Mahesh,+Sarvesh

Cal is my first tournament on the topic. I have judged multiple slow debate rounds in California and I am more than familiar with the stock issue paradigm. That said, I do not follow spreading. If you take it too fast, I will tell you to slow it down. If this happens multiple times, my flow will be lacking. Here is a brief explanation on how I will evaluate your arguments.

Topicality: Give me an interpretation of the resolution and show how the affirmative team does not fall under that interpretation. Make logical arguments with evidence and I am more than happy to vote you up on topicality. Explain why that matters for education and fairness.

Harms: What are the problems in the status quo?

Inherency: Are steps being taken in the status quo to solve the harms?

Solvency: How does your plan specifically solve the harms?

Disadvantage: I am aware that there are very generic disadvantages such as the politics DA. I will tell you that I am not at all familiar with them; however, I am more than happy to judge a debate with a disadvantage that makes logical sense and is backed by evidence. Do not use jargon such as uniqueness, internal link, and link because I will not understand that. Do good work on the impact debate and prove that the disadvantage is worse than the harms of the affirmative.

Keep it slow, logical, and interesting. Make sure you make strong analytics and compare evidence. I will do my best to vote on argumentation alone as I do keep a flow; however, debate is a game of persuasion and that may very well make up my decision.

Counterplans are fine. If you do choose to read a kritik, I will try my very best to understand it, but it will need extensive, SLOW explanations with specific warrants.

Feel free to ask me any questions before the round begins and I'll be more than happy to discuss my decision.