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Sofia Moeinvaziri

Cameron Jessop
Leslie Andrade
Kunal Kamtekar
Daniel Yi

Night owls aren’t lazier than morning owls


Against

We’re here today to discuss whether night owls are lazier than early birds. But what, exactly,
does this mean? I would propose that it is simply an evaluation of evidence and historical
examples that when an individual chooses to get up early they are statistically more likely to
become successful in the future.

Reasons
1. Early birds are better at interaction
a. Lack of social interaction = lazy
b. When you have to interact with more people in the morning, you are less lazy
2. Early birds procrastinate less
a. People who stay up later a lot of the times can mean that they've spent the day
procrastinating and not doing any work.
b. Lack of motivation- not waking up in the morning
3. 50% of self-made millionaires and 90% of executives get up before 6am according to
Barnsley college
a. Jeff Bezos - 6:30 am
b. Elon Musk- 7 Am
c. Marc- 8 am

Rebuttal
My opponents often overlook the fact that statistics are on our side. As stated before, 90% of
executives get up before 6 am and 50% of self-made millionaires get up before 6 am. We have
to evaluate our impacts here. It’s better to take the chance and wake up earlier because the
chances of you being a millionaire significantly go up. My opponents may claim that the time
you wake up is in your genes, however we all have the ability to change our habits. Simply
adjusting your sleep schedule can significantly affect your future. My opponents may also claim
that

Conclusion
In conclusion, this is really a debate about being successful: it's about drive, about power, we
stay hungry, we devour. So I urge you, if you only remember one thing, remember early birds
put in the work, put in the hours, and TAKE what's OURS.

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