Weekends Should be 3 days Long Instead
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 3
- Time for argument
- Two days
- Max argument characters
- 5,000
- Voting period
- Two weeks
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
Weekend: the end of the week
Day: A full rotation of the earth relative to its axis
William, David K. “10 Reasons You Should Stop Working Long Hours Today.” Lifehack, Lifehack, 18 Sept. 2013, www.lifehack.org/articles/productivity/10-reasons-you-should-stop-working-long-hours-today.html.
Pro says
My opponent isn't making sense here and is making inferences that are contradictory to the examples that I already listed.
I already stated before that even losing 8 hours that the workers could have spent in the 5th day compensate for it with the more productive 32 hours spent across the four days.
- Think about it: there are already people in most jobs to ensure a worker is productive. There are ways such as progress reports, time-cards, and meetings.
- Employees are paid by the hour. A job will be reduced by 20% due to this.
- Sure, there is the idea of paying them the same. However, I previously said that there are many ways to ensure a worker is productive. So, why would you make a $30 per hour job into a $40 hour job? This could decrease a business's profits. I'm not trying to be greedy here but this method could have some drawbacks.
- There are already ways businesses can ensure employees are productive such as time cards, meetings, and progress reports.
- I would like to add that tasks provided by businesses are analyzed by an experienced person in that field as to how long a task should take. The employee will have these many days to complete that task unless there is a legitimate exception.
- Employees are paid by the hour, and making a business only work for 4 instead of 5 days per week will reduce the pay of an employee by 20%
- Although there may be the solution of making an employee's be 5/4 (to compensate the same amount of pay for a 4 day work week as to that of a 5 day work week) that of normal, the business may lose money because the employees are being paid more than in a 5 day work week.
- Schools will also be impacted with this. School is on average 9 months; if 1/5 of the school week is a weekend, school will be much longer (about 11.25 months).
- One cannot skip school due to education gaps.
Reason:
Arguments: Both had strong arguments, however, PRO did not have strong evidence nor a clear and logical argument as to why removing 8 hours from a 40-hour workweek would have significant benefits towards productivity, pay, and output. CON had a well-backed response to counter. PRO also forfeited the final round.
Sources: Both provided sources.
Spelling and Grammar: Tie
Conduct: As PRO forfeited, point for CON.
Argument: Pro argued productivity increase, not necessarily hours reduction, and Con charged, but Con's argument assumed that Pro's argument would require hours lost by employees without demonstrating that both hours and productivity would suffer for the 3-day weekend. Since Con could not successfully rebut by the claim of lost hours never implied, not the benefit to the company of improved employee productivity, Pro wins the the points.
Sources: All Pro's sources supported the notion of a 3-day weekend with benefit to both employees and companies. Con had no sources beyond those claiming the increase to 10-hour days, which was an assumption not entertained by Pro. Prto wins the points.
S&G: tie
Conduct: Pro lost the point for forfeit of last round. Point to Con
P1: PRO states why 3-day weekends will benefit humans' lives using studies.
C1: CON states, although people might be happier, people will need to work longer shifts, which defeats its own purpose.
P2: PRO ditched sources and claimed that work shifts could change and 10H shifts aren't fixed.
C2: CON then refutes saying that if we have 2 day weekends, not only that humanity will be more productive, people will be more willing to be productive.
R3: PRO forfeits, CON claims victory.
Arguments: Overall CON has the better argument. More productive, more work done. Working 8H shifts for 5 days is still indeed better than working 10H shifts. PRO sort of moved the goalpost saying that work no longer needs to be fixed whatsoever, while CON sufficiently countered saying that in order to make human society sufficiently productive, people must work longer shifts if so.
Sources: Tie. Both parties only used one round of sources.
S&g: Tie. Good job.
Conduct: CON wins it as PRO forfeits the final round.
Whim? You will document that. And I refer you to the current debate, https://www.debateart.com/debates/2221/resolved-referenced-sources-are-necessary-in-a-debate
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>Reported Vote: fauxlaw // Mod action: Not Removed
>Points Awarded: 5:1; 5 points to PRO.
>Reason for Decision: See Votes Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action: This vote was borderline. Borderline votes are automatically ruled as sufficient.
While the reasoning for the sources point was not thorough enough, the conduct and arguments points were allocated fairly enough to satisfy a borderline rating.
Fauxlaw votes on whims, there's little guaranteed other than that if you stick to decent sourcing he doesn't vote against you for sourcing. He rarely ties points as opposed to the norm of tying most points that all other voters have. I'll vote eventually on this.
1. Both abandoned sources after r1. But Con had more and better sources supporting his argument. You offered three sources, all saying the same thing: a 4-day work week is not a 40-hour work week, and you said a 40-hr work week is standard, but offered no evidence of that. Don't assume. Cite a source. It may be a standard, but a little research will reveal that most people do not work 40 hr/wk. You also said employees [implying all employees] are paid hourly. Once I finished school, I never worked an hourly wage. And after 20 years working for somebody else, I ran my own companies. Again, don't assume.
2. You assumed productivity is demonstrated by time cards and progress reports. Don't assume. Cite a source. As it happens, you're wrong on both counts and have obviously never had to run a company or demonstrate productivity. Your opponent was correct. There is evidence of higher productivity, and he showed it. Just because you put in 40 hours, or whatever, of "work" does not prove you are producing 40 hours of work. Look it up.
3. You assume 8 hours of work, 8 hours of sleep, and 14 hours of other activity. That may be your schedule, but don't assume you're the norm. For over 50 years, I worked 12 - 16 hours, slept 4 hours, and the rest... But I love my work, so it's more play than work. I'm retired and still work. Don't assume. You cited none of your claims, and assume everyone is the same. Such a poor assumption.
3. You assume because your opponent forfeited the last roud that you had nothing to rebut. You did, but didn't. Such as the above issues.
Also, PRO ditched the sources in the 2nd round.
And also, when you say "PRO is arguing productivity increase, and I did not state anything about that", you are simply saying "I did not read CON's round two."
There are already ways to enusure productivity in business, such as time cards and progress reports
I did not really understand how PRO got the vote for "Better arguments" and "Better sources":
Let me start with "Better sources".
PRO had one round of sources, and I also had one round of sources. PRO unnecessarily blamed me as "not making sense" when it is really his fault. The American standard is a 40 hour work week, and PRO said nothing about changing it to a 32 hour work week in the first round, so it is indirectly said that all existing things would be the same in his argument, or a 40 hour work week. Also, if you are saying the previous sentence is "unjhustified" one could simply say "yeah lets change it so they do not have to go to work." That is what literally PRO is doing in the round two, and is blaming me for his own logical fallacy.
And what do you (fauxlaw) mean "I could not rebut the claim about lost hours?" I clearly stated in round two that it would also impact schools, and employees are paid by the hour, and the business would gradually lose money. In the school area, I clearly told PRO that you can't "skip" school like you can skip a business.
And this assumption was entertained by PRO because he did not say anything about changing it to 32 hour work week and blaming me; you aren't allowed to blame another for the mistakes of your own, so that would count against him for both argument and conduct."
Please take this in consideration for the voting, as I did not really understand how pro got Better arguments and Better sources, and your reasoning says I did not do things I clearly did in my rounds two and three.
BTW thats not what moving the goal post means in round 2.
oops
Wait whos that lol
Welcome to the true successor of DDO
Thanks!
It matters not the vehicle, but the product. I don't know or care how efficient your method is. As long as you deliver your message in a way that is convincing, no one cares what format to use. As long as you deliver a pack of bricks, no one cares if you are driving a Volvo truck or a broken Ape. I have no say over whether your method is on-point or not because I do not write it like that. However, to my knowledge, it is pretty convincing. Since this is more about sources than logical rhetorics, I suggest you consult Trent0405. He has loads of sources everywhere he goes.
Hey intelligence_06, is my argument like how one is supposed to write it? I posted it ~2 min ago.
It is best to include objective sources, but if you got none then use personal examples.
Do I need to have sources? Or are personal examples OK?
It continues and the one that forfeits will lose conduct unless the other one does more.
So, if a debate is forfeited, will the debate continue as normal or does it have to stop like debate.org
He knew you were anc2006 and went straight to the debating arena with no pause or forum-interaction since creating his account.
I think he doesn't need to be told that people are entitled to stall, hw knows it all too well.
Most debaters here waste one day or longer, so expect his argument later. I had RM(One of the most successful debaters) handing in his round one second before due.
Can you please post your argument for "Weekends should be 3 days long"
https://www.debateart.com/debates/2207/weekends-should-be-3-days-long-instead
Well yeah, its pretty much inactive and also nobody votes so its always tie 0=0
Yep, I am. I take that site less seriously than this one.
Yeah, thats me!
I know who you are, anc2006
Oh are you the guy who accepted the "dart gud" debate on DDO?
define "should"