Lesson 10 min 20 XP
Preempting Arguments
How to anticipate and address your opponent's strongest arguments before they make them.
Why and How to Preempt
Preemption means addressing your opponent's likely arguments before they make them. It is powerful because:
- It takes the wind out of their sails — when they make the argument, the judge has already heard your response
- It shows depth of preparation — judges respect debaters who understand both sides
- It controls the narrative — you frame the counter-argument on your terms
To preempt effectively:
- Brainstorm the strongest opposing arguments — put yourself in your opponent's shoes
- Select the 1-2 most dangerous ones — do not preempt everything or you will spend your entire speech on defense
- Build the response into your case naturally — 'Some might argue X, but this fails because Y'
- Keep it brief — preemption should take 30-60 seconds, not half your speech
The risk of over-preemption: if you spend too long on your opponent's arguments, you may not have time to fully develop your own.