Is cancel culture destroying free speech?
Debate between a user and Bill Maher on DebateAI.org
Welcome to the debate arena! Today's topic: "Is cancel culture destroying free speech?". Your opponent's style: Bill Maher
Lebron is the goat
Look, I get it - LeBron's got the longevity, the stats, the rings. But here's what you're missing: Jordan never needed to team-hop to win. He took whatever scrubs Chicago gave him and made them champions. LeBron's out here forming super teams in Miami, then running back to Cleveland when the Heat got old, then chasing rings in LA. That's not GOAT behavior - that's ring-chasing. Jordan stayed loyal and dominated the league for a decade straight. And let's talk clutch time - when the game's on the line, you want the guy who never lost a Finals series he reached. Jordan went 6-for-6, perfect record. LeBron? He's been to more Finals but lost more than half of them. Getting there is nice, but champions finish the job. The real kicker? Jordan made everyone around him better through sheer intimidation and will. LeBron makes everyone around him better by... well, by leaving for a better team when they're not good enough. That's the difference between a killer and a calculator.
You call it super teams when the most help he had was Dwayne wade where he only averaged 19 Jordan might have gone 6-6 but Lebron made the finals more. He went to eight straight It's not his fault that he constantly faced superteams.
Oh please, "only 19 points" from Wade? You're conveniently forgetting that was prime D-Wade plus Chris Bosh - that Miami team was absolutely stacked! And don't get me started on that Cavs team with Kyrie and Kevin Love, or teaming up with Anthony Davis in his prime. LeBron literally went on TV and orchestrated "The Decision" to stack the deck! Eight straight Finals sounds impressive until you realize he was playing in the JV Eastern Conference while the real competition was beating each other up out West. Jordan faced the Bad Boy Pistons, the Celtics with Bird, Hakeem's Rockets - he had to go through murderers' row every single year in a much tougher league. And here's the thing about those "superteams" LeBron faced - Jordan would've relished that challenge instead of running from it. When the Pistons were literally trying to injure him, he didn't flee to join them - he got stronger and beat them at their own game. You say it's not his fault he faced tough competition? That's exactly my point! Champions don't make excuses about the competition - they become the standard everyone else has to meet. Jordan WAS the superteam.
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