. I think multiple conditional advocacies are bad in parli, but I&#39;m open-minded.<br /> <br /> I value well-warranted defense more than most critics. I believe terminal defense exists--uniqueness alone is like thermodynamics alone: diamonds are theoretically less stable than graphite, but they aren&#39;t turning into graphite* because there&#39;s no easy pathway for that to occur.<br /> <br /> I have a troubled relationship with the K. I am often ideologically sympathetic to the K but wary of ignoring the PMC and unable to see a relevant difference between the &quot;realness&quot; of the plan and alt. I am also as far from hip to the critical literature as one can get. The more esoteric your K the less likely I am to vote for it.<br /> <br /> I believe, above all, in engagement. Spreading out a team not remotely on your level leaves me bored and frustrated. How will young/new/outside debaters learn if they are never able to meaningfully participate in rounds? I will reward teams for slowing down to engage their opponents. Similarly, I will be angry if you don&#39;t react to a &quot;clear&quot; from the other team. If this happens, you should probably go back and address your last argument, since I may have missed it too.<br /> <br /> I will punish scientific claims that are patently false (as opposed to those that are a subject of current debate). This is somewhat true in other areas, but since I&#39;m less confident there you have more leeway, probably. I don&#39;t think I could intervene in a decision on this basis, but I would probably give your opponent&#39;s arguments a lot more weight if you are blatantly wrong and may even drop your speaks significantly. I&#39;m not Martin Harris, but I lean his way in terms of the intervention/facts debate.<br /> <br /> I default to extinction being the worst, though I&#39;m open on that question. Vague notions of dehumanization leave me cold.<br /> <br /> *at any appreciable rate</p>


Thomas McCloskey - SWC

n/a


Tiffany Dykstra - Texas Tech

n/a


Tim Milosch - Biola


Tim Brooks - Jewell


Tom Proctor - UCLA


Tom Schally - Oregon

<p><strong>Schally Doctrine</strong></p> <p><strong>TL;DR Version (NPTE &#39;13)</strong></p> <p>I&#39;ve been told this is my year to be most preferred critic, so I&#39;ll keep this brief.</p> <p>Coach at Oregon 4 years parli/policy. I make an effort to thoughtfully evaluate and reward good debate, and help you improve it. I expect a lot but if you want your hard work rewarded then I am a probably a good critic to prefer. Thanks for reading. Since no one is tabula rasa, here are some of the things that are on my tabula:<br /> <br /> &bull; In front of me you are almost always better off doing what you do well rather than attempting to cater to my partiality. You want to read two counterplans? Make it rain. Read a poem? Frost me.<br /> <br /> &bull; I will not vote on an argument as &ldquo;dropped&rdquo; if it is intuitively answered by another argument in a speech.<br /> <br /> &bull; I am perfectly comfortable passing judgment. If an argument does not rise to a minimum threshold of sense and/or explanation, I will disregard it.<br /> <br /> &bull; Debate is a communication activity and good debaters recognize that fact &ndash; time pressures and all &ndash; they can afford to explain, be funny, and identify failures and correct them.<br /> <br /> &bull; Rule 1 of winning debates is control the frame: is conditionality good/bad to be decided on education or fairness, is timeframe or magnitude more important, is social welfare or maximizing liberty more important? . . . These meta-level comparisons, or arguments that resolve arguments, are more important than smaller line-by-line issues in 11 out of 10 debates.<br /> <br /> &bull; I like jokes. Even mean jokes, but not cruel jokes. Actually, even most cruel jokes. But only if everyone can agree with that they are jokes. How do you know? Social skills. It&#39;s a matter of risk/reward.<br /> <br /> I enjoy competitive debates that illustrate that this is a collegial activity. This activity is very intense, but recognize that everyone present feels the same pressures. Enjoy what you do. I suppose that honor is a bourgeoisie value, but I am a supporter.<br /> <br /> <strong>&nbsp;</strong><strong>STOP HERE! </strong>You&#39;re better off spending your time researching, but if you&#39;d like to proceed, here&#39;s last year&#39;s NPTE philosophy. 2012 NPTE: <a href="http://www.net-benefits.net/showpost.php?p=233088&amp;postcount=3" target="_blank">http://www.net-benefits.net/showpost...88&amp;postcount=3</a></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Schally Doctrine</strong></p> <p><strong>NPTE 2012 Director&rsquo;s Cut</strong></p> <p><strong>&nbsp;</strong></p> <p>Even the best classic works occasionally require modernization to match the times, yet other observations simply grow finer with time. So, here&rsquo;s the new update everyone, thanks for reading.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>E-harmony Blurb:</strong> This is not a game that someone wins, but rather a form of play that is successful the more people get to play, and the longer the game is kept going. I approach judging as a constant challenge for personal betterment and make a genuine effort to thoughtfully evaluate and reward good debate and help you improve it. I want to be preferred at tournaments and see the very best debates. I think that debate is unquestionably one of the best games ever crafted and embrace its eccentricities with a fair amount of jest; yet recognize its value is determined by our collective expectations and willingness to be challenged. If you demand a lot from yourself and want your hard work and practice rewarded, then I am a probably a good critic for your to prefer.<br /> <br /> <strong>Debate/Academic Pedigree:</strong> I am in my third year of coaching and judging both policy and parliamentary debate for Oregon. I have judged at approximately 12 parli and 5 policy tournaments this season and rarely get a break. I competed for three years at Western Kentucky University (don&rsquo;t read into it) in both NPTE/NPDA Parliamentary and NFA Lincoln-Douglas debate (strike two, I know). I also competed in CEDA/NDT as a freshman with Macalester College. As an undergraduate I studied political science (mostly comparative and international relations) and gender studies/philosophy. Now as a graduate student at the University of Oregon, I study public policy and my major research areas include ethical philosophy, security studies, and environmental issues.</p> <p><strong>About This Philosophy:</strong> Proceeding with the adage, &ldquo;the only bad judging philosophy is a dishonest one,&rdquo; I have made a noteworthy effort to reveal my known predispositions. Of course, (requisite judge philosophy qualifier ahead) these are purely my opinions and I can be dissuaded from them unless explicitly noted. Since no one is tabula rasa, here are some of the things that are on my tabula. Read and then get back to researching.</p> <p><strong>GLOBAL THOUGHTS: </strong><br /> <br /> &bull; In front of me you are almost always better off doing what you do well rather than attempting to cater to my partiality. You want to read two counterplans? Make it rain. Read a poem? Frost me.</p> <p>&bull; I will not vote on an argument as &ldquo;dropped&rdquo; if it is intuitively answered by another argument in a speech.</p> <p>&bull; I am perfectly comfortable passing judgment. If an argument does not rise to a minimum threshold of sense and/or explanation, I will disregard it.<br /> <br /> &bull; Debate is a communication activity and good debaters recognize that fact &ndash; time pressures and all &ndash; they can afford to explain, be funny, and identify communication failures and correct them.</p> <p>The Schally Doctrine addresses my musings and jest on substantive argument categories first and then matters of debate practice follow.</p> <p>Substantive Debate Issues:</p> <p>Rule number 1 of winning debates is control the frame: is conditionality good/bad to be decided on education or fairness, is timeframe or magnitude more important, is social welfare or maximizing liberty more important? . . . These meta-level comparisons, or arguments that resolve arguments, are more important than smaller line-by-line issues in 11 out of 10 debates. If you control the frame, you will almost invariably win.</p> <p><strong>CRITIQUES:</strong> Providing a clear and persuasive explanation of your argument is vastly more important than advertising your mastery of a cultural studies vocab list. People seem to often lose sight of the fact that critiques are just arguments, so don&rsquo;t strive to mystify your argument on either side. Don&rsquo;t assume that I have read and/or understand your author(s)&mdash;this is generally a problem in K debates&mdash;where people assume that terms are packed with implicit meaning. Teams are usually better off attempting to engage the kritik than spewing down a list of &ldquo;pomo ain&rsquo;t good.&rdquo; I would rather listen to smart analytical arguments than the standard curriculum of &ldquo;not fair&rdquo; and &ldquo; policy/realism good&rdquo;.</p> <p>-Tips for Neg &ndash; Kritiks should typically provide an explanatory framework for evaluating the world or advocacy in a manner that deviates from the framework assumed by the other team. I am unimpressed by frameworks that seek to inflate the relevance of the Kritik by excluding the Aff. Kritiks should not literally exclude other impacts, but rather provide a specific mechanism for evaluating and prioritizing different types of impact claims and/or contains implications that logically make other impacts non-existent or irrelevant.<br /> Framework &ndash; Framework debates are much like theory debates to me. The explanation of your position on what debate should be, and the consequences to debate of a particular practice or position are just as important as winning specific claims. If you want to debate about debate, then you need to articulate an impact statement about what debate should be. That being said, I&rsquo;ve voted both ways on most framework debates, so you should defend the debate practices that you feel most comfortable defending, and not worry about my views of debate practices.<br /> -Critical Affirmatives - I am inclined to believe that affirmatives should be tied to a topical advocacy statement. Beyond that I have no evident presumptions about critical arguments that are not equally true of the negative.<br /> -Contradictory/Conditional K&rsquo;s &ndash; Although there are obvious exceptions, critiquing the thinking or representations of an advocacy do not seem exclusive with also questioning its political consequences (to me). An idea can be wrong for relying on faulty assumptions, making wrongful conclusions, or both. Similarly, it is possible to have both ethical and pragmatic objections to particular action. I can be convinced that conditional K&rsquo;s are bad, but do not begin thinking they are any worse than a counterplan. -Performance &ndash; I don&rsquo;t see a lot of performance in parli and when I have it was done haphazardly and mostly uninspired. I am happy to judge performance debates, but would like for the performance to be purposeful; that makes or enhances a merited argument. If you deploy an argument and debate it then you can definitely pref me, but if your intention is to be ambiguous and unhelpful with the hope that I will conjure an explanation of your argument and reason it beats the other team, you may want to stick to getting Cheesewright&rsquo;s ballot.<br /> <br /> <strong>TOPICALITY:</strong> Obviously topicality is a question of competing interpretations, but it seems just as apparent to me that if the affirmative wins that their interpretation solves the impact to topicality i.e. fairness or education, then there is no compelling reason to vote negative. So, if you win that your interpretation is marginally better in a relatively unimportant way, then you must justify why it is that I should reward you with the ballot. Within this framework if you do not &ldquo;meet&rdquo; any interpretation in the round then it is difficult to vote for you because you have not provided a justification for how you affirm the topic, so offer a counter-interpretation. Too often debaters neglect the &ldquo;impact&rdquo; of your interpretation and what their world of debate looks like, so get with it.</p> <p>-Topicality intuitively precedes consideration of the merits of the affirmative advocacy assuming no effort is made to change the conventional framing of these arguments (if T isn&rsquo;t first, it&rsquo;s last, right?). This principle does not apply to non-topicality arguments such as specification relative to theory, etc.<br /> -T is not genocide&mdash;however, &ldquo;exclusion&rdquo; and similar impacts can be good reasons to prefer one interpretation over another.<br /> <br /> <strong>COUNTERPLANS:</strong> I think that the &ldquo;gold standard&rdquo; for counterplan legitimacy is specific solvency. Obviously, the necessary degree of specificity is a matter of interpretation, but, like good art, you know it when you see it. I tend to believe that counterplans that focus the debate on substantial elements of the plan are good for debate and counterplans that rely on &lsquo;normal means&rsquo; for competition are not. Many of the assumptions about aff bias in choosing their case and having full/infinite prep are almost always untrue in parli&rsquo;s current topic area =&gt; resolution procedure, so make theory forum-specific. I rarely see teams creatively counterplan away affirmative advantages or generate uniqueness and wish this happened more often.</p> <p>LOC Theory &ndash; I think that negative teams benefit greatly by including a theoretical defense of their counterplan in the LOC, otherwise the debate starts in the MG and I often have a difficult time figuring out how to reconcile new&rsquo;ish PMR impact comparisons on these theory debates.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; Legitimacy &ndash; As a general guideline, I think CP&rsquo;s shouldn&rsquo;t contain a world where the entire plan could happen.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I am skeptical of delay, consult, small exclusion PICs of things unqualified by the plan.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Competition &ndash; I do not think that anything is &ldquo;implied&rdquo; by the plan. I prefer that counterplans compete both textually and functionally, however I can easily be made to favor solely functional competition. BTW, textual competition means a counterplan is competitive based off of something explicitly in the text of the plan. It does not mean what most debaters say it does in rounds&hellip;..(IE excluding a word counts)</p> <p><strong>DISADVANTAGES:</strong> In assessing risk I tend belong to the &lsquo;link first&rsquo; school of thought regarding disadvantages. To clarify, I find that if a disad is extremely unique then it obviously requires a high magnitude of a link to trigger the impact, but on the converse, if a disad is brink&rsquo;ish then the neg has to win a high magnitude of a link to distinguish the plan from the conditions that created the brink. In either case, the question is the degree to which the aff causes the link. Uniqueness is, of course, very important however I find &ldquo;we control uniqueness&rdquo; to be code for &ldquo;our link is terrible.&rdquo; I do not believe in &ldquo;1% of a link&rdquo; and I am comfortable saying that there is not one, you should win your link and then you may assess risk of an impact. I think that if you &ldquo;link turn&rdquo; a disad and control the net-direction of the link but have no uniqueness answers that the risk of the disad is probably still zero. I think that intelligent defensive answers are under-utilized in most debates that I watch.</p> <p><strong>THEORY:</strong> Does topic education outweigh analytic/process driven education? Does &lsquo;judge intervention&rsquo; have a unique impact in relation to other theory impacts? You should answer these questions. I am likely to assume that rejecting the argument solves your impact, unless persuaded otherwise. I try my best to check my biases at the door, just recognize that some theoretical arguments make more sense (to me) than do others. Arbitrary interpretations are one of the stupidest trends in debate right now. If your interpretation of debate theory is wholly arbitrary and made up it doesn&rsquo;t seem very useful for me to uphold it as some new norm and reject the other team. I am likely to believe that plans that fiat a number of actors (especially private) are abusive. The argument that &ldquo;the aff will be vetoed/rolled back by the Pres or Congress&rdquo; is laughable. By this I mean that, on occasion, when I am depressed, I think about this argument, and I laugh out loud. Specification arguments may be dismissed with maximum flippancy.</p> <p><strong>IMPACTS:</strong> Lately, I think that impact comparison is one of the least sophisticated levels of analysis in most debates that I watch, which is very unfortunate. I welcome creative ways of framing the importance of differing impacts and would like to see rebuttals employ more &ldquo;tiebreaker&rdquo; arguments.</p> <p>Defense &ndash; Smart defensive arguments are an invaluable part of any good impact debate. Impact defense is severely underrated, especially against particularly silly impacts. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Silly Impact Turns &ndash; Arguments deemed &ldquo;counterintuitive&rdquo; are welcome, but before unloading your early 90&rsquo;s backfiles you should recognize that most of these arguments are intellectually weak and require some finesse to pull off.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; Buzzwords &ndash; Recent judging has made me irritated with the way any impact other than nuclear war is typically characterized. <em>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s dehumanization, which is the internal-link to all violence,&rdquo;</em> has become a vacuous and lazy stand-in for every non-mass death or systemic impact framing. There are compelling reasons to value/prioritize actions that address racism or poverty, so argue this some integrity. This observation has also led me to make public my following inclinations.<br /> <br /> Things that probably do not negate personhood and/or erase life of meaning:<br /> &bull; making difficult choices<br /> &bull; lacking universal healthcare<br /> &bull; Americans living in conditions that people elsewhere in the world already live in<br /> &bull; abiding by laws or conventions<br /> <br /> Things that probably do negate personhood:<br /> &bull; death<br /> &bull; points of order<br /> &bull; Soulja Boy&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>Debate Practices</p> <p><strong>HUMOR:</strong> I like jokes. Even mean jokes, but not cruel jokes. Actually, even most cruel jokes. But only if everyone can agree with that they are jokes. How do you know? Social skills. I know, not high on debaters&rsquo; list of talents, but it&#39;s a matter of risk/reward. It is refreshing to see debates that illustrate that this is a collegial activity in which all participants dedicate a significant amount of time and effort. In particular:<br /> <br /> StarCraft jokes are good.<br /> Star Wars are better.<br /> Pokemon jokes (except Dewgongs)<br /> Franz Kafka<br /> College sports<br /> Hipsters and PUNS</p> <p><strong>PARLI ODDITIES:</strong></p> <p>Prep &ndash; All materials should have been written in prep time; apparently this is a necessary clarification. Questions &ndash; The &ldquo;protected time&rdquo; rule is outdated and irrelevant to me; you are welcome to accept/decline questions within your speech as you choose.<br /> Points Of Order &ndash; I do not require points of order to be made in order to exclude new arguments, however I understand the strategic utility of them and am unlikely to punish you for using something that is put at your disposal by the rules.<br /> Texts &ndash; I prefer that textual advocacies be written down in a legible and shareable format if you are not going to repeat them in your speech, so that I have a definite form somewhere. I will not however contribute to the proliferation of arbitrary procedurals concerning the &ldquo;right&rdquo; to a written copy of plan or counterplan; it&rsquo;s a courtesy. Demand a copy of &ldquo;perm: do both, perm: do cp&rdquo; or any of the like and receive 26 speakers points. Ask me why and I will write you a text.<br /> Opposition Block &ndash; The LOR does not need to make explicit extensions from the MOC. However, expounding upon certain arguments can affect the relative strength of that argument when I evaluate it. I will also defer to the nuance of argument explanation and comparison offered by the rebuttals. I think that &ldquo;splitting&rdquo; the block is particularly unfair and probably heavily bias. If you want me to &ldquo;box in&rdquo; your opponents, then you should provide a good explanation of what you could not argue and why that was critical. That being said, I do not like sandbagging and I will exert close scrutiny on the rebuttals. Make better arguments and you wont have to be sneaky.<br /> New MG Args &ndash; I&rsquo;m not really one to give the PMR &ldquo;golden answers,&rdquo; especially on the positions that came out new in the MG.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m perfectly willing to evaluate your arguments.&nbsp; Going for something stupid in the PMR on the basis that the negative doesn&rsquo;t get second lines is a bad strategy in front of me.</p> <p><strong>FLOWING:</strong> I keep an excellent and detailed flow. However, winning for me is more about establishing a coherent and well-reasoned explanation of the world rather than extending a specific argument. An argument is not &ldquo;true&rdquo; because it is extended on one sheet of paper if it is logically answered by arguments on another sheet of paper or later on the line by line. In a close debate, I will evaluate the final rebuttal of the team I am voting against on a separate sheet of paper, to make sure I have sufficiently evaluated each argument. I also flow the LOR on a separate sheet.&nbsp; I do a lot of comparisons between the PMR and the LOR.&nbsp;<br /> <br /> I flow every distinct case contention and off-case argument on a single sheet of paper spaced out appropriate to what I expect to need for answers. I typically flow responses to those arguments from top-to-bottom unless explicitly told to do otherwise (and maybe even still because I likely know better). Any attempt to alter this should be purposeful. I will not move back up the page, I will write your next argument in the order it was delivered. For example, if your mg says, &ldquo;framework, perm, aff outweighs&rdquo; I will not move down to the alt to flow your perm and then move back and end up cramming things together. So you should reference arguments by their tag/content and respond to them in a logical order that follows the previous speech. p.s. I sometimes flow permutations on a separate page if I expect that debate to get big (i.e. if it&rsquo;s &ldquo;one-off&rdquo;), but that shouldn&rsquo;t affect anything.</p> <p><strong>DECORUM:</strong> I recognize that this activity is very intense, but try to understand that everyone present feels the same pressures. If you are decisively beating a team (particularly a younger or less successful team), then there&rsquo;s no need to be rude. I suppose that honor is a bourgeoisie value, but I am a supporter.</p> <p><strong>DISCLOSURE:</strong> I welcome post-round discussion&mdash;even if it is confrontational&mdash;it lets me debate again.</p>


Tyler Griffin - Whitman


Will Chamberlain - WWU

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Zach Tschida - Puget Sound


Zach Furste - WWU

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Zach Frasier - WWU

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