Instigator / Pro
8
1417
rating
158
debates
32.59%
won
Topic
#2457

Global Warming is a more pressing issue than Abortion

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
6
Better sources
4
4
Better legibility
2
2
Better conduct
2
2

After 2 votes and with 6 points ahead, the winner is...

MisterChris
Parameters
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
Contender / Con
14
1762
rating
45
debates
88.89%
won
Description

I've been curious which issue is more concerning

more pressing: more important, influential, should be resolved first

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

First, even though conduct is a tie, I feel like they're both really low numbers. The really cruel descriptions of abortion, including terms like "vacuum" described by Con and then Pro's labeling of some people as inherently less valuable than others, not in the best taste. I feel conduct is a litmus of both treatment of each other, but also ensuring not offensive statements.

Second, the debate comes down to the issue of Pro dropping all of their arguments. By the end of the debate, there is no reason to prefer global warming, while all the impacts of Con have a risk through the unpredictability issue. Pretty much, abortion might be unethical now, but global warming is in a 100 years, and all of the issues were both refuted as worse under abortion and the numbers for global warming dropped.

Pro - Tips to get better, talk about how the numbers you bring up will get worse. It eventually leads to extinction, abortion doesn't. This then gives you a higher magnitude over Con. Also, justify abortion as a human right issue earlier in the round. The comment in the last speech is new and can't be evaluated.

Con - Don't paint yourself in the bubble of only illegalization. You could do also go for legalization in the countries it's illegal and all the reasons it's a human right. Con's job is to only prove the resolution wrong, so if you can prove that there's two reasons for abortion to change, then it's a double-bind on Pro. Make sure to only keep one till the end of the debate tho.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

This became the obvious decision after Pro's second round because as soon as the debate became more about whether abortion is bad, Pro's main offense in this debate vanished into the periphery. It comes back somewhat in the final round, but by then, Pro has tied his own hands by allowing Con to dictate the definitions in a way that basically forces him to argue based on current harms rather than future harms. There was an opportunity to argue this back, but Pro didn't take it, so we're stuck with current degrees of impact.

What makes this worse is that I don't get any significant weighing analysis from either side between points with different impacts, which is a bigger problem for Pro. How do the economic impacts both sides discuss weigh against loss of life? Honestly, I have no clue, and since both sides largely shift focus to loss of life as an impact and it's generally hard to weigh lives against dollars and cents, I'm going with loss of life as the automatically greater impact. Pro also has this point about environmental impact, but I'm unclear throughout how much I should weigh the loss of other lives against human lives, and impacts of unrest and diseases are either too vague or downplayed too much to matter in the scope of the remainder of the debate.

Which, of course, just leaves me with the lives lost. Pro gives me a very clear number for his side. Con's is a little less clear, but what is clear enough is that it's bigger than 150,000. Late term abortions alone worldwide would get close to that number if not exceed it, and there's just a lot of uncertainty regarding the value of lives lost due to abortions. Con loses a lot of ground by missing out on arguing the Uncertainty Principle, which would have put the weight on his side for this, but I can still afford him some weight due to losses incurred via abortion. How much it weighs against losses of those we would consider persons is unclear, but it's a large enough number that it would feature in some fashion. Overall, there's just too much actual and potential weight on Con's side, and he ends up clinching this debate.