Instigator / Pro
14
1439
rating
13
debates
38.46%
won
Topic
#6315

Gun Rights in the USA

Status
Voting

The participant that receives the most points from the voters is declared a winner.

Voting will end in:

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Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
Two weeks
Max argument characters
30,000
Voting period
Six months
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
11
1494
rating
9
debates
50.0%
won
Description

America is well known for having a large amount of gun ownership and culture.
Some people are rather Anti-Gun.
Con in this debate would be taking the side of people more Anti Gun, than Gun Regulation.
Sure, one can call a country that only allows civilians to own guns for hunting sport shooting, to be 'Regulating guns, but that seems more 'technical, than common sense, to me.

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:

Con argues strictly. Classic anti-gun arguments. Even though i agree with Con's position, I can't think of any argument that Pro forgets to make for defending his (the higher-difficulty position). It might even be that the wording of the topic "Gun rights" "More anti-gun regulations" narrow Con's options. And Pro doesn't forget to take advantage about this either.
Con argues convincingly but so does pro, with arguments which appeal to both sides (guns/noguns). Pro grabs the reader's attention by defending the difficult position so well but that should not cause one to ignore the arguments of the other side, also as good but standing on an easier position.

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:

I wish we had a style category to immediately award to pro (sliding a Monty Python reference into his opening). And con's request "along stepping away from executing use of Warhammer references ... To make this a debate worth engaging in, for the audience..." as an audience member, having bits of levity greatly help me stay focused on a debate.

That said, the setup resolution is vague, like what about gun rights?

Ok, not going to quote every line or anything, but just some highlights which really stood out to me.

History:
Pro points out that gun ownership prevents the movement from having a "monopoly upon violence" and builds out from there with some good rhetoric.
Note: some if this line of reasoning could be easily countered with gun ownership failing to prevent various government sponsored atrocities in the USA (not to con caught that... in fact, he argued against it having occurred "There is no official record of tyrannical rule" ... Oh, in the last round (after pro could no longer respond) this was at least alluded to with "Black Codes and slave patrols to the disarmament of Indigenous nations").

Con wisely concedes that guns were once necessary, to build a case that such is no longer the case.

Con makes a great and quotable point with: "But culture does not equate to correctness. My own place of origin, Pakistan, has a heavy culture of political corruption and sectarianism."

NEED, COMPARISON, AND REGULATION:
This section suffers a bit from lack of pro's conclusions about the information.

It detours into other countries, and if they can be compared to the USA when they lack such strong constitutional laws (gun rights in the USA are a constitutional issue, which makes the counters odd).

Pro makes a good point with "There are more dangerous means than guns they 'could use."
Con misquotes pro as saying “school shooters would be more dangerous to a population than guns” ... Always be careful if using double quotation marks, as those are specifically for quotation. This was of course not an isolated incident. I found the closing criticism of this reasoning that arsonists are incapable of making a manifesto as shoots are (to quote: "Fire doesn’t make a manifesto") to be a rather obvious scarecrow argument. Needless to say, the better path would have been reminding the audience that taking away tools of murder, decreases the ease of murder.
Along these same lines, pro leveraged school shooting clubs to strengthen his proposal of more gun education as an alternative solution to gun violence; implicitly asking if it can be so safe then, why can't it be now?

Fallacies:
Pro was able to defend that he was not engaged in pure fallacious uses of the appeals. It's a good tactic to accuse people of fallacies, but one which risks losing the audience there's even a decent defense (in this case by explaining the use of "evoking" sentiments and such, rather than trying to blind people with them).

Closing:
I outright agree with pro "If you want real freedom, start by protecting the people who live in it. Guns don’t defend liberty when they’re being used to destroy lives inside that liberty. And quoting dead philosophers, poets, and colonial history doesn’t make modern inaction noble. It just makes it tragic."

...

Arguments: Pro
I am having to assume the debate was about broadly maintaining gun access in the USA or repelling it from civilian use.
I wholly agree with con. That said, pro was the more convincing speaker, showing ample reason why gun access remains necessary in the USA such as to protect us from a tyrannical government, and also that cons aims could be better achieved through simple education.

Sources: Tied
They lean pro, but not by enough to further enhance his victory (they'd be enough to mitigate cons had arguments gone that way). Lots and lots of sources from pro; and which there was some wise criticism from con which decreased their impact but they were not proven counter to pro's case or any such thing. Con introducing his own sources as "Verified and credible source" counter intuitively harmed them, as it was like putting a question mark on those very traits (website name would be better, or what is so good about them by comparison).
That said, pro was risking accusations of source spam with the number of them, and insufficient analysis of each one (there was at least thematic analysis, which is why I am identifying a risk rather than penalizing a fault)

Conduct: Tied
Leans a little to pro due to con making up quotations.