Any bros here do "debate" in HS/college? Help me train for my bait Twitch stream
| oomox | 04/23/26 | | oomox | 04/23/26 | | Junko Enoshima | 04/23/26 | | oomox | 04/23/26 | | Junko Enoshima | 04/23/26 | | oomox | 04/23/26 |
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Date: April 23rd, 2026 6:06 PM Author: oomox
As described elsewhere: I'm going to try a bait Twitch stream model. The concept is "debate me about anything" and the challenger gets to choose my position. I'll have a disclaimer on the screen that explains that this is an intellectual exercise and lists the assigned position and opponent, so I can't get clipped and canceled. There are fun ways I could incorporate channel points and eventually donations. I'll also post each debate on YouTube; maybe I could promise to respond to any paid comment. The idea is to capitalize on people's argumentative instincts.
While I am experienced in written argumentation, I don't have practice debating people real-time. So far I'm planning on training by extemporaneously defending chatbot-assigned positions aloud, recording and evaluating my argument afterward. But I also think it might be good to do some training modeled after what kids learn in "debate" or "mock trial" in case I end up debating those people.
Advice is of course welcome from everyone, not just debatebros. Also, if anyone has ideas for format of the stream, I don't have that set in stone yet.
I've been kicking this idea around for a while and want to try a stream or two while I'm funemployed. I figure the potential payoff of social media success makes it worth a try.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5859865&forum_id=2)#49838177) |
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Date: April 23rd, 2026 7:19 PM Author: oomox
Very helpful, tyvm. Great idea to look at stats in advance. I will do that and also come up with ways to poke holes in each and then a way to defend against those args. And it's v useful to know that opinions are citable lol. I guess if nothing else it shows you've done research on the topic.
Anything you think people will ask about?
I am committed to ideological flexibility for this exercise but I have strong opinions about some things. If I'm asked to defend something I disagree with, my plan is to distill it down to what I think the central assumption is, which may end up serving as a reductio argument against my assigned stance. I think that's the best-faith way I can do it.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5859865&forum_id=2)#49838415) |
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