Philosophies
Values
Vocab/lingo
Types of Debate
Topical
100

This philosophy says that we should do whatever produces the greatest good for the greatest number of people 

What is Util

100

This value is about the principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong or good and bad behavior and following a system of values held by a specified person or society 

What is morality

100

This is the most important thing that you are trying to achieve in debate

What is the value
100

This type of debate focuses on proving the resolution morally obligatory or morally prohibited using a framework with a value and value criterion

What is Trad Debate

100

Explain the Aff argument of "Fresh Ideas" 

Allow new justices more regularly would allow for more solutions that are fit for modern issues. It would allow justices to be more aligned with the actual public and have a more modern view on modern problems. 

200

This philosophy says that there are social structures (economic, legal, political, religious, cultural, etc..) that prevent individuals, groups, and societies from being excluded from our moral circle causes them to become demeaned or invisible 

What is structural violence
200

This value is usually defined as giving each their due

What is justice

200

This is the way that the value will be achieved

What is the value criterion

200

This allows the negative side to defend an advocacy separate from the status quo

What are counterplans

200

Explain the Con argument of "losing experience" 

Having shorter terms would cause more experienced judges to be forced to leave regardless on how the 'people' view them. 

300

This philosophy focuses on intent rather than consequences 

What is deontology 

300

This value focuses on the ability to climb the ladder of success 

What is upward mobility

300

This is when you bring up or remind the judge of an argument made in a previous speech to make sure it still stands on the flow

What is extending an argument or card

300

This argument argues that a fundamental assumption of the resolution is flawed or offensive and thus it can't or shouldn't be debated or proven true

What are Kritiks

300

Explain the Aff argument of Democratic Accountability 

The supreme court is fundamentally undemocratic - they have unprecedented power in US history, being the final arbiters of law, serving decades on end, and being effectively unremovable from office. The Supreme court must be more accountable to current opinions/beliefs by having shorter terms and more routine replacement of older justices with new (maybe younger) justices. 

400

John Rawls said we should put this on to evaluate things without any bias

What is the veil of ignorance

400

This value says that individuals should be in charge of their own person

What is autonomy

400

This is when you focus on the key arguments even if it means dropping other arguments that aren't as important/impactful to the round

What is collapsing 

400

This type of argument proposes rules to follow in a debate. The four parts consist of the interpretation, violation, standards, and the voters. 

What is a theory shell

400

Explain the Aff argument about preventing presidential influence 

It would prevent the president from extending too much political control over the court since they wouldn't be able to control how long a justice would remain as it may favor them due to political beliefs 

500

This philosophy states that the citizen must listen to the sovereign and says that diminishing the power of the sovereign is wrong

What is Hobbes

500

This value is about recognizing authority granted to a government

What is government legitimacy

500

These are the three parts of every argument

What are claims, warrants, and impacts

500

This type of argument are usually abusive because they are hidden and intended for you to concede or because they are logically difficult to refute. They would automatically trigger an aff win or loss if conceded

What are tricks

500

Explain the neg argument Stare Decisis

Stare decisis describes how lower and upper courts looks towards the precedent of prior decisions of the court so that constitutional interpretations remain consistent and stable from court panel to panel. If there is a term in place and constant changing of justices, weak stare decisis will occur causing flip flop judicial decisions, destroying court credibility.