debate report (Karlstack)
| Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Consuela | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Frutiger Aero | 06/19/26 | | Fucking Fuckface | 06/19/26 | | And what ur doing right now? It's illegal. | 06/19/26 | | aqua jeet | 06/19/26 | | Howard Nutlick's demonic giggle | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Howard Nutlick's demonic giggle | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Howard Nutlick's demonic giggle | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Howard Nutlick's demonic giggle | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Fucking Fuckface | 06/19/26 | | Howard Nutlick's demonic giggle | 06/19/26 | | Howard Nutlick's demonic giggle | 06/19/26 | | No Paye No Gain | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | Fucking Fuckface | 06/19/26 | | ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, | 06/19/26 | | Ancestral European Microbiome | 06/19/26 | | icanseemyneurons | 06/19/26 | | Fucking Fuckface | 06/19/26 | | Richard Ames | 06/19/26 | | icanseemyneurons | 06/19/26 | | aqua jeet | 06/19/26 | | icanseemyneurons | 06/19/26 | | Judas Jones | 06/19/26 | | icanseemyneurons | 06/19/26 | | Ancestral European Microbiome | 06/19/26 | | So we looked at the data | 06/19/26 | | Karlstack | 06/19/26 | | my dog can log into xo more often than I can | 06/19/26 | | Bow tie niggas always have very strong opinions | 06/19/26 | | MASE | 06/19/26 | | STEPHEN MILLER | 06/20/26 | | OldHLSDude | 06/19/26 | | MASE | 06/19/26 | | icanseemyneurons | 06/19/26 | | MASE | 06/19/26 | | icanseemyneurons | 06/19/26 | | STEPHEN MILLER | 06/20/26 | | Taylor Swift is not a hobby she is a lifestyle | 06/20/26 | | Karlstack | 06/20/26 | | Karlstack | 06/20/26 | | MASE | 06/20/26 | | Taylor Swift is not a hobby she is a lifestyle | 06/20/26 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: June 19th, 2026 2:34 PM Author: Karlstack ( )
it wasn't livestreamed... it will be released on YouTube next week
Introduction Statements: Crushed my 5 minute statement about liberty and the founding fathers and the practical realities of what disenfranchising 95% of American adults would mean. My opponent's opening statement weirdly focused a lot on me being Canadian. He kept trying to bring up Canada the whole debate, shitting on Canada, and I brushed it aside and never took the bait.
Open Debate Round 1: I think this was my weakest section, he pushed me around a bit and repeatedly steered the conversation to high minded ideals like rights, privileges, responsibility, duty, honor entitlement, etc. This wasn't my strong suit and I froze up a couple times. Even when I write substacks, I am not good at preaching about big picture ideas, I typically thrive when I narrow in on one practical story.
Open Debate Round 2: This was much stronger for me, I was more comfortable and assertive and talked over him and pushed him around a bit, and importantly I steered the conversation completely away from high minded ideals to the practical reality (economic distortions, voting outcomes, etc.) of what would happen if 95% of Americans were disenfranchised... I made a strong case that a military electorate would be the most radical social experiment ever conducted, and yes, democracy is imperfect, but not so imperfect that it's worth blowing up western civilization / the status quo over
Moderator crossfire round: I think I won this round too, because it was mostly about definitions, and my opponent repeatedly kept trying to redefine or widen the scope of "military service" to "national service" that includes FEMA, volunteering, firefighting etc. but I shut that down and said he was weaseling out of the prompt, which was just about military service, not national service
Closing statement: I brought up ancient Sparta, Starship troopers, freedom, morality, political agency, what makes a good voter, wisdom, etc. and it went well. He focused on, like, "Oh should children be allowed to vote? Should a driving test be required to drive? Should children be allowed to drive?" and it was pretty retarded
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49948976)
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Date: June 19th, 2026 2:36 PM Author: Consuela
Congrats, it’s good that you got some public speaking experience
Not a big fan of the topic tho
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49948981) |
Date: June 19th, 2026 2:38 PM Author: aqua jeet (π§)
"He focused on, like, "Oh should children be allowed to vote? Should a driving test be required to drive? Should children be allowed to drive?" and it was pretty retarded"
bro if u didnt win this round u need to grow a beard asap
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49948992) |
Date: June 19th, 2026 2:55 PM Author: Fucking Fuckface
Hey man, great job. Sounds like you got what you wanted out of it and didn't let us down. Wish it had been live streamed, but will watch it when it comes out
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49949082)
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Date: June 19th, 2026 2:58 PM
Author: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
THIS IS not SPARTA!
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49949091) |
Date: June 19th, 2026 3:02 PM Author: Ancestral European Microbiome
Lol universal suffrage is actually a much more radical Social Experiment than only military members "voting" (that's literally what the aristocracy was before the modern era)
Sounds like you just did a lot better prep than he did and thought about the rhetorical presentation better than he did. Good job. Can't wait to not watch the debate at all and vote for you as the winner
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49949101) |
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Date: June 19th, 2026 11:36 PM Author: MASE
Based on your own account, you won, and fairly clearly—on points and on strategy. Let me give you the honest read rather than just a pat on the back, because the after-action is more useful if it's accurate, and there are a couple of things worth flagging.
Where you won the round: you controlled the terms of the debate by the end, and in a debate, controlling the frame usually decides it. Your opponent wanted the whole contest fought on his turf—duty, honor, entitlement—and the decisive move was that you dragged it onto yours: the concrete consequences of disenfranchising the overwhelming majority of adults. That's the single most important thing that happened. Whoever picks the battlefield usually wins, and by Round 2 the battlefield was yours.
The crossfire round may have been your most quietly important win. When your opponent tried to widen "military service" into "national service"—FEMA, firefighting, volunteering—he was conceding your entire case without realizing it. The moment he reached for that broadening, he was admitting that non-military service is real service that should count toward the vote, which is exactly your thesis. Holding him to the literal resolution wasn't just a definitional nitpick; it trapped him. He either defends the narrow, indefensible version (only soldiers) or he drifts toward your position. You were right to pin him, and you should understand why it worked so you can do it again.
Now the honest parts, because you clearly want the real assessment.
Round 1 is the one to study, not the closing. You froze on the high-minded exchange, and that's worth taking seriously rather than waving off as "not my strong suit." Your opponent found the one register where he was stronger and lived there until you wrestled control back. You won the round despite losing that stretch—but against a more disciplined opponent who refused to follow you down to the practical level, that frozen patch could have been the whole game. The fix isn't to become a preacher; it's to have two or three pre-loaded one-liners that acknowledge the abstract and immediately convert it back to concrete. "Duty matters—so let's talk about who actually bears it" turns his strength into your runway. You don't out-preach him; you refuse to stay on the mountaintop and pull the argument back down to the farmer every time.
One genuine note of caution on the self-assessment: "I talked over him and pushed him around a bit" is something to watch. It worked here and you read it as a win, but assertiveness and dominance aren't the same thing, and judges sometimes score the person who stays composed over the person who steamrolls. Winning the exchange by volume is fragile—it works until you meet someone who stays calm while you escalate, and then the room turns. Bank the assertiveness, drop the talking-over. You don't need it; your material is strong enough to win on substance.
The Canada thing: you played that correctly. Refusing the bait was right. An opponent who keeps returning to your nationality instead of the resolution is telling you he's out of arguments on the merits, and the judge usually notices that without you having to point at it. The only thing I'd add for next time is that one clean, good-natured line to put it to bed early ("I'd love to debate Canada some other time—today the resolution is about American voters") can close the door so he stops knocking. But ignoring it didn't cost you.
Last thing, and I'll be direct because it's in your own interest: drop "retarded" from the debrief, even private notes. Not as a scolding—as craft. The reason his children/driving-test analogies felt weak to you is worth naming precisely, because the precise version is a weapon you can use next round. What he was doing was a competence argument ("some people shouldn't vote because they lack judgment") smuggled in next to a sacrifice argument ("you must earn it through service"), and those two justifications contradict each other—a driving test requires no sacrifice, and military service certifies no policy competence. If you can name that equivocation out loud next time—"my opponent keeps switching between whether voting takes competence or sacrifice, and he can't have both"—you don't just feel that his analogy was bad, you show the judge exactly why. "Retarded" stops your analysis at the feeling. The real critique is sharper and it scores.
So: you won. Frame control, the crossfire trap, and the practical-consequences case carried it. The growth edge is the abstract exchange in Round 1—not learning to preach, but learning to pivot fast enough that you're never stuck up there. Want me to draft those pivot lines—the three or four "acknowledge the ideal, return to the farmer" transitions—so you've got them loaded for the next one?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49950831) |
Date: June 20th, 2026 12:44 AM Author: STEPHEN MILLER (FAGGOTCHIPPER / Hegemon)
sounds like both of you sucked and lack any raw talent at this
if you want to get better, you should:
1. learn basic argumentation structure
- do probably 700-1000 drills of identifying a claim/warrant/impact for any position, then refuting it in the same format. give yourself less than a minute for the whole thing for each position.
2. thoroughly read and understand how competitive debate actually works.
- learn 90s policy debate theory, especially link and impact turns, impact calculus, and framework. a lot of this is just formalizing thought processes with which you (well, maybe not you, but smarter people) should already be familiar. this makes their elements much easier to practice, which in turn makes their precise application under time pressure much more fluid.
- learn APDA and NSDA Lincoln Douglas debate case structure. these are the formats most analogous to what you're doing.
3. learn how to flow. it'll help your structure a lot.
4. drill by watching APDA rounds.
- start with the rez, give yourself 10 minutes of prep time, write your case. you won't use this, but it'll improve your ability to generate a set of cohesive positions under time pressure.
- watch a speech and flow it. then give your own responding to it. video it (and all other speeches you give).
- flow the next speech, then respond again. repeat all the way through the round. you're going to quickly realize that everyone you can find in APDA is better than you by orders of magnitude. you're also going to learn that they're tracking arguments better, responding more efficiently, using stronger warrants, impacting better. Try to pick up what you can.
- watch each video, critique yourself, then regive the speech until you get it right. then move to the next.
5. Once you get good at all of that, work on being able to translate all of the debate-ese you just learned back into normal conversation without being spergy.
do all that and you'll probably be on the same level as a competent highschooler who's low end of varsity lmao
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49950920)
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Date: June 20th, 2026 12:59 AM Author: Taylor Swift is not a hobby she is a lifestyle (πΊπΈ π΅π±)
180
sounds like it'll be a fun watch
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5875612&forum_id=2Reputation#49950928) |
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