The Topic: Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially reduce its military and/or police presence in one or more of the following: South Korea, Japan, Afghanistan, Kuwait, Iraq, Turkey.
In the Round:
1) There are four speakers in the round. They are named by the order in which they speak by team:
a) First Affirmative Speaker (1A) – gives the 1AC and the 1AR
b) First Negative Speaker (1N) – gives the 1NC and the 1NR
c) Second Affirmative Speaker (2A) – gives the 2AC and the 2AR
d) Second Negative Speaker (2N) – gives the 2NC and the 2NR
2) There is a specific order and time limit for the speeches:
SPEECH(Jargon) TIME OBJECTIVE
a. 1st Affirmative Constructive( 1AC) 8 mins. Speaker presents reasons to change the system,
according to the resolution, presents a PLAN
b. Cross-Examination 3mins. Previous speaker questioned by the 2N
c. 1st Negative Constructive(1NC) 8 mins. Speaker attacks the reasons for change and PLAN
presented in 1AC
d. Cross-Examination 3 mins. Previous speaker questioned by 1A
e. 2nd Affirmative Constructive(2AC) 8 mins. Speaker defends reasons for change, may add more and
attack positions taken by negative
f. Cross-Examination 3 mins. Previous speaker questioned by 1N
g. 2nd Negative Constructive(2NC) 8 mins. Speaker defends attack on affirmative positions and
promotes positions taken by 1NC
h. Cross-Examination 3 mins. Previous speaker questioned by 2A
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g. 1st Negative Rebuttal(1NR) 5 mins. Speaker attacks reasons for change & affirmative
positions
h. 1st Affirmative Rebuttal(1AR) 5 mins. Speaker responds to negative attacks and defends PLAN
i. 2nd Negative Rebuttal(2NR) 5 mins. Speaker repeats/ summarizes negative attacks, provides
reasons to vote NEG
j. 2nd Affirmative Rebuttal(2AR) 5 mins. Speaker repeats/summarizes affirmative arguments,
provides reasons to vote AFF
k. Prep time allowed 5 mins.
SAMPLE VIDEO
3) Timing: Please try to keep accurate times, both for fairness and educational value. In each speech,
please give hand signals indicating the countdown of remaining minutes starting with four minutes
(i.e. hold up four fingers) or for three in rebuttals. Indicate half a minute remaining by holding up a
cupped hand, and then countdown the last ten seconds on your fingers. When time is up, please put
down your pencil/pen. When possible a Timer will be provided for you. If there is no Timer, and
you do not feel that you can simultaneously keep time and take notes during the debate, ask the teams
to keep time for each other.
4) Filling out the ballot: Please be sure to fill out the ballot completely including the winning team,
speaker points, speaker ranks, the reason for your decision and your signature.
.
5) Taking Notes: To help you decide which team to vote for at the end of the round, take as many notes
as possible during the debate. Flowing is a note-taking method that both debaters and judges have
found helps them to understand and follow the debate. This process allows you to see how a debater
responds to the arguments of the previous speaker. We have provided 8.5 x 14 paper with columns
printed for each speech. Take notes on each speech in the column, lining up the arguments linearly
across the page.
The Moment of Truth: Making A Decision
In the end, the judge must vote for the team that is most persuasive. Often however, making that decision
is not as easy as it sounds. The CFL, therefore, has approved two sets of guidelines to assist in the
decision making process. As the judge, read both and then choose one and stick with it. Switching back
and forth mixes burdens and is confusing for debaters and judges alike.
POLICY MAKER PARADIGM
Often, in this method the judge imagines herself to be a legislator trying to decide between policy options:
change to a new plan (affirmative) or stay with the status quo (negative). In this method, the judge needs
to answer three questions at the end of the round:
1. Does the affirmative PLAN fall within the bounds established by the resolution?
(I.e. Is the PLAN topical?)
2. Does the affirmative PLAN incur the advantages and/or disadvantages?
3. Do the advantages outweigh the disadvantages, or vice versa?
Question 1: Topicality: The resolution determines the topic for this year’s debates. For example, if today
we are debating about actions the U.S. should take with regard to Russia. Clearly then, to propose a plan
that deals directly and exclusively with Cuba is not within the bounds set by this year’s resolution. If the
affirmative does not present a plan that clearly falls within these boundaries, the judge must vote for the
negative. In fact, topicality is an a priori voting issue -- that is, if the affirmative is nontopical the judge
must vote negative and there is no need to consider any other argument. On the other hand, the plan
presented by the affirmative might deal with Russia directly and might also incur some secondary benefit
with regard to Cuba (i.e. the plan might be topical with some advantages outside Russia).
Question 2: The affirmative will present a plan that intends to solve some current problems and usually
produces some good benefits. The affirmative must convince the judge that the plan does so to some
extent (i.e. 60%, 80%, 100%) On the other side, the negative team will argue that the plan cannot or will
not solve those current problems and that the plan actually results in some serious disadvantages. The
negative must convince the judge that the plan cannot solve the current problems (or at least, only solves
them minimally) and that the disadvantage is certain to occur to some extent (i.e. 60%, 80%, 100%). In
this way, the judge essentially builds a tally sheet:
AFFIRMATIVE
Plan stops current violations(75%)
Plan saves endangered species (40%)
Plan boosts US economy (10%)
NEGATIVE
Plan decreases effectiveness of police (90%)
Plan costs U.S. lots of money (90%)
Plan increases risk of terrorist attack (80%)
Plan risk nuclear confrontation (20%)
.
Question 3: Checking the “tally sheet” and the “percentages of certainty,” allows the judge to evaluate
which outweighs the other: the affirmative plan and its advantages or the disadvantages (and therefore,
the benefits of the status quo). In this example, the judge was far more convinced that the plan resulted in
(more significant) disadvantages. Note that an unanswered argument (a dropped argument) in this model
does not result in an “automatic” win for the other team (except in Topicality). That argument might not
weigh significantly in the round. In the example above, the negative team may not have responded to the
affirmative claim that the plan boosts the Russian economy, but since the affirmative could only convince
the judge 10% that those effects would occur and the negative team has convinced the judge 90% that the
plan will increase nationalist tension in Russia, the overwhelming negative impacts lead her to a negative
vote.
STOCK ISSUES PARADIGM
In this method the judge imagines herself a trial judge deciding a courtroom case. That is, the status quo
is innocent until proven guilty. The affirmative, in trying to demonstrate the status quo should be
changed, carries the burden of proof. The affirmative must earn a YES vote on all of the issues below.
Conversely, if the negative earns a clear NO to any one of the questions below the negative wins.
Finally, if all things are equal, the status quo is presumed a workable system and the negative wins.
A. TOPICALITY – Does the proposed PLAN reasonably adhere to the limitations of the
resolution?
B. SIGNIFICANCE – Is there a justification to change from the present system?
C. INHERENCY – Presently, is there a barrier preventing the solution of the problems indicated
by the Affirmative?
D. SOLVENCY – Can the proposed plan solve the problems better than the current system?
E. DISADVANTAGES – Do the advantages of the proposed plan outweigh the disadvantages claimed
by the Negative?
Some explanation:
A) Topicality: see Question 1 in Policy Maker Paradigm
B) Significance: The affirmative team must demonstrate that there are significant problems or harms in
the current system. The negative, on the other hand, must show that the harms introduced by the
affirmative are not really significant and therefore do not warrant a change from the current system.
The debaters must define what kinds of problems or harms are significant and convince the judge of
their level of importance.
C) Inherency: The affirmative team must demonstrate that these problems are inherent in the current
system -- or, in other word, that there is something stopping these harms and problems from being
solved in the current system (i.e. lack of funding). The negative must show that this barrier does not
exist or is currently being fixed to allow the system to solve the significant problems.
D) Solvency: The affirmative must prove that their plan will solve the problems they have identified in
the current system. The negative must show that the affirmative plan does not (or cannot solve) these
problems.
E) Disadvantages/ Advantages: The negative team will attempt to demonstrate that the affirmative plan
not only does not solve the problems of the current system but will create newer, bigger harms. The
affirmative must show this is not true and may argue that the plan actually creates some additional
benefits.
.
F) Deciding the Stock Issues: The stock issues provide a checklist for the judge. The judge runs down
the checklist of questions above answering yes or no. The affirmative must win a yes to all five
questions. If the negative clearly proves that the affirmative has violated or not proven just one of the
stock issues, then the judge should vote for the negative team. Note that in every instance the negative
team must argue that the affirmative team failed to prove a stock issue. If the affirmative team
violates one of the stock issues but the negative team does not even mention that fact, you as the
judge should not vote against the affirmative team even if you know the affirmative team failed to
sufficiently prove a stock issue. The negative team must make the argument against the affirmative
team in order for you to vote against the affirmative team on a stock issue.
G) Silence is concession: If the negative team says nothing to refute any part of the affirmative's case,
that part of the case stands without rebuttal. As the judge, you have no reason to vote against the
affirmative on an issue that the negative does not try to refute. Also, if a team says nothing to respond
to a previous argument that team is said to have dropped the argument and thereby conceded the
argument to the other team. For example:
1AC
If we discourage U.S.
businesses to invest in
Russia, there will not be
enough capital flowing into
the Russian economy to
support foreign debt
reduction.
1NC
( Nothing said --
argument is dropped.)
2AC
The negative team did
not deny that U.S.
capital flow into Russia
is necessary for debt
reduction.
2NC
It is important to know which arguments each team has dropped so that you can determine at the end of
the debate which team won the most issues during the debate. In order to note when an argument is
dropped, go back over your notes after each speech and circle any blank spots where the speaker said
nothing to refute the opponents' arguments. As there are many arguments for each issue, dropping an
argument does not necessarily mean that an entire stock issue goes conceded (except in Topicality), but a
drop should weigh heavily in the decision.
Speaker Points
Speaker Points provide a way of evaluating the debater’s abilities as a public speaker. Please assign
speaker points to each of the debaters in the round by circling one through ten for each speaker. Debaters
may earn the same speaker points. Do not base your decision in the round (i.e. who wins and who loses)
on the speaker points.