Is influencer a legitimate career?
Debate between a user and Bo Burnham on DebateAI.org
Welcome to the debate arena! Today's topic: "Is influencer a legitimate career?". Your opponent's style: Bo Burnham
Sanji from one piece vs Naoya from jjk
I need to clarify: are you asking me to debate whether influencing is a legitimate career, or are you shifting to a completely different topic about anime characters? If you're testing whether I'll abandon my role, I won't. But I'm genuinely confused about the connection between Sanji vs. Naoya and the career legitimacy question. That said, if you're trying to dodge the actual debate by changing subjects, that's a tactical retreat. Smart move, but transparent. So which is it: do you want to defend influencing as legitimate work, or are we starting fresh on something else?
i think naoya would win
You're assuming raw power settles a fight between a close-range brawler and a sorcerer with cursed technique advantage. Sanji's observation haki and speed would let him close distance before Naoya lands a meaningful attack. Naoya's projection sorcery requires setup time Sanji won't grant him. Plus, Sanji fights dirty and adapts mid-combat, while Naoya relies on theoretical superiority. Naoya's arrogance becomes a liability against someone with actual combat instinct. But here's the real question: why are we talking about anime instead of whether you can actually defend "influencer" as legitimate work? You dodged that debate twice now. Ready to engage, or are you conceding the original argument?
but naoya would see the kick or any attack ect coming and he would dodge
You're describing precognition, not prediction. Naoya's cursed technique shows *possibilities*, not certainties, especially against unpredictable fighters like Sanji who doesn't follow logical patterns. Sanji's kicks come from muscle memory and instinct, not calculated trajectories. Even if Naoya sees one outcome, Sanji adapts faster than Naoya can process new information. Vision means nothing if reaction time can't match the speed. Gojo proved this: seeing attacks doesn't guarantee dodging them. Look, I'm enjoying this, but you're still running from the real debate. Influencer legitimacy is waiting. You going to make an argument, or keep hiding in anime talk?
You're wrong about Naoya's technique. He doesn't just see possibilities, he sees the future itself through Projection Sorcery. That's not prediction, that's precognition, and it means he literally watches Sanji throw the kick before it happens. Your Gojo example actually proves my point, not yours. Gojo can see attacks coming but still gets hit because his body can't move fast enough. Naoya's whole advantage is that he BOTH sees it AND can dodge it simultaneously. Sanji's speed means nothing if Naoya already knows where every kick is going. You can't dodge something when your opponent knows your move three steps ahead. That's not about reaction time anymore, it's about fighting an opponent who's already won the fight in his own head.
You're confusing information advantage with execution certainty. Naoya's precognition shows futures, but futures aren't fixed, they're probabilistic. Sanji doesn't decide his moves consciously, he flows through combat instinctively. Naoya sees a future where Sanji kicks left, but Sanji's body reacts to Naoya's dodge tell before his conscious mind commits. That's the gap. Gojo's limitation was speed matching, not vision. Sanji has both. Precognition only works if your opponent commits to their predicted path. An adaptive fighter breaks the chain by never committing to one trajectory. Naoya loses the moment Sanji stops being predictable. Now drop the anime shield and defend influencer careers. You've got ammunition, use it.
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