Judge Philosophies

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Abigail Watkins - El Camino

<p>Experience: I competed for two years at El Camino College, where I competed at both community college circuit tournaments as well as NPDA/NPTE, and I have been coaching at El Camino for two years.</p> <p>IMPORTANT: If you only take one thing away from my judging philosophy, remember this: please do not read arguments about animal abuse/violence against animals/animal death in front of me. You are one hundred percent guaranteed to give me a panic attack. This is an unfortunate reality of my mental health and something I would happily change if I could. If you are wondering whether or not an argument might delve into this territory, I beg you to exercise caution!</p> <p>Otherwise:</p> <p>SPEED: I am somewhat out of practice flowing absolute top speed so if you&rsquo;re super fast you might want to slow down a bit for me, but overall I should be fine flowing most people&rsquo;s spread, especially on a laptop. I have terrible listening comprehension so if your spread isn&rsquo;t super clear, you definitely want to slow down just to make sure that I understand you.</p> <p>FRAMEWORK: I will default to a net benefits paradigm unless otherwise instructed. I tend to respond best to framework arguments with clear real world warrants to back up your claims.</p> <p>THEORY: I love theory. I default to competing interpretations unless otherwise instructed. Please don&rsquo;t read RVIs in front of me unless the round has entered some weird parallel universe and you really, REALLY think that they&rsquo;re justified.</p> <p>KRITIKS: I like the kritik and I think it can be a valuable tool in the debate. You should probably assume that I don&rsquo;t know anything about the literature. If all things are equal and you&rsquo;re wondering whether or not to go for a DA/CP round or a K round, you might be better off going for a more &ldquo;straight up&rdquo; style in front of me, but I am not predisposed against the K in the slightest.</p> <p>IDENTITY ARGS: I might not be your best judge for this; I feel like they are asking me to insert myself into the round as a judge in a way that I don&rsquo;t always feel comfortable doing. But if this is your strategy in competition, I will do my best to judge these arguments as I would any other. I have certainly voted for them in the past.</p> <p>CONDITIONALITY: I default to unconditionality unless otherwise instructed and I tend to be receptive to arguments that unconditionality is a superior paradigm, but ultimately...I don&rsquo;t care that much.</p> <p>MISC: Economics make little to no sense to me so if it&rsquo;s going to be an econ round...read Marx or be very clear in defining your terms, and don&#39;t rely on me to gutcheck your opponents because it&#39;s just not going to happen. I have horrible nonverbals, and I am sorry about that. It&rsquo;s just how my face is. I understand that when you&rsquo;re going fast, it&rsquo;s easy for your volume level to pick up as well, but I am very noise sensitive so if you can try your best not to yell at me I will appreciate it. Have fun? Have fun.</p>


Alex Cadena - Rio

<p>Background Information:</p> <p>I have 4 years debate experience in Parli. I competed at Rio Hondo Community College in NPDA and IPDA then transferred to the University of Utah and competed in NPDA and IEs. This is my first-year coaching/judging collegiate forensics, and I am a graduate student at CSUN. If me being a first year out is a concern, feel free to strike me.</p> <p>How I evaluate rounds:</p> <p>I find clarity important, make it clear what your argument is and how your impacts are the most important in the round. I like full and completed arguments. Do you have Warrants, Links, Internal Links, and Impacts? If you are running a K, please state the Alternative Twice, it helps me get it down precisely as well as the opposing team. If your K is highly technical, please explain and articulate your argument.</p> <p>Some other comments:</p> <p>Debate is an animal that can bring out a lot of different emotions, please remember that you are competing against humans and treat each other as such. There is no need to reduce our humanity to &ldquo;win a ballot.&rdquo; If you don&rsquo;t care how you win and are willing to treat your opponents poorly. Please strike me, I will not be a critic you want in the back of the room. POI&rsquo;s are good, and remember to call out POOs in the rebuttals.</p>


Andrew Escalante - El Camino


Anthony Cresto - Palomar


Austin Funk - OCC


Brandon West - PLNU

<p>Brandon West &ndash; Point Loma Nazarene University</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I debated with Point Loma all four years of college in Parli and LD debate. I focused mainly on parli and was a national circuit debater.</p> <p>TL;DR &ndash; I&rsquo;m ok with whatever speed and strategy you have at your disposal and simply love a good debate. The only positions I&rsquo;m slightly dispositioned against are identity politics K&rsquo;s because I feel uncomfortable evaluating them typically. Overall, debate is a game, so play it. I&rsquo;m most comfortable in a straight up econ debate, but please run whatever you do best.</p> <p>Speed &ndash; Go as fast as you like. Please don&rsquo;t be abusive if the other team is constantly calling clear. If there is blatant abuse, I am sympathetic to speed procedurals if impacted well. Debate should be accessible to both teams. Don&rsquo;t use it as a tool of exclusion.</p> <p>Procedurals &ndash; Love them. Don&rsquo;t apologize for running a procedural, I think there is just as much education to be had in these debates as any other. Impact your procedural, I&rsquo;m a fan of counter frameworks against kritikal positions.</p> <p>Kritikal positions &ndash; Totally fine. I will say that I have a high threshold for solvency with kritiks. Please explain exactly why you solve the aff and/or your impacts. I&rsquo;m not terribly well-read on a litany of literature. Don&rsquo;t assume I&rsquo;ve read your author. Please don&rsquo;t assume I&rsquo;m liberal/conservative and agree with X position. I really try to distance myself from my opinion and vote on the flow, so I absolutely LOVE impact turns to kritiks. I&rsquo;ll tell you how I evaluate K&rsquo;s. First, does the K solve the aff? If not, does the K advocacy solve the impacts of the K? If so, does the K&rsquo;s impacts outweigh the case impacts? Last, is the offense against the alternative stronger than the offense against the case? Please, please, please, please leverage your case against the K instead of just abandoning your case out of fear.</p> <p>As I said above I don&rsquo;t typically enjoy identity politics debate, and I&rsquo;ll explain in more detail now why. First, I feel that most of these positions, unless expertly done, end up attacking the opponents for their identity and recreating all of the violence they try to solve. Additionally, I have found extreme and tragic irony in the fact that most rounds I have watched where people have been sobbing, felt personally attacked, quit debate, and/or been legitimately a victim of rhetorical violence have been identity politics rounds meant to solve violence against X groups. I find non-identity based kritiks and policy rounds to cause this level of violence a much lower percentage of the time. This is not to say there is not subtle violence against certain groups in policy making, and I welcome you to point these out and propose ways to solve these issues. But often the leverage of identity creates severe ontological violence in-round. I hate seeing these rounds get ugly and I don&rsquo;t enjoy judging them. Second, as a passing-white straight male I am rarely the group discussed in the position. This means that I typically find it difficult and uncomfortable for me to pass a ballot based on a debater&rsquo;s identity while probably linking to all of their impacts both in terms of my identity and in terms of the act of voting for them in and of itself. This is not to say I will never vote for these positions, but I have a low threshold for arguments about why these positions are bad and a low threshold for calling the round if it gets rhetorically violent.</p> <p>Advantages/Disadvantages &ndash; I love a straight up debate. Econ was my thing, so if you&rsquo;re an econ debater I am the judge for you. I do typically lean towards probability over magnitude and find most nuke war scenarios silly, but run whatever scenario you&rsquo;re comfortable with and I&rsquo;ll evaluate it. You need to explain your link scenario and articulate the steps that lead all the way to your terminal impacts.</p> <p>Counterplans &ndash; Love them. Not sure what else to say about this, I leave theory debates about CP&rsquo;s up to the debaters.</p> <p>Politics &ndash; Totally down. However, I don&rsquo;t like really vague tix scenarios or scenarios where one single person magically has the magical ability to unilaterally control the entire bill&rsquo;s passing or not. You don&rsquo;t win tix because you know the name of one senator the other team didn&rsquo;t know, or the other team dropped the hair color of a Congressperson in your links scenario.&nbsp;</p>


Caleb Moore - PLNU

<p><strong>Pronouns: He, Him, His</strong></p> <p><strong>TL;DR: You do you. </strong></p> <p><strong>I competed in four years of high school policy in KS and then 4 years of parli at Point Loma. &nbsp;I believe that it is my job as a critic to adjudicate the round that the debaters want to have without bias; although, I know this is easier said than done, so here are some specific feelings I have about things:</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Delivery/Partner Communication: Speed can have two functions. It can add depth to a debate in a way that positively contributes to the competitive nature of the activity, or it can be used as a tool of exclusion to cheaply win ballots. If it is the former then I am all about it. The latter will lose you a lot of speaks. For partner communication, parli is a partnered activity, as long as there isn&rsquo;t parroting it isn&rsquo;t a problem. I will only flow the argument that the person speaking says. </strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Please read all texts, interps/counter-interps, and perms slowly and twice. If you want to, it would also be helpful to just write me a copy; although, I understand if that takes you away from your flow for too long.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Case: Case debate is tragically underutilized. I am not saying you have to go 8 minutes of case out of the LOC (but hey it&rsquo;s super fun to do that), but teams often don&rsquo;t dedicate enough time to generating offence against the PMC. I think that is a mistake. </strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>The K: I ran the K in about half of my rounds while debating. If this is your preferred strategy, I encourage you to go for it. All I ask is that you don&rsquo;t assume that I know your literature, to be honest I probably don&rsquo;t. I can&rsquo;t vote for a position I don&rsquo;t understand. It is very important to me that you explain exactly how the alternative functions, what a world of the alternative looks like, and how the alternative resolves the links. That means that solvency isn&rsquo;t a good time to just throw out jargon and be vague/generic. On the aff, I feel like K affs are a legitimate strategy. Resolutions often only seek to reform or uphold structures that are oppressive to large populations of people. For this reason, I understand why people feel uncomfortable defending the state; however, don&rsquo;t think that just because I am sympathetic to the importance of the K Aff that I will ignore a well articulate Framework argument. Justify why your framework comes first and why there is not a topical version of the aff you are running.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Performance Arguments: If you want to run a performance based position that&rsquo;s fine, but I don&rsquo;t love positions where the performance itself is the advocacy. If you are running a performance, please give me a concrete advocacy or statement of method to vote for. Someone sharing their narrative, poetry, or performing requires an amount of vulnerability that is not usually present in a debate round. It is important to honor that vulnerability and recognize that their narrative specifically isn&rsquo;t up for debate (like, don&rsquo;t be that person that impact turns a narrative). A narrative can garner some unique solvency but to vote for/against someone on the basis of their narrative and its specific ability to solve feels like a unique form of ontological violence. A concrete advocacy makes the debate about the method and not about the person and both gives the other team access to method based offense and doesn&rsquo;t put the judge in a position where their ballot affirms or denies the ontological existence of a debater.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Topicality: T is fun. Don&rsquo;t be afraid of T. I default to competing interpretations, but am open to other ways to frame the position. I believe that T is always A-priori (in a straight up debate) but I still want you to say it. I don&rsquo;t need articulated abuse but it does make the argument a lot more persuasive.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Theory/Procedurals: I don&rsquo;t have a lot of predispositions on theory. I am up for pretty much any theory you might want to run and should be relatively unbiased when evaluating it. For things like SPECS my threshold is a little bit higher. It becomes harder for me to vote for these arguments if there is no articulated abuse.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>CP&rsquo;s: I understand why cheater CP&rsquo;s are super abusive, but I also think they are really fun. I think it is probably important that a team be able to defend the entirety of their aff, including the timeframe, actor, and each part of the bill, but I also understand how difficult it is to generate offense against these positions. PICS, delay, and consult are all fine to run in front of me, but be ready for the theory debate.</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Christopher Rodriguez - Rio


Dana-Jean Smith - OCC

<p>~~The first affirmative speaker must present a coherent case that addresses the stock issues of the particular debate. The first affirmative speaker must also provide a case that overcomes their prima facie burden and is topical for me to consider further argumentation. The first negative speaker&rsquo;s job is to hold the affirmative accountable for fulfilling their responsibilities structuring a debate. Next, I do take kritiks and procedurals into consideration if they are well-structured and well-justified. Competitors must make both aprioi issues if they would like me to look at implications of reasoning or impacts of violating rules prior to the case when making a decision. Indeed, parliamentary debate resolutions are claims of fact, value, OR policy. Furthermore, I only take developed arguments into consideration. Claims must be backed by reasoning and evidence. Claims must also be linked to the plan, resolution, and or value of a debate. Lastly, speakers should not spread as strategy for decreasing their opponents&rsquo; comprehension of their case. While I can keep up with a fast rate of delivery, speakers must respect their opponents&rsquo; request to clear and or repeat information. If a speaker decides to speed, he or she must provide internal summaries in a normal/conversational rate of delivery.&nbsp;</p>


Delara Gorjian - IVC


Dewi Hokett - Palomar


Douglas Kresse - Fullerton Col


Edwin Tiongson - IVC

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>EDWIN TIONGSON: IRVINE VALLEY COLLEGE</strong></p> <p><strong>Background of the critic: </strong></p> <p>I&#39;m one of the Co-Directors of Forensics at Irvine Valley College. Although I competed in Parli when it was in its infancy stages (95-97), I have been coaching the event since 1999. I&#39;ve been a part of the coaching staff where IVC/SOC won the community college national title at NPDA from 2002-2007. However, I haven&#39;t been to NPDA&rsquo;s national tournament since it was at USAFA in 2008. Lately I&#39;ve been coaching all forensics events, but not so much Parli. When it comes to Parli, I can get novice debaters started and then I would typically hand them off to our more advanced debate coaches: Gary Rybold or Eric Garcia. Regardless, I&#39;ve judged numerous rounds and I consider myself a decent parli critic. &nbsp;Miscellaneous info: I competed in Northern CA for Diablo Valley College &amp; UOP from 1995-1999 in Parli, platforms, and interp. I&rsquo;ve coached at CSUN and IVC in all events in Southern CA since 1999.</p> <p><strong>Approach of the critic to decision-making (for example, adherence to the trichotomy, stock-issues, policymaker, tabula rasa, etc.): </strong></p> <p>I&#39;m more of a stock issues judge or a comparative advantage judge.&nbsp; Either approach is fine. I don&#39;t mind the trichotomy arguments. Make them compelling and worthy of my attention. I do believe that policy topics should be policy rounds. I&#39;m open to making a value or fact round into a policy round as long as it&rsquo;s justified and worthy of my attention. &nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Relative importance of presentation/communication skills to the critic in decision-making: </strong></p> <p>I do enjoy communication skills in a round. Don&#39;t go so fast so that I can&#39;t understand. Please take into consideration if I have to work too hard to flow the round, you&#39;re going too fast. I will yell out clear if I&rsquo;m annoyed.&nbsp; Regardless, humor is a plus and helpful. &ldquo;Sounding pretty&rdquo; will help you with speaker points, but I&rsquo;ve voted on low-point wins before.</p> <p><strong>Relative importance of on-case argumentation to the critic in decision-making: </strong></p> <p>I believe that OPP should make on-case refutations.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t assume the GOV&rsquo;s case is unworthy of your attention. Make sure you don&#39;t simply abandon the on-case positions and run suicide T. I believe that offensive is important but still poke the holes in the GOV&#39;s case.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m open to Topicality and Kritiks but don&rsquo;t put all your eggs in those baskets.</p> <p><strong>Openness to critical/performative styles of debating: </strong></p> <p>I&#39;m not a big fan of performance debate. This is only the case because I have yet to see one. I&#39;m not so open to it and I&#39;m not sure how I&#39;d react. It&#39;s your debate; do what you like but I&#39;m use to watching a non-performance type of a debate.</p> <p><strong>Any additional comments: </strong></p> <p>This season I&rsquo;ve judged zero parli rounds at a tournament (I&rsquo;ve been working the backroom for them) and a handful of practice rounds.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve been working extensively with getting IEs up and running since we have enough debate coaches who have more experience.&nbsp; If you get me as a critic, assume I want the &ldquo;easy out.&rdquo; Tell me where to pull the trigger on voting for the round.&nbsp; All MGs &amp; MOs better maintain the structure; typically it falls apart in those two speeches.&nbsp; Signposting is a must; tell me where you are on the FLOW.&nbsp; All rebuttals better paint that picture and weigh out what I get in &ldquo;OPP-LAND&rdquo; and what I get in &ldquo;GOV-LAND.&rdquo; In other words, paint me a picture.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t time road maps but want them.&nbsp;</p> <p>Ask questions if you want or ask my two students who are here.</p>


Francesca Bishop - El Camino

<p>I had my years of debating; it is now your turn.&nbsp;There are&nbsp;lots of things I believe about debate and the world in general, but&nbsp;I try not&nbsp;to bring them into the round.&nbsp;Thus, if you tell me something, I write it down and assume it true unless it is refuted. That means that you&nbsp;CAN lose a round if you drop one little argument; if you drop&nbsp;a lynchpin argument, or a framework arrgument (where I look first) it could be bad. Although I try to be tabula rasa, there are a couple of exceptions: One is&nbsp;if you tell me to use my ballot as a tool in any way, or ask me to vote on real world impacts.&nbsp;I see this as a demand for intervention based on what I actually believe, therefore I may not vote on arguments that have &quot;won.&quot;&nbsp; A second&nbsp;exception is if you tell me something that I know to be untrue--so&nbsp;please don&#39;t guess or make stuff up.&nbsp;</p> <p>Because I try to base my decision based only on arguments&nbsp;that are made&nbsp;in the round,&nbsp;I don&#39;t assume anything. Therefore, you need to tell me why something matters. For example, don&#39;t expect me to assume climate change is happening or that it&#39;s bad, or for that matter, that nuclear war is bad.&nbsp;Likewise, you don&#39;t have to run only liberal&nbsp;positions. Arguments are just that--arguments. I don&#39;t assume you believe them or care if they are &quot;true.&quot;&nbsp;In general, know that I believe that debate is a game.</p>


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>


Genesis Prizmic - IVC


George Talavera - IVC


Grant Tovmasian - Rio

<p>The most important criteria for me is impartiality. I will avoid interceding on any one&#39;s behalf up to a point.&nbsp; Please remember that although I approach the round as impartial as I can, that does not negate the truth, I still am aware which country I live in and who is the president and killing puppies is wrong (also kicking them, and just violence in general, I frown upon)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I expect all debaters to remain cordial and professional throughout the round. The decorum is important so as not to isolate or offend any student. Debate albeit adversarial in nature should be based on arguments and not a personal attack and as such, each student should perceive this as a safe place to express ideas and arguments. I prefer good on case argumentation over near useless procedural that are simply run in order to avoid on case thorough analysis. As such I am a believer that presentation and sound argumentation is critical towards establishing one&#39;s position.&nbsp; DA vs Advantages. CP vs Plan are all sound strategies and I hope students will use them.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I firmly believe that speed kills, as such the first team that uses it as an offensive or defensive tactic will get a loss in that round. Critics, i.e. K are to be run only when one or the other side believes that it is more important than whatever else is happening and is directly connected to either the actions of the other team or resolution in it of itself. As such, they should be willing to commit to it wholeheartedly and most important at the top of everything. For example, if you truly believe that the other team is promoting cultural genocide, seriously do not speak to me about agricultural benefits or disadvantages of the plan first, because then I think you cheapen both the critique and your whole line of argumentation.&nbsp; If permutation can happen in the real world it can happen in a debate round. If you are running a CP please make sure to explain its status, especially if you are to claim dispositional (EXPLAIN) Please call Points of Order and 95% of the time I will respond with (point well taken, point not well taken) That aside, I am open to any line of argumentation as long as it is complete. Example: I will not do your work for you, no link no argument, no impact no argument, no warrant NO ARGUMENT PERIOD. I want to hear fun, constructive and polite debates. Have fun and let the best team win. (I always prefer cordial and educational rounds with elements of quick wit and persuasive argumentation over Nuclear Holocaust, which I really do not care for, especially when it results because of US not buying used car parts from Uruguay.)</p>


Jason Hong - IVC


Jay Arntson - IVC


Jen Page - IVC


Jose Larios - Rio


Josh Popke - Vanguard


Jules Throckmorton - IVC

<p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>JULES THROCKMORTON-FRENCH:&nbsp;IRVINE&nbsp;VALLEY&nbsp;COLLEGE</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Background of the critic:</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I&#39;ve been involved with Parliamentary Debate for the last 10 years; whether that be competing, coaching, or judging. I competed from 2001-2004 for what was then known as the South Orange County Forensics Team (SOC). Since that time, I went on to earn my Juris Doctor at law school. However, my love for forensics brought me back to the speech and debate community. I&#39;ve coached debate and individual events at both Saddleback and&nbsp;Irvine&nbsp;Valley&nbsp;College. I am also the Director of Individual Events at Concordia University.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Approach of the critic to decision-making (for example, adherence to the trichotomy, stock-issues, policymaker, tabula rasa, etc.):</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I consider myself a flow judge. I don&#39;t have any particular likes or dislikes- I will be open minded to whatever you choose to run in front of me. I will try to be as tabula rasa as possible. With that said, call every &quot;point of order,&quot; or I will flow it.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Relative importance of presentation/communication skills to the critic in decision-making:</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Communication is important as, after all, this is a communication event. However, good communication will only get you so far; I may award you high speaker points, but good communication skills will not necessarily win you the round. As far as speed goes, I am ok with a moderately-fast pace so long as it is CLEAR, necessary, and well signposted.&nbsp;&nbsp;Remember that I have been focusing more on individual events this year, and as a result my flow has gotten a little slower. Be careful, b/c if you are going too fast I will not give any verbal signals.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Relative importance of on-case argumentation to the critic in decision-making:</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I think a good debate involves offense and defense, and a good debater will never put all their eggs in one basket. However, there have been plenty of rounds where I&#39;ve picked up OPP even though the on-case was conceded.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Openness to critical/performative styles of debating:</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I will be open-minded to whatever you want to run.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Any additional comments:</strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>I will time road maps!!! Make the round an easy call for me- weigh everything out and tell me EXACTLY where you&#39;re winning and why. Give me clear voters &amp; tell me where to pull the trigger. Please be clear and signpost. Also, please do not be rude! Finally, I am old-fashioned in the sense that I believe you should stand for your speeches, and if your partner has something to contribute they can simply pass a note rather than yelling out.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Justin Perkins - Palomar


Karen Nishie - Vanguard

<p>&nbsp;</p> <h2>Karen Nishie - Vanguard University</h2> <p><strong>Question 1 : Background of the critic</strong><br /> Two and a half years college parliamentary debate 11&nbsp;years coaching parliamentary debate.&nbsp; DOF at Vanguard University.&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /> <strong>Question 2 : Approach of the critic to decision-making (for example, adherence to the trichotomy, stock-issues, policymaker, tabula rasa, etc.)</strong><br /> I am often called an &quot;old school&quot; critic -- which I think means I adhere to trichotomy (believing that there are three distinct types of resolutions with three types of argumentation that follow), I also follow stock isues with the rationale that they make for a cleaner debate than not. While I am well read I am not in the round -- meaning you don&#39;t have to argue the other team AND my biases/opinions. You should appreciate this. I have voted on positions that are, frankly offensive to my world view because that&#39;s where the debate went. I have never (to my knowledge) voted because the debaters did not cater to my world view nor have I assigned ballots to bad arguments that supported my personal world view -- I think that answers the question on tabula rasa. I may be the last judge standing who believes that opposition has presumption entering the round and that affirmative has specific burdens (like upholding the resolution, defining terms etc -- see stock issues). I am not a fan of claims that aff did not have to fufill primae facia because poi&#39;s &quot;check back&quot;. Opps ability to ask questions is not a responsibility to make sure Aff is doing their job.<br /> <strong>Question 3 : Relative importance of presentation/communication skills to the critic in decision-making</strong><br /> Very. This is a communication event preparing (in my mind) you to be better citizens and better communicators. I can keep up with speed, I just don&#39;t want to have to. You should be persuasive, this activity is great training for a future in advocacy, law, education, ministry, homemaking...fill in the blank -- and in no profession (other than auctioneer or voice telling me the potential harms of some new medicine) is speaking as fast as you can possibly spew words out a positive. In fact, a lot of what I see (lack of professionalism, lack of politeness, lack of respect) will likely COST you in the &quot;real world&quot;. If you are speaking so fast that you spit on me -- it will not reflect well on the ballot -- and if you have to breathe in so hard that you break a rib let it be known that I do not know first aid.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Also, as a side note, I don&rsquo;t appreciate foul language at all, but particularly in public presentations that are meant to be persuasive.&nbsp; Dropping the F bomb in front of me is likely to earn you ridiculously low speaker points.<br /> <strong>Question 4 : Relative importance of on-case argumentation to the critic in decision-making</strong><br /> Very. Especially for the affirmative. For opposition you can stay off case, but all aff has to say is flow across and every argument they made stands -- in net benefits this may not benefit opp. Unlike some critics I think the opp has very few burdens (I believe they begin the debate with presumption and aff must prove other than the SQ is good) other than refutation and good argumentation. I will never drop an opposition team that did not run a counterplan.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>One more thing &ndash; each speaker is given a set amount of time to speak &ndash; don&rsquo;t talk over your partner during their time &ndash; I&rsquo;m only flowing the person who&rsquo;s turn it is to speak &ndash; so, make each other look strong and credible by giving your own speech.</p> <p><br /> <strong>Question 5 : Concerns about any particular argumentative approach/arguments which the critic rarely/never will vote for</strong><br /> I find Kritiks over used and under impacted. I like links so if the kritik is well articulated, well linked and well argued, I will buy it -- otherwise leave if for other critics. Arguments about how vampires have rights, or how the X-men function are probably better left for other critics also. I am a pretty pragmatic person so being overly creative (modern dance, hand puppets, arguments in the form of Haiku) are probably lost on me. I see my role in rounds simply to evaluate the claims you make and weigh them in the ways that you tell me to. If you fail to tell me how things weigh out then you give me permission to make up my own weighing paridigm -- and that will be bad for you.</p> <hr /> <p>&nbsp;</p>


Kayla Graney - IVC


Kevin Nguyen - OCC


Kim Valencia - Rio


Lexi Robinson - Vanguard


Liza Rios - Compton

<p><strong>Hello! Welcome to my Debate Gospel!&nbsp;</strong></p> <ol> <li>I am Communication judge so it should come as no surprise that I value time honored traditions such as eloquence and charisma when speaking in public.</li> <li>You will lose my ballot if you spread.</li> <li>I do not time road maps.</li> <li>Tag-line and sign post the heck out of your speeches! &nbsp;I love structure! This will make it a pleasure for me to flow your arguments.</li> <li>I will vote on procedurals if you can convince me that your claims are legitimate.</li> <li>Impacts are weighted heavily on my ballot.</li> <li>Regarding partner communication: do not upstage your partner while he/she is presenting his/her speech. A few interjections are fine but overall I should be hearing mostly from the main speaker. Write notes if need be. &nbsp;If you keep speaking for your partner, this communicates to me that you do not trust your partner&hellip;so why should I trust your partner? Manage your ethos! When your opponents are speaking, quietly communicate with your partner or write notes to each as to not draw attention to your side.</li> <li>Be respectful and classy! That makes me happy! :)</li> <li>Do not drop arguments.</li> <li>I will not debate for you. If, for example, new arguments are brought up in rebuttal speeches, it is not my job to make note of this.</li> <li>I value truth in what is spoken in a debate.</li> </ol> <p>Looking forward to seeing you in elimination rounds!!</p> <p>Liza A. Rios</p>


Mark Dorrough - Cypress


Matt Porter - Cerritos College


Matt Hinkle - IVC


Nari Kim - UAV

n/a


Peter Doesburg - El Camino


Philippe Noel - IVC


Richard Cline - Fullerton Col


Sam Recinos - Rio


Scott Tuggle - IVC


Sherana Polk - OCC

<p>First, I like arguments that just make logical sense. &nbsp;Rarely will I buy that a plan is going to lead to a nuclear war;&nbsp;no matter how many internal links you have. So please make arguments that are realistic. &nbsp;However, I try my best to judge the round only on what the debaters say and not my personal opinions. &nbsp;Therefore, if a team does not respond to an argument, no matter how illogical that argument is, I could still vote for it. &nbsp;I don&#39;t think that you have to respond to all 35 warrants to say why one argument is ridiculous but you do have to make a response. &nbsp;</p> <p>Second, delivery is important. &nbsp;The only way to be persuasive is to be understandable. &nbsp;If you are spreading then you are less understandable. &nbsp;If I can&#39;t understand you then I am unwilling to vote for you. &nbsp;Please be organized and signpost where you are at. &nbsp;If I am lost I am less willing to vote for you.</p> <p>Third, I think that there are three types of debate. &nbsp;So I like listening to policy, value, and fact debate. &nbsp;Trying to shove policy into every debate topic annoys me. &nbsp;So run the proper case for the proper resolution. &nbsp;If you decide not to and Opp runs Tricot then I will vote there. &nbsp;I also think that Gov should always stay on topic. &nbsp;So if Gov is non-topical then run T. &nbsp;I don&#39;t think that T must have articulated abuse in order to be a real voting issue. &nbsp;If you are non-topical, no matter how debatable the case is, you lose. &nbsp;So just argue the topic. &nbsp;I am willing to listen to Kritiques. &nbsp;I am not a fan of K&#39;s because the vast majority of times that I have seen K debates they are unclear and really is just a tactic to not debate the actual issue. &nbsp;However, there are sometimes when the K is necessary. &nbsp;So run it at your own risk. &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;</p> <p>Overall, I really like debate. &nbsp;If competitors run clear arguments, with strong pathos, and are civil to one another then I am a happy judge. &nbsp;So do your best!</p>


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 Robertson - Cerritos College


Steven Cosgrove - IVC


Tom Proprofsky - IVC


William Neesen - IVC

<h2>Bill Neesen - California State University-Long Beach</h2> <h3>Saved Philosophy:</h3> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Bill Neesen<br /> Cal. State Long Beach &amp; Irvine Valley College<br /> <br /> Parli Debates judged this year: 40+<br /> Non-Parli Debates judged this year: Policy 10+<br /> Years Judging Debate: 15<br /> Years Competed in Debate: 7<br /> What School Competed at: Millard South/ OCC/CSU- Fullerton<br /> <br /> Making Decisions: &#39;My decision is based solely on how the debaters argue I should decide; I avoid using my own decision-making philosophy as much as possible. It is your round. choose how you want it to happen and then defend it.&#39;<br /> <br /> Decision-making Approach: &#39;I really don t like any of the above. It is up to you and you can do whatever you want. I decide who wins based on what you say in the round. So it is up to you. &#39;<br /> <br /> Assessing Arguments: &#39;I am addicted to my flow but drops only become important if you tell me they were droped and why that makes them important.&#39;<br /> <br /> Presentational Aspects: &#39;Speed is ok I would be amazed if you went faster than I can flow but if your not clear that might happen. I hate offensive rhetoric and if it gets bad so will your speaks. That is the one place I get to imput what I think and I love that.&#39;<br /> <br /> Strong Viewpoints: &#39;No I see debate as a game. I have defended some pretty scarry shit. So I would not punish you for doing it but you better be able to defend it.&#39;<br /> <br /> Cases, DAs, CPs, Ks, T, etc.: &#39;I like all of what is listed. My advice is to make some arguments and then defend them. I really don t care what they are.&#39;<br /> <br /> Other Items to Note: &#39;I might have a higher threshold on T and similar args. I have also been told that I am a K hack even though I never ran them and was a CP debator. &#39;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><br /> &nbsp;</p>


Willie Washington - IVC