I've changed my mind on live debates, and lean more towards them being a waste of time. I understand why with a lot of prep they could be valuable...
That said, in high-stakes issues where people are unlikely to cooperate with their opposition, there's not going to be any meaningful progress made.
If you think a live debate would be useful on a divisive topic, my recommendation would be to at minimum have someone (or a group) do the research to be able to solidly steelman (not strawman) the other side.
But even then, I'm more partial to written/hypertext form than live performances.
@gabriel
I know of one rule for a great debate... 1-1. Anything more is suicide. Moderators also do nothing but steps in any time, topic actually gets to any real depth.
But to ask people to steelman the other side is delusional. If I understood how can people be so psychopathic, as to mutilate children, I would not need the debate to begin with.
@gabriel
Even the most vigorous of lefties are completely incapable for instance to describe, why I switched my opinion of covid vaccine 2 months into the pandemic. And these people have been "doing their research" for years already.
that is, because research without context is pointless. It's like asking someone to run a marathon, but not showing them which way.
@gabriel
That's called an echo chamber. And it's not a good thing.
@LukeAlmighty@gameliberty.club
It's not meaningless, because there's no guarantee of agreeing 100%.
The extra effort is what makes a live debate more about education than just wasting everyone's time which was my point.
You can refine the shared understanding and points of contention instead of spending an hour accusing the other side of nonsense. Then afterwards declaring victory over a confused audience.