Changes for page Anderson Joe Neg
on 2016/09/10 01:56
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,17 @@ 1 +Part 1 - Resolutional burdens 2 + 3 +There is a difference in prohibition and regulation - a prohibition is to forbid an action or activity by authority or law. In contrast, a regulation is an official rule or law that says how something should be done. The difference in regards to nuclear power is about whether the law will permit any form of nuclear power whatsoever. 4 +The aff only justifies the need for prohibition if they can prove that the harms in their case are inseparable from the production of nuclear power. Otherwise, those harms could be solved through regulations without prohibition. The aff only has ground to win on an advocacy that is a prohibition of nuclear power while the neg has ground to win on regulation. This is because regulations still allow the existence and production of nuclear power that include revisions and innovation whereas prohibition means halting the production immediately halting all potential progress. If the aff only regulates and does not prohibit, they are not meeting the resolution. 5 +To prove that there ought to be no nuclear power whatsoever requires an issue to be presented that is inherent to nuclear power. Otherwise, the need to solve that harm would only justify a regulation because the problem could one day be separated from the production of nuclear power, thus solving the AFF harms. Therefore, the Affirmative burden is to prove that the harms identified in the AFF are necessarily inseparable from nuclear power. The failure to meet that burden means that the aff harms justify a solution that takes the form of a regulation. This is sufficient to negate. If I show they are theoretically separable from the production of nuclear power, then that justifies a regulation, and therefore you negate. 6 + 7 +Part 2 - Offense 8 +I advocate that instead of prohibiting the production of nuclear power, countries ought to enact regulations that only permits the production of nuclear power that doesn’t require mining 9 +Two reasons to negate under the burden structure: 10 +First, as I will demonstrate later in the line-by-line, the AC actually justifies the need to regulate not prohibit because the offense in the AFF comes from solving harms that are not conceptually necessary in producing nuclear power. This straight turns the AFF. 11 + 12 +Second, the affirmative may claim that a prohibition might be overkill but it still solves the problem. However, there are unique harms to using a prohibition to solve problems that could be resolved with well-crafted regulations. 13 +Subpoint A) Prohibition kills research and development 14 +No one would want to develop, or invest in the development of nuclear technologies that are both illegal and impossible to profit from. They would be incentivized not to do so because 1) the technology has already been deemed unacceptable, 2) they would not get their investment back, and 3) it would not be worth running the risk of violating the law and being shut down and losing their ability to research anything. Research and development would violate the terms of the prohibition because prototypes need to be tested at some point in development, and the prohibition would outlaw this practice. Without testing, there is no way to determine whether or not the prototypes work and how to fix the problems in the event that they are unsuccessful. Even if the aff allows modeling the only thing that could exist would be entirely computer based development which is not a viable strategy. 15 +Subpoint B) It is theoretically possible to develop nuclear power that is good under the AFF standard, which is a unique disadvantage to the AFF. 16 +Their own standard proves there is a negative cost to trying to solve these problems by prohibitions when the harms actually justify regulations. 17 +The question is ‘could you imagine a nuclear power technology that doesn't involve doing the aff impacts’- not ‘could you imagine a world without the aff impacts’. Regulations have the ability to resolve the harms of the aff while still maintaining nuclear power as well as research and development. We are not bound to the methods of producing nuclear power that they’re criticizing. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,11 @@ 1 +The AFF causes officers to become overcompliant in the face of potential litigation. 2 +Homer C. Hawkins (Associate Professor, School of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University) and Catherine Montsinger (Assistant Professor, Criminology, Johnson C. Smith University). “Po- lice and Civil Liability: A Practical Guide to Avoiding Litigation.” Law Enforcement Executive Fo- rum • 2007 • 7(1). 3 + Litigaphobia, also referred...litigation may present 4 + 5 +Decline of active and engaged policing is driving a record spike in crime, caused by police fear of backlash. 6 +George Hofstetter (President of the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs). "Proactive policing and the violent crime rate." 2016. http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?m=1119707513166andca=4a80a442-8caf-45c4-97ca-745c0f1b6f88 7 +This past week...seen in years. 8 + 9 +Surrounded by gunshots, children are doomed to a cycle of poverty and violence. 10 +Reich et al. ’02: (Kathleen Reich, M.P.P., Patti L. Culross, M.D., M.P.H., and Richard E. Behrman, M.D. “Children, Youth, and Gun Violence: Analysis and Recommendations.” The Future of Children. Children, Youth, and Gun Violence. Volume 12 – Number 2 Summer/Fall 2002//FT) 11 +Just as the economic...they were dead. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,24 @@ 1 +1. Agency is set apart from other enterprises in that it is inescapable 2 +(Luca Ferrero, “Constitutivism and the Inescapability of Agency”. Oxford Studies in Metaethics, vol. IV, Jan 12, 2009.(https://pantherfile.uwm.edu/ferrero/www/pubs/ferrero-constitutivism.pdf) Professor of Philosophy, University of Wesconsin at Milwaukee.) 3 + The initial appeal...viability of constitutivism. 4 + 5 + 6 +2. Analytic 7 +3.'' 8 +4.'' 9 +5.'' 10 +6.'' 11 +7. Traditional framing mechanisms don’t assign intrinsic value to special obligations which breaks down reasonability, when a promise is made or you owe a group something it creates a special obligation. 12 +SEP, 2014, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, All entries and substantive updates are refereed by the members of a distinguished Editorial Board before they are made public, Special Obligations, First published Thu Oct 17, 2002; substantive revision Sun Jan 5, 2014, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/special-obligations/# 13 + What is special...the hour of need” (59). 14 + 15 +8. Analytic 16 + 17 + 18 +Special Obligations are agent relative reasons for the government to act 19 +SEP, 2014, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, All entries and substantive updates are refereed by the members of a distinguished Editorial Board before they are made public, Special Obligations, First published Thu Oct 17, 2002; substantive revision Sun Jan 5, 2014, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/special-obligations/# 20 + The discussion of the..nearness and obligations. 21 + 22 +Special obligations as a guide to good and bad creates moral danger, therefore they can’t hold moral value or else moral reasoning breaks down. 23 +SEP, 2014, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, All entries and substantive updates are refereed by the members of a distinguished Editorial Board before they are made public, Special Obligations, First published Thu Oct 17, 2002; substantive revision Sun Jan 5, 2014, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/special-obligations/# 24 + Special relationships take...against one another. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,20 @@ 1 +Plan: The United States ought to eliminate qualified immunity for police officers and institute a mandatory indemnification scheme. 2 +Mandery ’94 (Evan J. Mandery, JD Harvard Law School AB Harvard College chairperson of the department of criminal justice and an expert on the death penalty “Qualified Immunity or Absolute Impunity? The Moral Hazards of Extending Qualified Immunity to Lower-Level Public Officials” Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy. 1994) 3 +Part II outlined... uncompensated is indefensible. 4 + 5 +Analytic 6 + 7 +Civil suits in constitutional rights violations are distinctly important in recognizing the importance of individuals who have their rights violated by government officials, even when the financial liability may be addressed by the government. Armacost 89 8 +(Barbara E. Armacost 51 Vand. L. Rev. 583 (1998) “Qualified Immunity- Ignorance Excused” J.D. University of Virginia School of Law 1989 M.T.S. Regent College of the University of British Columbia 1984 B.S. University of Virginia 1976 ) 9 +Turning to section...clear constitutional impropriety. 10 + 11 +Analytic 12 + 13 +First, Requiring police to come to court checks back rights abuses. 14 +Mathern ‘12 (Andrew Mathern. “Federal Civil Rights Lawsuits and Civil Gideon: A Solution to Disproportionate Police Force?” The Journal of Gender, Race and Justice. 2012 — KW, JT) 15 +Any effective approach...of police departments. 16 + 17 +Second, qualified immunity undermines critical reflection over and improved development of civil rights law. 18 +Hassle ’99 (Diana Hassel “Living a Lie: The Cost of Qualified Immunity” Missouri Law Review. Vot. 64 Winter 1999. http://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/mlr/vol64/iss1/9 19 + — KW) 20 +The problem with...encouraging fundamental change.” - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +look at my teammates wikis. i will read their stuff, or upload it here if they don't. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,53 @@ 1 +Part 1: Alternative 2 +The alt is a counter-factually framed resolution: In 1981, following the NAACP lawsuit against the city of Yonkers School Board, the United States ought to guarantee the right to housing. 3 +Analytic 4 + 5 +This historical moment is key to understanding our contemporary debates over the right to housing because it was a monumental uncovering of how schools and governments manipulated a partial right of housing to enforce segregation. 6 +Williams 95 (Lena Williams, Retired senior writer for The New York Times, “JUDGE FINDS YONKERS HAS SEGREGATION POLICY”, November 21, 1985, Online: http://www.nytimes.com/1985/11/21/nyregion/judge-finds-yonkers-has-segregation-policy.html?pagewanted=all – MG) 7 +"A Federal judge...portion of the suit." 8 + 9 +Our alternative method is to treat the counterfactual as it was the resolution. 10 + 11 +B. Functional Competition. It’s a question of competing methods as starting points for the debate. 12 +1. Analytic 13 + 14 +C. Net Benefits. The internal net benefit is that by necessitating use of non-ideal theory, clash under the alternative requires that we interrogate whiteness. Our alternative is a counterfactual and counterfactuals reveal contentions of whiteness. 15 + 16 +Hindsight bias ignores contingencies and alternate histories. 17 +Lebow 1 (Richard Lebow. Professor of International Political Theory in the Department of War Studies, King's College London and James O. Freedman Presidential Professor Emeritus at Dartmouth College, “What’s so Different about a Counterfactual?” World Politics. Vol. 52. No. 4. July 2000 http://www.jstor.org/stable/25054129 ) 18 +“The disciplinary tendency...to different outcomes.” 19 + 20 +Counterfactual engagement improves contingent judgement and decision making. 21 +Lebow 2 (Richard Lebow. Professor of International Political Theory in the Department of War Studies, King's College London and James O. Freedman Presidential Professor Emeritus at Dartmouth College, “What’s so Different about a Counterfactual?” World Politics. Vol. 52. No. 4. July 2000 http://www.jstor.org/stable/25054129 ) 22 +“Many psychologists regard...decisions and events.” 23 + 24 +Part 2: Non-Ideal Framework 25 + 26 +The links will prove why the affirmative is ideal as to engage in a non-historical analysis of the resolution is to be ideal because it is separating issues of oppression from history. 27 +The very use of ideal theory prevents achieving the ideal societies it tries to dictate. This is a ruse of solvency 28 +Mills 1 (Charles Mills. Mills received his PhD from the University of Toronto. Before joining the Graduate Center, he taught at the University of Oklahoma, the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Northwestern University. “‘Ideal Theory’ as Ideology” Hypatia. Vol. 20. No. 3. Summer 2005. — KW) 29 +“I suggest that this...never be achieved.” 30 + 31 +Perception is intrinsically tied to cognition which makes it crucial to interrogate our epistemology through non-ideal theory. (Why counterfactuals are good, our epistemologies are tainted by the past (the black slave), so we should interrogate these tainting pasts 32 +Mills 2 (Charles Mills. Mills received his PhD from the University of Toronto. Before joining the Graduate Center, he taught at the University of Oklahoma, the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Northwestern University. “‘Ideal Theory’ as Ideology” Hypatia. Vol. 20. No. 3. Summer 2005. — KW) 33 +"Let us turn...how things work.” 34 + 35 +Whiteness proliferates itself in epistemologies through the racialization of time. Outweighs on magnitude because he will always replicate past trends of racism 36 +Mills 3 (Charles Mills. Mills received his PhD from the University of Toronto. Before joining the Graduate Center, he taught at the University of Oklahoma, the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Northwestern University. “‘Ideal Theory’ as Ideology” Hypatia. Vol. 20. No. 3. Summer 2005. — KW) 37 +"Goody goes on...scheduled for extinction" 38 + 39 +Thus, the standard for the round is to engage in historical analysis to unravel white supremacy’s colonization of knowledge and value systems. 40 + 41 +Linking offense into this standard requires disrupting white time through the articulation of alternative histories that expose the contingencies of whiteness. 42 +Mills 5 (Charles Mills. Mills received his PhD from the University of Toronto. Before joining the Graduate Center, he taught at the University of Oklahoma, the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Northwestern University. “‘Ideal Theory’ as Ideology” Hypatia. Vol. 20. No. 3. Summer 2005. — KW) 43 +“Thus, as Hanchard...manifest itself here?” 44 + 45 +Part 3: Links to the AFF 46 + 47 +First, disguising white contingency. Whiteness is not ahistoric, but instead has emerged through historical contingencies. 48 +Yancy ’04 (George Yancy. Dr. George Yancy is a Professor of Philosophy at Emory University. What White Looks Like: African-American Philosophers on the Whiteness Question. Published by Routledge 2004— KW) 49 +“A genealogical examination...norms of whiteness.” 50 + 51 +Second, The aff practices futurism- relying on the prospect of the future to relieve us of current suffering does nothing but allow that suffering to live on unchanged. We must look to the past to inform us of the present and future. 52 +Dillon (Stephen Dillon. Stephen Dillon, assistant professor of Queer Studies, holds a B.A. from the University of Iowa and a Ph.D. in American Studies with a minor in Critical Feminist and Sexuality Studies from the University of Minnesota. “‘It’s here, it’s that time:’ Race, queer futurity, and the temporality of violence in Born in Flames” Women and Performance: a journal of feminist theory. Vol. 23. No. 1. 2013 — KW) 53 +“Hortense Spillers provides...what was before.” - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,5 @@ 1 +please contact me before you read disclosure theory, or if there's anything else you need: 2 +Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sesh.hollendonner 3 +Email: saeshinjoe@gmail.com 4 +ALternative Email: xAnimeNinjax_2001@gmail.com 5 +512-810-3696 - EntryDate
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