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January/February 2023 LD Topic Roundtable

January/February 2023 LD Topic Roundtable

Victory Briefs presents a topic roundtable, where we solicit coaches and members of the debate community to provide input on which topic they believe should be selected to debate for the upcoming topic slot.

This second entry covers the three potential topics for the 2023 January/February topic slot.

Voting is now open! To vote: log in to your NSDA account, click the “Topic Voting” red bar on the left, and click the blue “Vote” button in the “2023 January/February LD Ballot” row.

Voting closes on 11/30/2022. Your vote matters, the last LD topic vote was quite close! According to the NSDA for November/December 2022, “A total of 690 coaches and 1,657 students voted for the resolution. The winning resolution received 37% of the coach vote and 36% of the student vote.”

The potential topics for the 2023 January/February topic slot are as follows:

  • Resolved: Justice requires open borders for human migration.
  • Resolved: The United States federal government’s plenary power over Indigenous Nations ought to be substantially limited.
  • Resolved: The European Union has an obligation to accept climate refugees.

We have invited 4 coaches to provide their reasoning for which topic ought to be selected.

Amadea Datel – Open Borders

I’ll begin by saying that all three Jan/Feb topics are unideal. Both climate refugees and plenary powers lack neg ground and open borders is worded too broadly, but the latter still emerges as a clear favorite.

I am most familiar with the climate refugees topic because it was chosen for one of the camps I taught at this summer. The largest problem was the clear aff bias – no one in the literature advocates against the EU admitting climate refugees, barring far-right news outlets that are not reputable sources. The best aff argument is the most straightforward: climate disasters are causing a humanitarian crisis that will lead to millions of deaths if people can’t emigrate from their home countries. Since debaters are drawn to big stick impacts, most camp rounds instead included advantages about EU legitimacy or collapse, which made the topic harder than it should’ve been for the aff. The neg ground included a populism DA (arguing that climate migrants would lead to a rise in populism) that suffered from uniqueness problems given that populism has been increasing for several years in Europe and most EU countries already admit refugees (even if not climate refugees).[1] Debaters also read the Covid DA and Terror DA which relied on the problematic and inaccurate tropes that climate refugees spread diseases or are terrorists. The counterplan ground was also lacking – the neg couldn’t access any counterplans that solved warming because all DA links relied on climate refugees entering the EU, so the perm shielded the link.

The plenary powers topic requires more background to understand. The term “plenary powers” refers to “complete power over a particular area with no limitations.”[2] In the context of Indigenous Nations, this means that Congress has the same power and authority over tribes as states have over their citizens, which includes limiting or modifying the tribes’ power or even terminating tribal status altogether.[3] Although this topic could produce interesting 1ACs about indigenous sovereignty, the neg ground amounts to “indigenous rights bad” which is a non-starter. Even if Congress should have some involvement in indigenous affairs, the resolution specifies that the aff must only limit plenary powers, so the aff could agree that the US still owes duties to tribes without also agreeing that Congress has the right to infringe on tribal decisions.

The final topic concerns open borders. In general, I prefer resolutions that are phrased as normative statements (like “States should open their borders for human migration”) to clarify the division of ground, but the salient topic area, solid negative ground, and the two other unworkable options make this topic my favorite. The term “open borders” implies that people can travel between countries without presenting legal documentation,[4] which would drastically increase immigration. Polls have demonstrated that one-quarter of the world’s population wishes to migrate and 165 million would like to come to the US (for context, only 35 million immigrants currently live in America).[5] The implications are massive: the aff can make arguments about solving humanitarian crises, reducing government costs, and creating cultural diversity, while the neg has access to brain drain or econ arguments, along with a slew of advantage counterplans that reform immigration without opening borders completely. In many ways, the topic seems like a better version of the climate refugees one – it is centered around a concept with more literature and forces the aff to defend a controversial proposal – so I encourage students and coaches to vote for it.   

Eva Lamberson — Open Borders

Let me first say, I at least don’t think any of the possible JanFeb topics have nearly as many problems as the current topic does, so that’s a… bonus. Although I think many of the topics have some good qualities (and a fair number of drawbacks,) my preference is for open borders.

I first want to note that I think this is a successful topic in the endeavor to write an LD resolution that focuses primarily on a robust moral question with a lot of far reaching philosophical literature and interpretations — and that’s the largest reason why I prefer it. We have seen some iffy at best ‘philosophical’ resolutions in the past few years, but I don’t think this is one of them. The moral relevance of borders and the ethical limits of immigration are major parts of the literature in many philosophical traditions.

This means that regardless of the way you want to debate, there will likely be a wealth of literature for you to use. Joseph Carens, for instance, wrote an article outlining the case for open borders and expanded immigration from three distinct philosophical positions — Nozickian far-right libertarianism, Rawlsian liberalism, and utilitarianism. Any quick search on the case for open borders will give you pages on pages of well reasoned academic literature on the subject. Although a lot of the major philosophical positions lean affirmative, there is negative literature as well. Communitarians, for instance, object to open borders on the basis of self-determination. This view is taken by, among others, Michael Walzer in his book Spheres of Justice: A Defense of Pluralism and Equality. This view is also discussed in the aforementioned Carens paper.

Additionally, although the obvious focus of this topic is philosophical, I believe empirical questions and implications have their place in this topic, as long as your conception of justice includes such considerations. 

Now, I’ll turn to the other two topics briefly to compare and discuss my preference for open borders.

First, climate refugees — I actually like this topic too, and I think it’s pretty likely to be the one chosen. My preference for open borders is largely personal, since I think the open borders topic largely excludes the empirical economic and political arguments that will be more common on climate refugees topic, which are honestly just arguments I personally am less interested in hearing. That being said, if you want a more specific topic that balances philosophical inquiry and empirical arguments, this may be the topic for you. Much of the philosophical literature carries over, and there is additionally a number of papers written on the question of climate refugees specifically. There are obviously a number of articles written on the material effects of this resolution as well. I think the question of the open borders vs. climate refugees topics is largely personal — would you prefer a philosophical topic with some empirical implications or an empirical topic with philosophical implications?

Plenary power is by far my least favorite topic. Although it is probably high time for a topic that centers around indigenous issues and that can center indigenous scholarship, I unfortunately don’t think this is the one. TL;DR, it’s really aff biased, especially for LARPers and trad debaters. There’s article after article after article (and so on) about how the U.S. government having plenary power over native land and sovereignty is bad, to say the least. I suppose negatives could just say eliminate plenary power over native land, but I’m writing this with traditional debaters in mind too. Plus, who wants to deal with T-substantial?

Again, I think this is a pretty solid topic set, at least compared to NovDec, especially either immigration topic. Most importantly, regardless of what I or anyone else has to say, I hope that you all do some basic research and thinking before you vote so our topic selection is well informed!

Jacob Nails – Open Borders

None of the three slated topics for January-February 2023 stand out to me as exceptional. I believe both immigration resolutions would make for reasonable topics, and I give the marginal edge to Open Borders. Plenary powers would be the worst of the three resolutions.

“Resolved: The European Union has an obligation to accept climate refugees.”

Grade: B

This topic is the most straightforward of the three. It reads like a Public Forum resolution in centering on a timely political controversy. Immigration is an excellent topic area that provokes a range of significant ethical and practical questions, and the Climate Refugees topic provides a relatively clear and empirical context in which to debate immigration. It does, however, ask for debate at the margins over whether “climate refugees” constitute a well-defined category of refugees,[1] rather than over the core controversy of immigration itself. Another significant downside is the topic’s focus on climate change, which is already a main theme of the ongoing November-December topic.

“Resolved: Justice requires open borders for human migration.”

Grade: B+

This topic is my recommended choice. While the Climate Refugees topic isn’t exactly a minimalist change in immigration policy, it’s not the most substantial either. Open Borders, by contrast, is a maximalist revision in immigration law if ever there was one. Arguably, no country currently has a policy of true open borders. By virtue of representing a much more radical departure from the status quo, I think Open Borders does a much better job at cutting to the heart of the immigration debate, over what it means to constitute a political community, what authority a state possesses to define the boundaries of that community, and so forth. While I wouldn’t say the Climate Refugees topic has a shortage of literature, the literature base is far shallower than on the topic of borders, over which oceans of ink have been spilled.

The phrase “Justice requires…” makes this topic less amenable to being read as a straightforward statement of policy than its counterpart. This wording does add some vagueness, and I sharply criticized the current Chinese Environmentalism topic for presenting an empirical debate devoid of the context needed to evaluate it,[2] but in this case I would consider the inexactness more of a plus than a minus. It better represents the crux of the discourse over the concept of open borders, which is more often presented as a political ideal than a specific blueprint for policy change.

“Resolved: The United States federal government’s plenary power over Indigenous Nations ought to be substantially limited.”

Grade: D

While plenary powers over Indigenous Nations is a novel topic area, and I suspect that a high-quality version of this resolution could exist, I am very pessimistic that the topic as worded would produce productive debates.

Hillary Hoffman summarizes some of the historical applications of Congress’s plenary powers:

“Congress has used plenary power to override Supreme Court decisions, abrogate treaties negotiated by the executive branch, terminate federal recognition of previously recognized tribes, divest tribes of vast landholdings in violation of treaty agreements, and involuntarily incorporate numerous indigenous nation-states, such as the Kingdom of Hawaii, into the United States.[3]”

If that list sounds largely negative to you, then it’s doing its job of representing the state of literature on this topic. Law reviews contain more than a few articles on Congress’s plenary power over tribes but they bias by and large toward criticisms of it. Of course, on its own a skewed literature base isn’t the end of the world, and strong topics can be crafted with this fact in mind.

But the other limitation of this topic is that it gives extremely expansive leeway to the affirmative in crafting their advocacy. The topic is worded much like a Policy Debate resolution in merely requiring that the affirmative show a “substantial limit,” which could take any number of forms considering the broad scope and application of the doctrine (“plenary powers” literally means “absolute powers”), but unlike resolutions of policy it is worded in the passive voice, making the exact agent and process at least somewhat unclear.

Again, broad affirmative leeway on its own is not a death knell to a topic. The September-October 2021 topic (“Resolved: The member nations of the World Trade Organization ought to reduce intellectual property protections for medicines”) also allowed the affirmative free rein to choose from a variety of mechanisms for merely “reducing” IP rights. But the negative started with a strong general premise that IP rights are useful for innovation and a guarantee that any action the affirmative took in the direction of reduction would have at least some effect on that innovative incentive.

The Plenary Power topic represents the uniquely dangerous confluence of unreliable negative ground and flexible affirmative choice, making it too easy for the affirmative to find some change from underneath the broad umbrella of total control to which the negative’s main objections don’t apply. Even the seeming conflict between rectifying social injustices and preserving rule of law that undergirds many topics of this sort does not provide the negative stable ground here, as many of the criticisms of plenary powers stem from its tenuous constitutional foundations. And with the affirmative picking the exact terrain on which that debate occurs, they’ll generally come out with the high ground.

[1] Apap, Joanna and Capucine du Perron de Revel. “The concept of 'climate refugee': Towards a possible definition.” European Parliamentary Research Service. October 2021. https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2021/698753/EPRS_BRI(2021)698753_EN.pdf

[2] Victory Briefs. “November/December 2022 LD Topic Roundtable.” 23 September 2022. https://www.vbriefly.com//2022/09/23/november-december-2022-ld-topic-roundtable/

[3] Hoffman, Hillary M. “Congressional Plenary Power and Indigenous Environmental Stewardship: The Limits of Environmental Federalism.” Oregon Law Review: Vol. 97, No. 2 (2019). https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24696

Lawrence Zhou — Open Borders

Well, it appears that the near-unanimous consensus of the writers in the previous roundtable did little to sway the community vote in favor of the China topic. While the most apocalyptic predictions of the topic producing unmanageable debates seemed to have passed, a brief survey of the wiki has not left me feeling like the China topic was a preferable option to conscription. Let’s hope this topic roundtable fares better. 

Unfortunately, the slate of topics available for January/February seems noticeably worse than the topics available for November/December. In fact, I might go so far as to argue that even the China topic would have won my vote above any of the three potential listings here. 

With great reluctance, I favor the open borders topic. I think it has at least some semblance of a reasonable balance between affirmative and negative ground and accesses an interesting literature base. 

I think the EU topic isn’t terrible, but I think it makes for an uninteresting debate. While I think some might be intuitively drawn to the topic because of its simple wording, I think the topic avoids the interesting debate that exists in the literature in favor of an abstract philosophical debate that forces the negative to make some very implausible arguments.

As Marshall Bierson once argued, this topic requires the negative to argue that not only is there no responsibility to save a drowning child in a pond generally, but no responsibility to save a drowning child even when you’re the one who pushed them into the pond. Given the EU’s contribution to global climate change, it seems patently absurd to argue that the EU has precisely zero moral obligation to accept some non-zero number of climate refugees. 

The more interesting questions seem more about how to accept climate refugees, e.g., delineating precisely what obligations does the EU have to help refugees, asking what policies should be in place to mitigate the backlash people might have to a large influx of climate refugees, or defining what a climate refugee is in the first place. None of these are particularly relevant to the topic as worded. 

That leaves the negative with arguments that are mostly about the (racist) backlash that will occur as a result of an influx of climate refugees. Such arguments are important to discuss, but I personally don’t really want several months of judging some variation of the backlash DA. 

The plenary powers topic has the advantage of at least sounding interesting. Plenary powers—that Congress has expansive, virtually unlimited authority to regulate tribes—is a somewhat obscure legal idea that most debaters and coaches are likely unfamiliar with. If chosen, at least the topic would force debaters to engage with the history of Supreme Court cases like Herrera v. Wyoming or United States v. Kagama

Beyond that, however, I suspect this topic is simply too small and affirmative-biased to sustain four months of debate. Not only is there good reason to suspect that such a doctrine lacks any Constitutional basis to begin with, but I can’t think of any particularly strong reason why plenary power over Indigenous Nations ought to exist anyways. It seems like the negative would be forced to resort to precedent or spillover arguments that seem tenuous at best. 

By contrast, the open borders topic seems far more balanced in terms of ground while not being too small. While I personally think having completely open borders is wildly implausible, I think there is a reasonable debate to be had. Both libertarians like Bryan Caplan and critical theorists criticize borders as cementing unjustified exclusion. Meanwhile, those critical of open borders argue that borders ensure a right to association, prevent conflict, or are necessary to advance leftist goals

The literature surrounding the debate over open borders spans many different genres and is as deep as it is wide. There would be no shortage of blogs, academic articles, and books to draw from on this fascinating ethical debate that has huge relevance (as the climate refugees topic makes clear). While the affirmative would be confined to a single advocacy, there would be no shortage of different framing devices the affirmative could draw from, thus ensuring reasonable argument innovation over the course of the topic and guaranteeing the negative a reasonable backstop against a tidal wave of small and unpredictable affirmatives. Of course, the topic suffers from the usual slate of issues, e.g., the lack of a clear actor, but I think those are surmountable barriers. 

While none of these topics stands out to me as particularly interesting, I think open borders should win because it has a clear, limited, and relatively balanced division of affirmative and negative ground. The climate refugees and plenary powers topics fail that test in at least one major way.


[1] https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2022/10/06/populists-in-europe-especially-those-on-the-right-have-increased-their-vote-shares-in-recent-elections/

[2] https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/plenary_power

[3] https://www.americanbar.org/groups/crsj/publications/human_rights_magazine_home/2014_vol_40/vol--40--no--1--tribal-sovereignty/short_history_of_indian_law/

[4] https://www.thoughtco.com/open-borders-4684612

[5] https://www.aei.org/articles/what-if-justice-demands-open-borders/

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November/December 2022 LD Topic Roundtable 

Victory Briefs presents a topic roundtable, where we solicit coaches and members of the debate community to provide input on which topic they believe should be selected to debate for the upcoming topic slot. 

This first entry covers the three potential topics for the 2022 November/December topic slot.

Voting is now open! To vote: log in to your NSDA account, click the “Topic Voting” red bar on the left, and click the blue “Vote” button in the “2022 November/December LD Ballot” row.

Voting closes on 9/30/2022. Your vote matters, the last LD topic vote was quite close! According to the NSDA for September/October 2022, “A total of 512 coaches and 1,442 students voted for the resolution. The winning resolution received 40% of the coach vote and 35% of the student vote.” 

The potential topics for the 2022 November/December topic slot are as follows: 

  • Resolved: The People’s Republic of China ought to prioritize environmental protection over economic growth.
  • Resolved: Singapore’s Ethnic Integration Policy is unjust.
  • Resolved: The Republic of Korea ought to abolish military conscription.

We have invited 5 coaches to provide their reasoning for which topic ought to be selected. 

Lawrence Zhou - Military Conscription 

To be honest, I think the three potential November/December LD topics are all pretty bad, especially in comparison to the slate of topics we got for the September/October slot. However, one clearly stands out to me as the best—military conscription. 

Let’s start with why I think the other options are worse. 

The China topic is nothing more than a modified version of the 2014 January/February LD topic: January/February – Resolved: Developing countries should prioritize environmental protection over resource extraction when the two are in conflict. Anyone who debated that topic understood that the negative ground on that topic was horrifically bad not just because there isn’t a very strong argument in favor of destroying the environment (and because destroying the environment often itself undermines economic growth) but because there was simply no good backstop against a tidal wave of tiny specific advocacies aka plans. What is to stop the affirmative from saying that we shouldn’t mine a particular coal vein, shut down a particular dam, or even just affirm the status quo given the recent 14th FYP that already prioritizes environmental protection in a wide variety of domains? 

I struggle to think of a single unifying generic that survived the entire season on the last version of this topic (apart from tricky philosophical NCs that didn’t really reflect any serious philosophical work in the area of environmental ethics). The affirmative was always incentivized to pick a tiny area where there was very little for the negative to say and the negative was always forced to retreat to extremist generics (e.g., untenable versions of libertarianism or random kritiks of issues unrelated to the truth or falsity of the resolution) or to be saddled with the unreasonable expectation of producing a specific negative file to every possible affirmative proposal. As someone who has proposed some version of a China topic to the topic committee for the past three years, I’m excited to see a China topic finally make it to the final slate of topics, but I’m unconvinced that this version of the topic would make for a good debate topic. 

The Singapore topic is a subject area I view as interesting and under-discussed, but also a poor subject for a two-month debate topic. While there are some articles discussing the issue, a quick skim of Google Scholar on the issue shows very few articles directly about the EIP, with results by page 3 quickly moving to discuss the EIP merely in passing. The core conflict is whether the EIP increased social integration or marginalized the Malay and Indian underclass (or both), an interesting debate but that is basically just a single argument for each side. I don’t think this topic is quite as bad as the initial reactions to it have suggested it would be, but I don’t think this is a topic I would want to debate for two months given the dearth of literature on the issue. 

In comparison, I think the military conscription topic is fascinating. The topic burst into the limelight when BTS rekindled a debate about military service in South Korea. There are also excellent philosophical arguments on the topic. Coupled with the unique cultural and historical dynamics of South Korea, I think there are many excellent debates to be had about the importance or necessity of military service. There are interesting debates about conscientious objectors, how conscription interacts with changing population dynamics, and if conscription would help or hinder South Korea in a conventional conflict with North Korea

In my mind, only the conscription topic has a relatively balanced ground for both sides and has lots of literature to support both sides. The China topic has huge swaths of literature but an inequitable division of ground; the Singapore topic has relatively equitable ground but lacks a robust enough literature base to sustain a two-month debate topic. This is why I think that conscription is the best topic. 

That being said, my suspicion is that people will naturally gravitate towards the China topic, drawn in by the allure of an interesting topic area and the novelty of debating from the perspective of the other world superpower (although people have been reading clearly untopical affirmatives about China for several years now). I don’t think it would be the end of the world should the China topic be selected, but I do suspect it will be a pain to prepare as the negative. 

Jacob Nails - Military Conscription

My grade: I give the South Korea topic an A, the Singapore topic a B, and the China topic an F.

The Chinese environmentalism resolution is a clear dead last. The only plus I see to this topic is that it exists at the intersection of two geopolitically salient subjects that students would benefit from learning about—China and the environment—but the topic is not well-suited to foster engaging debates on these issues.

The main problems stem from the “value A over B” mechanism. Topics with this style of wording need to be debatable at an abstract level because they tend not to provide enough context to be interpreted as a specific statement of policy. What would it look like for China to pass a law that prioritized the environment over the economy? It could look like about a million things. The number of environmental issues is as innumerable as the set of policies targeting them and the types of economic activities they could conflict with. The Jan-Feb ’14 resolution (“Resolved: Developing countries should prioritize environmental protection over resource extraction when the two are in conflict”) demonstrated this in spades. The policies debaters conjured up were absolutely limitless and culminated in a disaster of a topic.

Broadness and vagueness would not be a problem per se if there were substantive debate to be had about the topic as a principle. The Jan-Feb ’13 resolution (“Resolved: Rehabilitation ought to be valued above retribution in the United States criminal justice system”), for example, produced fine debates because the main conflicts between rehabilitation and retribution stemmed from opposing philosophies of crime and punishment that cut across context. But the size and severity of both environmental and economic issues are primarily empirical and context-dependent questions that can’t be meaningfully gauged in the abstract, and “China” is far from sufficient context to reach any interesting philosophical conclusion about how growth somehow categorically supersedes the environment or vice versa. The topic asks a detail-oriented question without the details to evaluate it.

A related trouble with the resolution is that the two values pitted against one another aren’t inherently at odds. The most recent “prioritize” topic from last season (Mar-Apr ‘21, “Resolved: In a democracy, a free press ought to prioritize objectivity over advocacy”) illustrated both sides of this issue. On the one hand, this topic at its best produced clash over a core controversy, as objectivity and advocacy were two approaches to journalism directly contrasted against one another in the topic literature. On the other hand, debaters would often define “objectivity” in terms like “ensuring factual accuracy in reporting,” which left no real trade-off between objectivity and advocacy, and when this happened it resulted in the two sides talking past each other.

While the blame on that topic could mostly be laid on crafty debaters with dubious definitions, the problem seems much more insoluble on the China topic. The argument over whether growth benefits the environment is not just idle nitpicking, but one of the central resolutional questions. Is this an argument for the negative? It’s not clear. If the two values turn out not to be in conflict, what does it mean to prioritize one? Where does the controversy even lie? The division between sides becomes unclear. And hand-waving these arguments away by assuming an implicit “When in conflict…” constraint on the topic doesn’t make things any better. Not only is it unclear ex-ante which forms of growth will net harm the environment, forcing debaters to muddle topicality and content to determine which examples apply, but limiting the discussion to only the cases where growth is most clearly harmful is to stack the deck against the negative.

And lastly, we’ve seen China crop up as the subject of some rounds on recent topics such as nuclear weapons (Jan-Feb ‘20), lethal autonomous weapons (Jan-Feb ‘21), and appropriation of space (Jan-Feb ‘22). These rounds uniformly produced some of the lowest quality debates on each topic, leaving me skeptical of debaters’ ability to discuss China constructively.

The other two topics are much better.

Turning next to the Singapore topic, some background info is in order. One will need to know about Singapore’s Ethnic Integration Policy or EIP to form an informed opinion on this topic. The EIP instituted ethnic quotas for housing in Singapore, requiring that each neighborhood and housing block reflect Singapore’s overall ethnic makeup (which is majority Chinese, with substantial Malay and Indian minority groups). The purpose of the law is to ensure members of different ethnicities live amongst and interact with each other and to prevent the formation of ethnic enclaves within society (a map of racial demographics in many U.S. cities may give a good indication of what the law aims to avoid). I recommend this talk by Singapore’s Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong for background info on race relations in Singapore (he also touches on his support for the EIP during the Q&A). Critics claim that race-based quotas inflame rather than ameliorate racial tensions and that the law may inadvertently harm minority groups. For example, if a downtown housing block is already at quota for Chinese occupants, only Chinese homeowners will be able to sell to prospective Chinese buyers without exceeding the quota; Malay or Indian home sellers, unable to accept most offers, must settle for a lower price and a longer search for buyers.

First, the pros. The topic is very clear and concise. It’s only six words, half of those being the name of an exact law. Aside from perhaps minor disputes over the exact meaning of “unjust,” the topic leaves little room for ambiguity. It also succeeds at (what I take to be) the main goal of this year’s November-December topic basket, namely, encouraging students to engage with controversies elsewhere in the world. I am certain almost no students had extensive prior knowledge of Singapore’s Ethnic Integration Policy, and, more so than on the other two topics, succeeding on this topic will require they thoroughly familiarize themselves with a new cultural and political context. And while most students will never live in Singapore, a topic that concerns race relations and housing policy can teach lessons of domestic relevance, both in thinking through the topic’s similarities to U.S. issues as well as the many ways in which the Singaporean context is different.

One of the topic’s strengths is also a major downside. Because this topic requires a deep understanding of the current affairs of a distant nation as a pre-condition to informed debates, rounds between debaters who haven’t researched the topic thoroughly will be even poorer than usual. And even where both debaters have done their due diligence, the judge may not have. It is not a safe assumption to hope that a parent volunteering for the weekend has engaged in background reading on Singaporean politics. These debates may end up much worse than they could be due to the inherent knowledge barrier.

Another drawback is that the EIP isn’t the largest controversy ever and so the literature base is somewhat lighter than the average topic. November-December is one of the less intensive topic slots for most regions, so the shallowness isn’t a fatal flaw, but I could just as easily see this topic fitting comfortably in a one-month Public Forum topic slot. In particular, the affirmative might struggle to find support for the law being fundamentally unjust. Not being an expert myself, I consulted a few Singaporeans, and the general impression seems to be that the EIP is relatively popular or at least accepted as the state of things by most of the public. Some expressed concern that the affirmative will have a harder time.

Finally, my topic of choice: South Korean Conscription.

Conscription is a Lincoln-Douglas classic, being the third LD resolution ever debated (Mar-Apr ‘81, “Resolved: military conscription is a superior alternative to a voluntary army”) and with variations on the theme showing up three other times since for Nov-Dec ‘89 (“Resolved: all United States citizens ought to perform a period of national service”), NFL—now NSDA—Nationals ‘09 (“Resolved: Military conscription is unjust”), and Sep-Oct ‘17 (“Resolved: In the United States, national service ought to be compulsory”). That the topic committee has returned to this topic area so many times shows there’s something right about it, and my experience with the 2009 and 2017 iterations supports this.

Conscription sits at the crossroads of the ethical and the political which makes for an ideal Lincoln-Douglas topic. One can ask moral questions about the extent of individual liberty in times of war as well as practical questions about public perception or military effectiveness. The literature on all of these matters is deep and goes back decades, including a wealth of empirical studies to be cited on both sides.

This topic would be the first time conscription, or any topic, has been situated in a South Korean context. While I don’t think the added specification is necessary to facilitate productive debates over conscription, it is also not unwelcome. This topic, just like the EIP topic, is worded clearly and concisely with an unambiguous agent and action, leaving little room for interpretational confusion. Korea gives a modern political setting that makes the debate more concrete and relevant, and conflict on the Korean peninsula is always a timely topic to learn about.

My only word of caution is that I expect debaters to gravitate toward superficial specificity on a topic like this one, preferring to cite the news article of the week that explicitly uses the word “Korea” over the meta-analysis of conscription throughout history that doesn’t. I would resist this impulse.

Amadea Datel – Military Conscription

For the November-December LD topic, I encourage debaters and coaches to vote for the third resolution: Resolved; The Republic of Korea ought to abolish military conscription. South Korea’s mandatory two-year military conscription for young men is a salient, controversial issue. Proponents emphasize its two aims: national security and nation building, which can act as a force multiplier during emergencies (which are on the horizon considering recent tensions with China) and a social equalizer that reinforces individuals' connections to their nation. Meanwhile, its opposers stress that the system is prone to corruption, grants easier service conditions to celebrities, and entrenches gender inequality since the mandate only applies to men.  The increasing social opposition to conscription also undermines its original goals since a policy that a significant proportion of the public resents cannot create a sense of national unity. Yet this otherwise aff-biased topic is counterbalanced by the neg’s counterplan options – debaters can advocate reforming South Korea’s military conscription policy by applying it to all regardless of gender or loosening its tight restrictions on exemptions. 

The largest issue with the first topic – China’s prioritization of environmental protection over economic growth – is that it is too vague to prove a stasis point for debate, resulting in shallow T debates on the national circuit and definition debates combined with examples that do not clash on local circuits. At first glance, the resolution is neg-biased since “prioritize” implies a forced choice between environmental protection and economic growth, so aff debaters must argue that the government must always place the former over the latter. This is an untenable position because one can always find isolated instances when the government should prioritize economic growth or consider the two equally important since it is impossible to disentangle one from the other. Increasing greenhouse gas emissions will submerge hubs of global commerce underwater, and environmental issues cost the economy billions of dollars each year, with estimates putting the toll at 10 percent of GDP.  On the national circuit, I expect to see the opposite problem: an aff side bias because the aff can advocate for any policy that prioritizes the environment over growth, exploding the neg’s prep burden. 

Although the second topic, Singapore’s Ethnic Integration Policy, is phrased more clearly, I doubt it can sustain two months of debates. For some background, Singapore introduced the EIP in 1989 to curb ethnic segregation between Malays, Chinese, and Indians by limiting the total percentage of neighborhoods that may be occupied by certain ethnicities. I initially expected this topic to favor the aff due to the wealth of evidence that the policy has exacerbated the housing shortage because the disparities in income between social groups make it impossible for lower-income Malays to purchase housing in Chinese and Indian neighborhoods. The EIP has also inflamed racial tensions by allowing families of certain races to sell their flats for higher than others depending on which ethnic groups are eligible to purchase them and has failed to account for the increasing percentage of mixed-race people. Moreover, evidence of the policy decreasing segregation is speculative at best, considering that the areas with an overconcentration of particular ethnic groups have not changed since the 1980s, and neighborhoods with overrepresentation have sprung up since then due to income disparities. However, I doubt there is more than one topical aff (that abolishes the EIP), which rectifies the aff skew yet contributes to somewhat stale debates that cite the same limited literature base in most rounds.

Thus, the military conscription topic offers the clearest resolution with the most balanced ground on both sides, along with advantages and disadvantages that accommodate the “big-stick” impacts to which debaters inevitably run. 

Sources:

https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/debating-south-korea-s-mandatory-military-service

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/prioritize

https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/china-climate-change-policies-environmental-degradation

https://www.99.co/singapore/insider/ethnic-integration-policy-eip-hdb/

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-13-7048-9_3

Eva Lamberson – Military Conscription

Before anything else, I just want to express that I’m generally pretty on board for the NovDec topic set. When they were first released, I definitely criticized them for being way too PF-like (which may still be true,) but the more I thought about them the more I realized that, at the very least, each of these topics are an exciting opportunity to move LDers out of their comfort zones and to argue topics that have serious and extremely relevant ethical and political implications beyond just the United States — so, no matter which topic is picked, I’m hopeful we’ll see some robust, non-US-centric debates.

However, all of that optimism aside, I definitely have a preference, and that preference is (by far) South Korean military conscription. I think this topic offers the best balance, both in terms of argument diversity and side bias. Additionally, I appreciate that the ground on this topic is extremely clear (the China topic, for instance, will be fraught with extensive arguments about what it means to ‘prioritize’ something, which I quite frankly just don’t want to listen to.)

First, it’s worth noting that the subject of conscription in the Republic of Korea is actually creating quite a buzz right now, not only in South Korea but internationally. Policy revisions to the Military Service Act are currently being proposed in order to exempt popular boy band BTS from mandatory service, sparking debates among South Korean officials about the nature of exemptions for artists. As silly as this may sound, the increased scrutiny on South Korean conscription should (hopefully) lead to a number of forthcoming articles relevant to the topic, meaning there should be an abundance of cards to cut!

Even before BTS brought it to the limelight, conscription in South Korea has been the subject of both political and academic debate, so there should be a decent literature base to build off of and a diversity of arguments to examine. For instance, there are practical questions about the dwindling numbers of the South Korean military, meaning that eliminating conscription would be catastrophic, especially given heightened tensions between North and South Korea. On the other hand, many aspects of the Military Service Act have raised serious concerns — for instance, the way conscientious objectors are treated or the ways in which conscription affects the political attitudes of South Korean men.

However, the largest reason that I prefer this topic to the others (which, granted, also have good empirical literature bases) is that, in my opinion, it leaves the most room for principled philosophical positions. Even though the topic specifies a particular nation, I think that positions that are either based on or incorporate wholesale philosophical objections or endorsements of conscription could be both extremely strong and extremely interesting. For instance, affirmatives may suggest that mandatory conscription constitutes an unacceptable violation of liberty, or that (especially given South Korea’s harsh treatment of conscientious objectors) such policies are seriously coercive. On the flip side, a negative could argue that conscription is an obligation we owe the state by virtue of the social contract (though, which side this argument actually flips depends on the social contract theory you’re using,) or that mandatory service bolsters democratic values.

Finally, if anyone read my two cents here and thought “Wow, Eva must really have the right takes on these topics!” you can even choose to rank all three topics in the way that I’m going to — if you’re at all curious, it will be: conscription, environment v. econ, Ethnic Integration Policy. 

Charles Karcher – Environmental Protection

The topic slate for November and December offers some solid options. After a careful review of the three, my choice is Resolved: The People’s Republic of China ought to prioritize environmental protection over economic growth. (If you have been around for long enough, or if you appreciate debate history, you may recognize the wording of the topic - that’s because it’s a blatant nod to the 2014 January/February/TOC topic, Resolved: Developing countries should prioritize environmental protection over resource extraction when the two are in conflict.)

Here, I will present a brief note that speaks to why I believe that this topic offers a great division of ground, especially for policy-style and critical argumentation. 

China’s rapid economic growth since 1978 has become - and will be remembered as - an international spectacle. Not only has the country been able to impressively improve the average quality of life and income of its citizens, it has also established itself as an international economic juggernaut, even as Western countries face routine economic hardships which hamper growth and efforts to maximize economic prowess on the global stage. However, such growth has not come without cost. Even during the 2014 topic, China was a hot point of contention - scholars around the world have observed China’s prioritization of economic growth over consideration for the environment. 

The varied environmental challenges that have manifested in China can be used as advantage areas on the affirmative or even be read as plans. One random memory from my childhood is watching a video (that I was too young to fully understand at the time) about the Three Gorges Dam. This project is a great example of how infrastructure projects that yield economically-beneficial fruits can be detrimental to local and regional ecosystems and communities. There are many infrastructure projects that are similar to this, and there is ample discussion about policies that can be passed to mitigate the environmental effects of them.

Prepping and debating against policy affirmatives will be in-depth and engaging. There is a good amount of research on the ‘win-win’ possibilities for economic growth and environmental protection, which will be a useful generic case turn. Moreover, the uniqueness question for economy-related disadvantages is hot at the present. 

The topic also offers fresh areas of exploration for critical perspectives. Critical debaters may choose to research topics such as environmental inequalities in China or the role that Ecofeminism can have in remedying its environmental issues. Negative debaters may choose to critique certain affirmative positions on the grounds of Anthropocentric Futurism

One other interesting thing to ponder is the Belt and Road Initiative. (For those who keep tabs on Public Forum topics, this might ring a bell - in 2019, there was a topic about the European Union and the Belt and Road Initiative.) The BRI is a series of infrastructure projects outside of China that has been criticized as neo-colonial and parasitic to local economies. Given that the resolution does not establish any parameters that speak to whether China’s prioritization has to be global or local, it may be worthwhile to investigate what environmental implications these projects have - here’s a start. An investigation of this subsection of the topic literature is sure to be worthwhile for critical and policy debaters alike.

I’ll be excited to judge debates on any of the topics that are on the slate. Since arriving in Taiwan last month, I’ve seen firsthand the cultural influence of BTS and have heard discussions about its relevance to the South Korean conscription system. Although a bit more restricted in terms of research available, the Singapore topic would be a great option for philosophical and critical debates about the role of the state, Foucauldian biopolitics, and the philosophy of race. Perhaps it is because so much of my early exposure to circuit debate was from rounds recorded in the Spring of 2014, but I am personally inclined toward the China topic. It offers a great division of ground about an issue that will become more pressing in the coming decade, and I believe that it is the best choice of the three topics presented.

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Harker KM wins Damus Hollywood Invitational

Congratulations to Harker's Krishna Mysoor (VBI '19) for winning the 2019 Damus Hollywood Invitational. In finals, Krishna defeated S. Eugene's Wiley Kohler on a 2-1 decision.

Full results can be found here.

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American Heritage PR wins Florida Blue Key

Congratulations to American Heritage Peregrine Beckett for winning the 2019 Florida Blue Key. In finals, Peregrine advanced over Southlake Carroll's Tarun Ratnasabapathy.

Full results can be found here.

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PF Application for Victory Briefs Squads is now Open!

We’re excited to announce that Victory Briefs Squads has opened applications for our Public Forum Squad for the 2019–2020 debate season. Squads gives debaters an opportunity to work with top coaches and collaborate as a team with other students from all over the country. Squad membership provides weekly Squad practices, frequent private coaching sessions, access to a curated shared Dropbox, guest seminars with championship level instructors and former debaters, many practice round opportunities, and case feedback.We are proud of our first year of Squads and the strong feedback participants offered. We frequently solicit feedback from our students to ensure the best possible experience and on our final student evaluation 100% of respondents indicated that they were glad they chose Victory Briefs Squads over other private coaching resources. Here’s what a member had to say about Victory Briefs Squads:

“Working with the coaches was really great. They were beyond helpful in both increasing my technical skill... and expanding my content knowledge… Overall, squads has really helped my improve my skills throughout they year and there’s no way I would have had any of the success I’ve achieved without the help”—David Edwards, Charlotte Catholic High School

Our primary PF coaches this season will include Krithika Shamanna and Bradley Tidwell. Students will also have the opportunity to attend guest seminars led by Anthony Berryhill, Matt Salah, Ellie Singer, Nick Smith, Chris Theis, and more TBA!The application will be on a rolling admissions basis, but spots are extremely limited, so we encourage you to apply quickly for the best chance at admission. You can apply to join the PF Squad here, or learn more at the VB Squads website. There are still a small number spots available in our LD Squad and you can find more info here.If you have any questions about Victory Briefs Squads, please email squads@victorybriefs.com.

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Victory Briefs Squads is now accepting applications!

We’re excited to announce that Victory Briefs Squads is now open for applications for the 2019–2020 debate season. Squads gives debaters an opportunity to work with top coaches and collaborate as a team with other students from all over the country. Squad membership provides weekly Squad practices, frequent private coaching sessions, access to a curated shared Dropbox, weekly open office hours, guest seminars with championship level instructors and former debaters, and case feedback.We are proud of our first year of Squads and the strong feedback participants offered. We frequently solicit feedback from our students to ensure the best possible experience and on our final student evaluation 100% of respondents indicated that they were glad they chose Victory Briefs Squads over other private coaching resources. Here’s what a member had to say about Victory Briefs Squads:

“Working with the coaches was really great. They were beyond helpful in both increasing my technical skill (ie speed/efficiency/etc) and expanding my content knowledge... Overall, squads has really helped my improve my skills throughout they year and there's no way I would have had any of the success I've achieved without the help”—David Edwards, Charlotte Catholic High School

Our primary coaches this season will include Jacob Nails, Christian Quiroz, and Pacy Yan. Students will also have the opportunity to attend guest seminars led by Brianna Aaron, Anthony Berryhill, Sai Karavadi, Devane Murphy, Jake Nebel, SunHee Simon, Chris Theis, Marshall Thompson, Darius White, and more.The application will be on a rolling admissions basis, but spots are extremely limited, so we encourage you to apply quickly for the best chance at admission. You can apply to join the LD Squad here, or learn more at the VB Squads website. Applications are currently available only for Lincoln–Douglas debate. If you’re interested in a Public Forum squad, please fill out this interest form.Thanks again for being a part of the Victory Briefs family. If you have any questions about Victory Briefs Squads, please email squads@victorybriefs.com.

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Find Your Squad with Victory Briefs

Each year, many students, parents, and teachers ask us about possible coaches for the upcoming debate season, and we are always happy to recommend our staff for coaching relationships. Private coaching arrangements, however, are often hard to organize and sustain throughout the year. They also rarely provide everything one looks for in a structured debate team, such as dedicated teammates, regular practices, directed research assignments, and continuous, varied feedback.
We're therefore pleased to announce a new service for debaters looking for additional coaching and teammates: Victory Briefs Squads. Each Squad will bring together up to twelve students to work with two coaches continuously throughout the upcoming season. Squad membership will include up to ten months of weekly squad practices, private coaching sessions, access to a curated shared Dropbox, guest seminars with distinguished instructors and former debaters, feedback on cases, an online workplace to facilitate collaboration, and regular updates for parents and coaches.We're offering Squads as a team-friendly alternative to private coaching and prep sharing groups—not to replace school-based debate teams, but to help make them stronger. Students with coaches or administrators at their schools are required to get coach approval to participate, and they are encouraged to share materials they create with teammates at their school. At the end of each topic, each Squad will share their topic-specific preparation with the broader debate community; guest seminars will also be recorded for broader access. And, in accordance with our commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion along all dimensions of debate, Squads will provide financial assistance for debaters who lack financial resources to afford expensive private coaching.Each squad will start working together when the September–October topic is released on August 8. The application will be open until August 5, but squads may fill up by then. We have already received applications for one-third of available spots, so we highly recommend that interested students apply as soon as possible.To apply or learn more about Squads, please visit squads.victorybriefs.com. Applications are currently available only for Lincoln–Douglas debate. If you'd be interested in a Public Forum Squad, please let us know. If you have any questions about Victory Briefs Squads, please email squads@victorybriefs.com or call us at (330) 3-DEBATE.

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LD NSDA National Tournament Card of the Day

To those who’s seasons have come to an end, we wish you the best in your upcoming academic endeavors, and we hope to see you at camp or on the circuit next year!If you're competing in LD at the 2017 NSDA National Tournament and would like to receive a fresh card in your inbox every single day free of charge, you can subscribe to our LD NSDA card of the day feed here.Please note that cards of the day often get caught up in email applications' promotional filter, so be sure to check that section of your inbox daily!

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Raffi Piliero Wins The 2016 Greenhill Round Robin

Congratulations to Harrison's Raffi Piliero and Harvard-Westlake's Connor Engel for making it to finals of the 2016 Greenhill Round Robin. In finals, Raffi defeated Connor on a 2-1 decision (Paramo, Vincent, *Alston).

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The Argument Clinic

The Argument Clinic Podcast is officially ending.The Argument Clinic Podcast covered a wide variety of introductory debate topics that will serve useful for many debaters for years to come. We hope that listeners continue to benefit from this free educational resource. Download links to old episodes can be found below.A full listing of podcast episode titles can be found below:Listen to current episodes here.Download the full archive of The Argument Clinic podcast as a zip folder here.

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Jack Wareham Wins The 2016 Loyola Invitational

Congratulations to Oakwood's Jack Wareham and La Canada's Alex Zhao for making it to finals of the 2016 Loyola Invitational. In finals, Jack defeated Alex on a 3-0 decision (Bistagne, Ditzian, Steele). Crossroads' Noah Simon was top speaker of the tournament.Full results can be found here.

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Matt Gofman Wins The 2016 Wake Forest National Earlybird

Congratulations to Hendrick Hudson's Matt Gofman and Cary's Grace Jin for making it to finals of the 2016 Wake Forest National Earlybird! In finals, Matt defeated Grace on a 2-1 decision.Full tournament results may be found here.

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Raffi Piliero Wins The 2016 Byram Hills Invitational

Congratulations to Harrison’s Raffi Piliero and Success Academy’s Sekou Cisse for making it to finals of the 2016 Byram Hills Invitational! In finals, Raffi defeated Sekou on a 3-0 decision (Alston, Staunton, Chace). Raffi was also top speaker of the Byram Hills Invitational.Full tournament results may be found here.

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Katherine Fennel Wins The 2016 Byram Hills Round Robin

Congratulations to Stuyvesant’s Katherine Fennel and Harrison’s Matt Zinman for making it to finals of the 2016 Byram Hills Round Robin. In finals, Katherine defeated Matt on a 2-1 decision (Crucilla, Rashed, *Student Vote). Katherine’s coaches are Paul Zhou, Paras Kumar, Ananth Panchanadam, and Julie Sheinman. Matt’s coaches are Chetan Hertzig, Christian Quiroz, and Bennett Eckert. Success Academy's Sekou Cisse was top speaker of the Byram Hills Round Robin.Full round robin tournament results may be found here.

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Shruthi Krishnan Wins The 2016 Grapevine Classic

Congratulations to Greenhill's Shruthi Krishnan and Woodlands College Park's Jessica Zhang for making it to finals of the 2016 Grapevine Classic! In finals, Shruthi defeated Jessica on a 2-1 decision (Hsun, Wright, McConway*).Full tournament results can be found here.Photo Credit: Kim Hsun.

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Bennett Eckert Wins the 2016 NSDA National Tournament

Congratulations to Bennett Eckert of The Greenhill School (TX) and his coach Aaron Timmons for winning the 2016 NSDA National Tournament in LD. Bennett defeated Millard North's Priya Kukreja on an 8-7 decision. Congratulations to both debaters and their coaches on an excellent tournament! Bennet is a former VBI camper and will be teaching at VBI this summer.FullSizeRender

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LD Bid Tournament Logistics 15-16

With the beginning of the competitive season quickly approaching, many teams and debaters are in the process of ironing out their tournament schedule for the season. This page is meant to provide a centralized location for information that is widely dispersed amongst a number of different sources. The page will continuously be updated throughout the season as confirmed exact dates and registration websites become available. For tournament directors (or people who just happen to be in-the-know): please feel free to send me an email (at smitnich91@gmail.com with the subject “Bid Tournament Spreadsheet”) for any updates or changes regarding any of the listed tournaments. (Note: Bold dates are confirmed, italic dates are projected)

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Sep/Oct 2015 LD topic is autonomous medical choices, PF is reparations

You can order a Victory Briefs subscription for the 2015-2016 season HERE.2015 September/October LD TopicResolved: Adolescents ought to have the right to make autonomous medical choices. 2015 September/October PF Topic Area: Racial JusticeResolved: The United States Federal Government ought to pay reparations to African Americans.

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2015-2016 LD Topic List

Update: The official list for potential 2015-2016 LD topics has been made available.Here it is!!Resolved: The United States ought to promote democracy in the Middle East.Resolved: Countries ought to prohibit the production of nuclear power.Resolved: In the United States criminal justice system, jury nullification ought to be used in the face of perceived injustice.Resolved: Immigration ought to be recognized as a human right.Resolved: In the United States, campaigns that support candidates for public office ought to be financed exclusively by public funds.Resolved: Democracies ought to incorporate provisions for legal secession into their national constitutions.Resolved: The United States ought to adopt carbon pricing.Resolved: Corporations ought to value their responsibility to shareholders over the public interest when the two conflict.Resolved: The privatization of civil services undermines democracy.Resolved: In the United States, private ownership of handguns ought to be banned.

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