Then you should also acknowledge that a discussion can involve persuasive arguments with the intention of convincing the other party. Debates aren't the only realm where persuasive arguments between two parties exists. Debates are intentional and purposed towards convincing and winning a particular discussion topic. That doesn't mean all persuasive arguments are subject to being debates, they can still be in the realm of discussion.
The difference between discussion and debate is the intent. And miscommunicating intent is where most long-winded back and forths tend to spring from here. It's not a debate if the intent of a persuasive argument is being presented for the sake of mutual understanding.
And the difference is the intent. All those would be debates if there is an intention to convince the other side of a particular discussion. They wouldn't be debates if it were merely for the sake of conversation. Persuasive arguments can be employed in both debate and conversation, it's not mutually exclusive to debate.You can have a debate on the bus. You can have a debate while getting your hair cut. You can have a debate while hanging upside down from the top of a mountain. Doesn't matter. You offer a position and wish to convince someone else of its validity - you're in a debate. And that means you need to bring arguments, not opinions.
Opinions aren't all absent of justification. Not all justification for opinion is considered an argument. An argument can be a reason or justification for opinion, but one that intends to persuade others of being right or wrong. Not all reasons or justifications are arguments.That's an oxymoron. You can't have "arguments of opinion" (at least not in the sense I have used those terms). Opinions are subjective preferences without justification. Arguments are persuasive positions with reasoned justifications. They're mutually exclusive. Opinions have no persuasive power, arguments do. You cannot use opinions to convince someone of your positions, and you cannot use arguments to justify subjective preference - by definition.
If you want to use "argument" as a synonym for debate or conversation or whatever, fine, but that's not what I'm talking about when I use the word here, so please don't use it that way with me so we don't get confused.
Like the example I give above, 'Sweet and salty shouldn't be mixed' can be a persuasive justification for an opinion without being an argument. It can exist merely as a means of self expression. Even if the context is persuasive, it may not be intending to prove something to be right, and that context is defined by the intent of the person expressing the statement. It does not immediately equate to convincing others that 'Sweet and salty shouldn't be mixed' to be true to everyone. It can be read as 'This person thinks sweet and salty shouldn't be mixed'. It can be an argument, or it can merely be rhetoric.
It would be an argument if it was being presented with the intent on proving something. If that intent is not there, it is merely an extension of an opinion.

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. And say for some of us, all we truly try to engage in is honest discussion And truly con't to just ignore (as much as we can) the shitposting to CONTINUE with honest discussion.
