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On and off for the past several years, I've been working on a bunch of articles here on Fanpop: interviews (so many interviews....), comic articles, reviews, and various "What is..." explanatory articles. One of the ones on the back burner has been the "What is Debate?" article, and since I haven't finished that, I have to summarize some basic points about debate:

1) Debate is all about using arguments to support a position, thesis or statement.
2) Debate requires opposition: at least two sides arguing the truth or fallacy of the thesis.
3) Debate requires an audience to judge the effectiveness of the debate. A debate without an audience (whether a few judges or an enormous crowd) is, at best, a civil conversation, and at worst, a knock-out, drag-down argument.

Recently, an acquaintance on Facebook posted a video called "Fraud of the Age: Myth Stolen From Egypt". At first I thought it was broken, because the first half minute of the video is just a black screen with "Part I" written on it. Then, once it started, I thought it was a joke. To some of you, this may not be a surprise, since you may recall I had the same reaction to the hilarious "Zeitgeist" comedy video a few years ago. But this video clearly tries to make a concerted argument in support of a thesis. It's just hard to take seriously because it fails, again and again, to successfully debate. I present it here, in the debate club, as an example of "What Not To Do" in a debate.

Here's the video: link. Can you spot all the problems?

I'm not trying to open a debate here on the thesis of the video - not at all. I just want to discuss how this is an example of just about everything you can do wrong in a debate. For the purposes of this article, the topic of the debate in question doesn't really matter - it's the methods attempted and/or used which are of interest.

WHAT NOT TO DO IN A DEBATE:

1) DON'T Proceed without a thesis. It isn't ever really stated what the film-maker's thesis is. The audience doesn't really know what the guy is trying to prove. You may have your own take on it, but it could be stated as something like "Christianity is false because it is entirely made up of stuff stolen from other religions." It's tough to say for sure.

Without a thesis clearly stated at the beginning, your debate arguments are likely to come off as unconnected meandering diatribes, and nothing loses an audience's interest faster than not knowing what the point of it all is.

2) DON'T Rely on Innuendo. While it can be effective at influencing an audience, implication should never be the primary tool of a debater. This video implies that something is not true, by arguing that it is based on ancient or outdated things that no one now believes. If A = (B + C), B is approximately equal to D, C is approximately equal to E, and both D and E are false, then A must be false, too. That fails, logically, so isn't a very effective argument, particularly when it is your primary argument.

Many arguments can be broken down into logical form; when preparing for your debate, make sure to do a basic check to see if your arguments hold up logically. Given that blue and red, combined, make purple, is it logical to then say that "Without red there would be no green?" No - at the very least, you need more connecting arguments to make your case more clearly.

3) DON'T Make up your own facts. This is the most obvious flaw in this attempt at debate. If you present something as fact in your debate, make sure to present your sources. If you can't provide sources, at least CHECK to make sure that your facts could even possibly be facts.

Practically everything presented in the video as fact has actually NO verifiable basis in fact. It's appalling. It's a logical twenty-car pile-up on the expressway: it's so horrible, but you can't take your eyes off of it. Rather than a reasoned set of arguments, we have a Spot the Mistakes drinking game, where every player is guaranteed to end up completely toasted.

Poor debaters may sometimes present a statement or statistic in an argument without providing a reference and have some hope that it will slide past the opposition and be accepted as fact by the audience. But no debater I've ever seen before makes so many consecutive, bald-faced assertions that are insupportable.

Repetition and speaking in an authoritative tone are not sufficient to sell statements as facts. In a debate, audience members should be able to verify that what you say is factual actually is factual. Otherwise you undermine your own credibility, because a debater's assumption should always be that the audience will check the supposed facts.

What constitutes a verifiable fact? Published references can provide verification, provided they are published by a reputable arena. Preferably any fact that you present in a debate should be independently verifiable through three or more distinct sources, be they newspaper references, biographies, UNESCO fact sheets, study results, or other reference volumes. Print is generally preferable to video or audio, which is preferable to web-based references.

Too often, debaters will reference a wiki page, such as Wikipedia, or other web-based repository. The problem with such references is that anyone can post anything online and claim it to be true, often without any editorial review or verification. Wikipedia is notorious for containing erroneous and fallacious information, and should NEVER be used as a fact reference in a debate. The Wikipedia volunteers are tasked to perform fact-checking - and facts that are not verifiable in an off-line source are generally rejected - but the sheer volume of crap that people submit to Wikipedia makes it impossible to ever be certain of the veracity of information on the site.

If we as debaters rely on online sources for information, we might in our haste end up referencing something like the aforementioned video. Go for trusted and verifiable sources for your facts, not online.

"Yeah," you say, "what do you expect? You're surprised by finding wackos online?" That's a fair cop. But the video in question serves some use: as a cautionary example of what not to do. I'm sure that fans in this club could come up with a better video than this, debating the same or similar thesis, and do it in a coherent manner that did not make these mistakes. In fact, you could probably point out MORE mistakes than the ones I've highlighted.
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Many of Hillary Clinton's past statements about the FBI email investigation are proven untrue, and Donald Trump praises Saddam Hussein's approach to terrorism. Let's just skip the election. Clip from The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, July 6, 2016.
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