| Tournament | Round | Opponent | Judge | Cites | Round Report | Open Source | Edit/Delete |
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| debate | Finals | the fkn wiki | mary nardini |
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| debate | Semis | the antiqueer af wiki | mary nardini again |
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| life | Finals | cishets | mary nardini |
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| Tournament | Round | Report |
|---|---|---|
| debate | Finals | Opponent: the fkn wiki | Judge: mary nardini this just for the cite boxes |
| debate | Semis | Opponent: the antiqueer af wiki | Judge: mary nardini again this is just for cites smh |
| life | Finals | Opponent: cishets | Judge: mary nardini this is just for cite info |
To modify or delete round reports, edit the associated round.
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0 - A note on Queerness and its Intersections with Disclosure Prep StealingTournament: debate | Round: Finals | Opponent: the fkn wiki | Judge: mary nardini disclosureI'll disclose as much as I'm comfortable with. That will include policy, philosophy, and generally less personal queer K materials. I want to provide a good debate, but I'm also uncomfortable with my more personal arguments being open to the circuit under my school. Don't use disclosure as a way of gatekeeping me from pursuing arguments that allow me to explore my identity and we shouldn't have a problem. That being said, if my case is something that I don't feel comfortable putting on the wiki, CONTACT ME BEFORE ROUND. I'll disclose the full doc 30 minutes before. prep stealingI may recut, rework, and reuse people's queer cases on the wiki if I really like it and I feel a passion for the arguments behind it. Your cases might be used! For debaters that are openly not queer, I'll tell you that I plan on recutting it and using it and if that's a problem I'll not do it. For debaters that are wonderful queer voices on the circuit like Cobin, I'll ask permission to do it and I'll also be jealous of you b/c you're cool. For debaters that are openly anti queer, fuck you. Don't run queer kritiks. I'll tell you that I'm going to adapt your case but it's not a conversation. Consider it payback asshole. | 8/31/21 |
0 - CONTENT WARNINGS FOR YOU AND ITournament: life | Round: Finals | Opponent: cishets | Judge: mary nardini Ask me before round about content that I'm uncomfortable with, ironically enough I don't feel comfortable listing it on the wiki. GenericSeptoctNovdecJanfebMarapr | 8/29/21 |
0 - about me, contact info, and navigationTournament: debate | Round: Semis | Opponent: the antiqueer af wiki | Judge: mary nardini again about meHi! I'm VandegriftDD, but I go by Van. Any and all pronouns work. Don't be violent and we should have a fun time! A couple things about me -- COMPLIMENT MY NAILS AND YOU'LL BE MY FAVDebate is more than just a game for me, it's a space that allows me to explore my identity, my expression of my identity, and to find supportive people who I can feel safe around. Please keep that in mind with your performance in round -- take my arguments and myself seriously, or I'll not afford you the same respect. contact infoDiscord: what is queerpess#1312 navigation0 - hot takes and wiki info! | 9/2/21 |
0 - remember Lauryn PaigeTournament: life | Round: Finals | Opponent: cishets | Judge: mary nardini Lauryn Paige was a trans girl who lived in Travis County, Austin until 1999. She was 18 years old. She liked to express her gender identity openly, but she wasn't allowed to do it at home, so she naturally avoided home. She did sex work with a friend of hers, Dixie. Much of her life was on the streets, living with friends and in motels. She didn't have it easy. She was bullied at her high school, Johnston High. She injected black market estrogen herself without supervision from doctors. She was criminalized by the law, by her family, and by society itself. Even still, she never lost hope. She was passionate, she was optimistic, and she never gave up after all of the oppression she faced. Lauryn was brutally murdered. She was stabbed over 60 times. The stab wounds were so deep that she was nearly decapitated. Quite predictably, this didn't get much coverage. According to the Austin Chronicle (heavily bracketed for their tremendous disrespect), "The murder of Lauryn Paige was the first of 1999 in Austin and a particularly gruesome one at that. For some reason, not much has ever been made of it -- which seems odd. How could it come to pass that a teenage girl would be brutally murdered in Austin, Texas, and no one would even ask why? The answer, though neither polite nor "politically correct," seems simple enough: By living her life openly as a transgender woman, Paige lived outside the parameters of what most of society considers acceptable. Perhaps for society, the easiest way to deal with something so uncomfortable is to not." The article in question was the only one you'll find. Throughout it all, she was misgendered, deadnamed, and painted as worthless. She was a bright light that was extinguished by a world that did not value her life. Remember her. | 8/31/21 |
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