Changes for page Cy-Fair Welch Neg

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Summary

Details

Caselist.CitesClass[65]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,26 +1,0 @@
1 -TURN Genealogy entrenches us back into the subjective mindset it tries to get rid of
2 -Ashenden 1:
3 -Ashenden, Senior lecturer in sociology at Birbek university, and Owen, Lecturer in politics at the University of Southampton, 99 Samantha and David, Foucault Contra Habermas: Recasting the Dialogue between Genealogy and Critical Theory, (Sage Publications) pp. 62-63
4 -
5 -Foucault's fateful turn
6 -AND
7 -hegemony of subject-centred reason.
8 -
9 -TURN Genealogy encounters a perf con, it can only ensure the validity of the geneology by withholding critical analysis.
10 -Ashenden 2:
11 -Ashenden 2 , Senior lecturer in sociology at Birbek university, and Owen, Lecturer in politics at the University of Southampton, 99 Samantha and David, Foucault Contra Habermas: Recasting the Dialogue between Genealogy and Critical Theory, (Sage Publications) pp. 62-63
12 -
13 - This genealogical detour,
14 -AND
15 -counterdiscourse of modernity.
16 -
17 -
18 -Turn- Their prioritization representations and historicity is problematic since it ignores the oppression being faced in the status quo.
19 -KAUFMAN
20 -Taft-Kaufman, 95 - Professor, Department of Speech Communication And Dramatic Arts, Central Michigan University – 1995 (Jill, “Other ways: Postmodernism and performance praxis,” The Southern Communication Journal, Vol.60, Iss. 3; pg. 222)
21 -
22 -In its elevation
23 -AND
24 -material objects and bodily subjects.
25 -
26 -Link turns your access to the role of the ballot, emphasis on using history to “bring subjugated knowledge to light” abstracts away from oppression and destroys movements
EntryDate
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1 -2017-02-04 13:10:11.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -JP Fulger
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Winston Churchill WC
ParentRound
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1 -29
Round
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1 -3
Team
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1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2 Genealogy Bad
Tournament
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1 -Colleyville
Caselist.CitesClass[66]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,52 +1,0 @@
1 -Reforms never happen despite theory because the biopolitical state has risen above traditional modes of social control to control information itself. Its cybernetic apparatus obsessed with knowing everything they can about the revolutionary population prevents any reform,
2 -Invisible Committee 9’
3 -(Call) The Coming Insurrection is an anonymous book published in 2009 online. “Invisible Committee” is the name the anonymous authors gave themselves https://tarnac9.wordpress.com/texts/the-coming-insurrection/
4 -
5 -Here a new weapon of crowd dispersal,
6 -AND
7 -Cold War – or Third World War.”
8 -
9 -
10 -Next are the links
11 -A) Their promotion of discourse makes our movements vulnerable and visible, we’ll just get crushed,
12 -Invisible Committee 2
13 -
14 -In a demonstration, a union
15 -AND
16 -we’ll be crushed in no time.
17 -
18 -
19 -B) Vocal objections to power force resistance onto terrains controlled by the government, ensuring it is coopted,
20 - Invisible Committee 3
21 -“let's disappear” Istanbul, June 2013.
22 -
23 -After reading that, one has a slightly
24 -AND
25 -features of its adversary.
26 -
27 -
28 -
29 -C) Micropolitics and performances of resistance do nothing and prevent us from solving pernicious SYSTEMS of oppression – generalization from your act fails and makes things worse,
30 -Invisible Committee 4
31 -“let's disappear” Istanbul, June 2013.
32 -The radical defining him
33 -AND
34 -And one hasn’t changed anything.
35 -
36 -
37 -D) performative resistance is either hopelessly isolated and does nothing or succeeds according to a publicity I reject, allowing the biopolitical state to easily predict and eliminate any change it might have,
38 -Invisible Committee 5 :
39 -The Invisible Committee. The Cybernetic Hypothesis. 2001
40 -
41 -When you're a writer, poet
42 -AND
43 -a certain casual manner.
44 -
45 -
46 -The alternative is white noise. That’s a politics that deprives the biopolitical state of the information it needs to flourish,
47 -INVISIBLE COMMITTEE 6:
48 -The Invisible Committee. The Cybernetic Hypothesis. 2001
49 -
50 -From the cybernetic perspective,
51 -AND
52 -taking place. Fog makes revolt possible.
EntryDate
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1 -2017-02-04 13:10:13.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -JP Fulger
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Winston Churchill WC
ParentRound
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1 -29
Round
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1 -3
Team
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1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -JAN-FEB Biopolitics K
Tournament
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1 -Colleyville
Caselist.CitesClass[67]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,42 +1,0 @@
1 -The structural position of the slave is not defined by liberalist notions of alienation and oppression, where one perceives a loss of one’s humanity. Through social death, natal alienation, and gratuitous violence, the slave relation grounds a social economy that produces a relationless object. This reduces the slave’s being to being-for-the-captor where suffering is instead due to fungibility and accumulation.
2 -AARONS:
3 -“NO SELVES TO ABOLISH: AFROPESSIMISM, ANTI-POLITICS AND THE END OF THE WORLD” By K. Aarons, 29 February 2016 // UH-DD
4 -
5 -“From a practical or
6 -AND
7 -reduced to a being-for-the-captor.”
8 -
9 -Implications:
10 -A. Analytic
11 -
12 -B. Analytic
13 -
14 -The social economy of the slave relation gave rise to an epidermalised construction of Blackness where objecthood is inscribed at the level of appearance itself. The relationless objecthood of Black flesh becomes the means by which the subjecthood of Humanity is defined and contributes to the symbolic death of blackness.
15 -AARONS 2:
16 -“NO SELVES TO ABOLISH: AFROPESSIMISM, ANTI-POLITICS AND THE END OF THE WORLD” By K. Aarons, 29 February 2016 // UH-DD
17 -“Far from disappearing
18 -AND
19 -objecthood of Black flesh.”
20 -
21 -
22 -Here is our link- Black and non-black affirmative identity politics reaffirms antiblack structures. Non-black identity politics humanizes the inclusion of identities, but this requires a racialized distancing towards a civil society to provide a grammar of coherence for non-black suffrage. As for black bodies, the attempt to humanize the black subject is structurally impossible and can only whiten antiblack suffrage.
23 -AARONS 3:
24 -“NO SELVES TO ABOLISH: AFROPESSIMISM, ANTI-POLITICS AND THE END OF THE WORLD” By K. Aarons, 29 February 2016 // UH-DD
25 -“Modernity is therefore
26 -AND
27 -fact only deepen it.”
28 -
29 -
30 -Do not allow them to claim material oppression outweighs. This itself is the product of white supremacy and white leftism by reaffirming a politics of humanism and independently ignoring black autonomous revolt in visions of resistance.
31 -AARONS 4:
32 -“NO SELVES TO ABOLISH: AFROPESSIMISM, ANTI-POLITICS AND THE END OF THE WORLD” By K. Aarons, 29 February 2016 // UH-DD
33 -“For over a decade
34 -AND
35 -racism in the US.”
36 -
37 -The alternative is self-abolition as a method of negative identity politics. This is the only paradigmatic approach towards the end of humanity that does not ignore the multiplicities of non-black identities. Through self-abolition, non-black suffrage can be articulated in a grammar that is not necessarily predicated on antiblack violence. This creates the possibility for coalition movements of true fugitivity that escape the logic of civil society.
38 -AARONS 5:
39 -“NO SELVES TO ABOLISH: AFROPESSIMISM, ANTI-POLITICS AND THE END OF THE WORLD” By K. Aarons, 29 February 2016 // UH-DD
40 -“I take it to be a libertarian axiom
41 -AND
42 -cartographies to pursue it.”
EntryDate
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1 -2017-02-06 03:05:32.0
Judge
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1 -Mario Shields, Lawrence Zhou, Garrett Telfer
Opponent
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1 -Westwood RS
ParentRound
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1 -30
Round
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1 -Octas
Team
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1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
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1 -JAN-FEB Afropessimism K
Tournament
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1 -Colleyville
Caselist.CitesClass[68]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,18 +1,0 @@
1 -1. Calls for concrete solutions in debate through state action replicates the colonial context in two ways. First, law enforcement is literally predicated on the colonial situation. This is not an ontology claim, rather that supporting law enforcement supports their right to rule in a colonized territory. Second, their use of debate as a site of educating students into the correct “moral reflexes” of the state is simply an extension of the colonial state making law enforcement easier. FANON:
2 -“The Wretched of the Earth” by Frantz Fanon Translated by Richard Philcox // UH-DD
3 -“The colonized world is a
4 -AND
5 -the colonized subject.” (Pg. 3-4)
6 -
7 -2. Analytic
8 -
9 -3. Analytic
10 -
11 -4. Analytic
12 -
13 -5. THEIR FOCUS ON STATE ROLEPLAYING SHIELDS US FROM RESPONSIBILITY FOR OUR CONTRIBUTIONS TO PAIN AND SUFFERING
14 -DELGADO, CHARLES INGLIS THOMSON PROFESSOR OF LAW @ UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO, 91 (RICHARD, SYMPOSIUM: THE CRITIQUE OF NORMATIVITY: ARTICLE: NORMS AND NORMAL SCIENCE: TOWARD A CRITIQUE OF NORMATIVITY IN LEGAL THOUGHT, 139 U. PA. L. REV. 933, APRIL)
15 -
16 -Normativity may be
17 -AND
18 -make a claim on us.
EntryDate
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1 -2017-02-06 03:05:33.0
Judge
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1 -Mario Shields, Lawrence Zhou, Garrett Telfer
Opponent
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1 -Westwood RS
ParentRound
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1 -30
Round
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1 -Octas
Team
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1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
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1 -1 A2 Policymaking vAfropess
Tournament
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1 -Colleyville
Caselist.CitesClass[71]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,72 +1,0 @@
1 -1. The affirmative’s focus on social norms in the construction of identity is a counterproductive starting point. We relate meaning to our experiences from social norms but these are simply deterritorialized views of the world that do not allow us to see beyond the border. We must embrace new meaning beyond the border of what is socially institutionalized.
2 -KYNČLOVÁ 4 :
3 -Tereza Jiroutová Kynčlová, « Elastic, Yet Unyielding: The U.S.-Mexico Border and Anzaldúa’s Oppositional Rearticulations of the Frontier », European journal of American studies Online, Vol 9, No 3 | 2014, document 3, Online since 23 December 2014, connection on 17 August 2016. URL : http://ejas.revues.org/10384 ; DOI : 10.4000/ Special Issue: Transnational Approaches to North American Regionalism UH-DD
4 -
5 -“Further, Slotkin’s theoretical
6 -AND
7 -and struggle for recognition.” (2)
8 -
9 -
10 -
11 -2. The affirmatives orientation towards identity politics is trapped within dualistic epistemologies that reinforce the very structures they seek to destroy. The polarization of identity politics destroys any progress. This is terminal defense to AFF solvency.
12 -ANZALDUA:
13 -Anzaldúa, Gloria. The Gloria Anzaldúa Reader. Duke University Press, 2009. UH-DD
14 -
15 -“I've been thinking
16 -AND
17 -long-term visions of social justice?” (Pg. 301-302)
18 -
19 -Multiple Impacts:
20 -
21 -Antiblackness cannot account for the unique experiences racially black folks experience. We understand that blackness is a structure that creates similar conditions for black individuals but individuals are ontologically asymmetrical. This determines each individuals’ orientation towards anti-black structures. They will only homogenize.
22 -YOUNG:
23 -“Inclusion and Democracy” Iris Marion Young UH-DD
24 -“From these failings =
25 -AND
26 -among which we choose.’” (99-102)
27 -
28 -2. Oppression manifest itself because of dualistic distinctions that normalize epistemologies of difference. The division between our consciousness and subconsciousness further normalizes these views. Border bridging allows us to reclaim our subconscious and reverse norms of domination.
29 -TAMDIGIDI:
30 -Mohammad H., Prof. @ U. Mass-Boston, “I Change Myself, I Change the World”: Gloria Anzaldua’s Sociological Imagination in Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza”, Humanity and Society, 2008, p. JSTOR
31 -
32 -“All major concepts in Anzaldua's thought,=
33 -AND
34 -our culture, our languages, our thoughts..”
35 -
36 -3. Dualisms propagate border violence. The border is a zone of difference which makes possible violence in the borderland. Rigid distinctions between epistemological systems of thinking cannot account for hybridity. Embracing the borderland resist colonial domination within epistemology and ethics itself.
37 -KYNCLOVA:
38 -Tereza Jiroutová Kynčlová, « Elastic, Yet Unyielding: The U.S.-Mexico Border and Anzaldúa’s Oppositional Rearticulations of the Frontier », European journal of American studies Online, Vol 9, No 3 | 2014, document 3, Online since 23 December 2014, connection on 17 August 2016. URL : http://ejas.revues.org/10384 ; DOI : 10.4000/ Special Issue: Transnational Approaches to North American Regionalism UH-DD
39 -“The border functions as a
40 -AND part of a civil war within representation” (xiv).” (2)
41 -
42 -Our critic is not abstract theory. The epistemology of binaries creates categories of normality within both sides of the dualism. This subjugates the lived experiences of those who can’t fit neither side of the border and universalizes an epistemically false interpretation of the world.
43 -KYNCLOVA 2:
44 -Tereza Jiroutová Kynčlová, « Elastic, Yet Unyielding: The U.S.-Mexico Border and Anzaldúa’s Oppositional Rearticulations of the Frontier », European journal of American studies Online, Vol 9, No 3 | 2014, document 3, Online since 23 December 2014, connection on 17 August 2016. URL : http://ejas.revues.org/10384 ; DOI : 10.4000/ Special Issue: Transnational Approaches to North American Regionalism UH-DD
45 -
46 -“The physical presence
47 -AND
48 -methodology of Borderlands/La Frontera.”
49 -
50 -The alternative is to endorse Nepantla. This is an epistemological starting point that recognizes the exclusion of the borderland. This creates the possibility of bridging the subconscious-conscious duality that keeps the mestiza a prisoner by recuperating the possibility of a space in between.
51 -ZACCARIA:
52 -PAOLA ZACCARIA Living in El Lugar of Transformations, Translating Vision into Writing UH-DD
53 -
54 -“In my opinion all
55 -AND
56 -in process of nepantla-translation.
57 -
58 -Our criticism is not a theorizing of a world without distinctions, we don’t think we get rid of the reality of blackness, rather we are a methodology to reverse the colonization of our forms of thinking about distinctions, which have been reduced to epistemologies that stigmatize the possibility of new forms of becoming.
59 -KYNCLOVA 3:
60 -Tereza Jiroutová Kynčlová, « Elastic, Yet Unyielding: The U.S.-Mexico Border and Anzaldúa’s Oppositional Rearticulations of the Frontier », European journal of American studies Online, Vol 9, No 3 | 2014, document 3, Online since 23 December 2014, connection on 17 August 2016. URL : http://ejas.revues.org/10384 ; DOI : 10.4000/ Special Issue: Transnational Approaches to North American Regionalism UH-DD
61 -
62 - “Anzaldúa’s aim is not
63 -AND
64 -as well as collective psychological dimension.” (11-12)
65 -
66 -The judge should adopt Nepantla pedagogy. Outweighs counter judge obligations– the need to construct debate through a singular axis rein trenches borders and epistemological colonialism in education. This is specifically true for normalizing pedagogies that assume themselves to be true without normative groundwork.
67 -ABRAHAMS:
68 -Abraham, S. (2014). A Nepantla pedagogy: Comparing Anzaldúa’s and Bakhtin’s Ideas for pedagogical and social change. Critical Education, 5(5). University of Georgia UH-DD
69 -
70 -“Nepantla is the site
71 -AND
72 -frame our educational research (Gonzalez-Lopez, 2006; Keating, 2006).”
EntryDate
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1 -2017-02-06 03:13:41.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Lawrence Zhou, Aisha Banway, Erick Berdugo
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Lake Travis KE
ParentRound
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1 -32
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Quarters
Team
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -JAN-FEB Boderlands K v3
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Colleyville
Caselist.CitesClass[72]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,17 +1,0 @@
1 -Calls for concrete solutions in debate through state action replicates the colonial context in two ways. First, law enforcement is literally predicated on the colonial situation. This is not an ontology claim, rather that supporting law enforcement supports their right to rule in a colonized territory. Second, their use of debate as a site of educating students into the correct “moral reflexes” of the state is simply an extension of the colonial state making law enforcement easier. FANON:
2 -“The Wretched of the Earth” by Frantz Fanon Translated by Richard Philcox // UH-DD
3 -“The colonized world is a
4 -AND
5 -the colonized subject.” (Pg. 3-4)
6 -
7 -Calls for the state based on its inevitability in Zanotti and reasonableness reinforces the colonial situation. They are the colonizer trying to decolonize by reinforcing the myth of the same structures that propagate the colonial situation in the first place. FANON 2:
8 -“The Wretched of the Earth” by Frantz Fanon Translated by Richard Philcox // UH-DD
9 -“As soon as the colonized
10 -AND
11 -vomit them up.” (Pg. 8)
12 -
13 -Calls for innate human dignity and social ontology as a warrant for why oppression is bad reinforces the colonial situation and replicates their own abstraction impacts in two ways. First, innate human dignity is an ideal experienced exclusively by the colonizer. The colonized only know of silencing the colonizer. Second, their abstract approach to human dignity ignores the role of the colonizer who will not accept equal coexistence. FANON 3:
14 -“The Wretched of the Earth” by Frantz Fanon Translated by Richard Philcox // UH-DD
15 -“Such an occurrence
16 -AND
17 -substitute for reality.” (Pg. 8-10)
EntryDate
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1 -2017-02-06 03:13:42.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Lawrence Zhou, Aisha Banway, Erick Berdugo
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Lake Travis KE
ParentRound
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -32
Round
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1 -Quarters
Team
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1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
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1 -JAN-FEB Fanon Turns
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Colleyville
Caselist.CitesClass[73]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,58 +1,0 @@
1 -The right to housing is a tool of the neoliberal welfare state to control and focuses on housing as a form of money for compliance in the system
2 -
3 -Rolnik ’13:
4 -Rolnik ’13 (Raquel, “Late Neoliberalism: The Finacialization of Homeownership and Housing Rights,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 2013, vol 37, issue 3, pg 1058-1066, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1468-2427.12062/full, TW)
5 -
6 -The commodification of
7 -AND
8 -crisis and its perspectives.
9 -
10 -Discourse based within the assumptions of state are the very roots that catalyzed the violence of the libidinal economy – Their framing within the resolutional call for the United States to hold an obligation only represents the constant management, consolidation, and protections that make it impossible solve such violence.
11 -
12 -Harman ‘6:
13 -Harman, 06. (Chris, editor of International Socialism Journal and, before that, of Socialist Worker, and a leading figure in the Socialist Workers Party, September 26th, 2006, “The state and capitalism today”, http://www.isj.org.uk/?id=234) BY
14 -
15 -The state may be
16 -AND
17 -are capitalist forces.
18 -
19 -
20 -
21 -Cap created poverty – not the other way around – only the alt’s starting point of the root cause of the res can solve. The aff focuses on easily identifiable flashpoints of systemic violence through surface issues such as the right to housing which is ensures that violence’s repetition in the future and prevents confrontation with cap.
22 -
23 -Zizeck ‘8:
24 -Zizek, 08 (Slavoj, a cocaine hobo, 2008, “Violence”, p 1-4) BY
25 -
26 -If there is a unifying
27 -AND
28 -towards its victims.
29 -
30 -
31 -Legacies of violence produced by capitalism are rooted within the project of public housing towards class struggles.
32 -
33 -Bouie ’14:
34 -Bouie, 14. Jamelle Bouie is a former staff writer at The Daily Beast. His reporting and analysis has appeared in The American Prospect, The Nation, The Atlantic, CNN.com, and The Washington Post. He covers campaigns and elections, as well as policy and public opinion. He is based in Washington, D.C. You can follow Jamelle on Twitter at @jbouie. http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/03/13/how-we-built-the-ghettos.html BY
35 -
36 -Yesterday, apropos of
37 -AND
38 -poverty—we built that.
39 -
40 -The capitalist system values only one thing, capital, everything else is drained of its very essence to make capital. Even we have no value in this system.
41 -
42 -Cockburn ’09:
43 -Cockburn 2009 (Alexander Cockburn, Editor of counterpunch magazine, “Is This the End of Capitalism?” http://endofcapitalism.com/about/, SF)
44 -
45 -While the US government
46 -AND
47 -not be any planet left.
48 -
49 -
50 -
51 -Capitalism is driven by a constant and rapid desire for production and capital, do nothing and negate the production complex of capitalism. Only this inaction is enough to slow down the speeding train of capitalism that makes change seem inevitable.
52 -
53 -Zizek ’12:
54 -Zizek ‘12 (Slavoj, Foremost Slovenian psychoanalyst, “Less Than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism,” 2012, http://rebels-library.org/files/less_than_nothing.pdf, AC)
55 -
56 -Returning to Rand,
57 -AND
58 -saved the world.”81
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-03-10 14:03:32.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Tyrell VanWinkle
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Southlake Carrol HX
ParentRound
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -35
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2
Team
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -MAR-APR Cap K
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -TFA State
Caselist.CitesClass[74]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,8 +1,0 @@
1 -T/ Empirically American government intervention in housing always fails.
2 -
3 -Sladick and Michel ’16:
4 -Sladick and Michel ’16 (Claudia, A Member of the Young Leaders Program at the Heritage Foundation, Norbert, Researcher on Housing Finance, Research Fellow for the Heritage Foundation in financial regulations, “Government Intervention in Housing Has Always Been Bad: Here’s Why Today Is No Different,” December 12 2016, http://dailysignal.com/2016/12/12/government-intervention-in-housing-has-always-been-bad-heres-why-today-is-no-different/, TW)
5 -
6 -Ever since the federal
7 -AND
8 -destructive financial policies.
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-03-10 14:03:34.75
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Tyrell VanWinkle
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Southlake Carrol HX
ParentRound
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -35
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2
Team
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -MAR-APR Empirics Turn
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -TFA State
Caselist.RoundClass[29]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -65,66
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-02-04 13:10:09.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -JP Fulger
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Winston Churchill WC
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -3
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,3 +1,0 @@
1 -1AC - Biopower AC
2 -1N - Biopolitics K Geneaology Bad
3 -1AR - Kicks Geneaology Method is Kritikal Analysis now
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Colleyville
Caselist.RoundClass[30]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -67,68
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-02-06 03:05:30.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Mario Shields, Lawrence Zhou, Garrett Telfer
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Westwood RS
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Octas
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,2 +1,0 @@
1 -1AC - Title Nine AC
2 -1N- Afropessimism K A2 Policymaking vAfropess Schlag Case Turns
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Colleyville
Caselist.RoundClass[32]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -71,72
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-02-06 03:13:38.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Lawrence Zhou, Aisha Banway, Erick Berdugo
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Lake Travis KE
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Quarters
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,2 +1,0 @@
1 -1AC - Lays Potato Chip AC
2 -1N - Borderlands v3 Fanon Turns Schlag Turn
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Colleyville
Caselist.RoundClass[33]
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-03-10 14:01:00.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Tyrell VanWinkle
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Southlake Carrol HX
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,3 +1,0 @@
1 -1AC - SV Policymaking
2 -1N - Cap K Gentrification Turn Empirics Turn Analytic Responses
3 -1AR - Neoliberalism Inevitable Cap Solves Poverty Neolib Solves Structural Violence Neoliberalism Increases Human Welfare Neoliberalism Solves Infant Mortality and Economic Ability
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -TFA State
Caselist.RoundClass[34]
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-03-10 14:01:29.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Tyrell VanWinkle
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Southlake Carrol HX
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,3 +1,0 @@
1 -1AC - SV Policymaking
2 -1N - Cap K Gentrification Turn Empirics Turn Analytic Responses
3 -1AR - Neoliberalism Inevitable Cap Solves Poverty Neolib Solves Structural Violence Neoliberalism Increases Human Welfare Neoliberalism Solves Infant Mortality and Economic Ability
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -TFA State
Caselist.RoundClass[35]
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2017-03-10 14:03:28.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Tyrell VanWinkle
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -Southlake Carrol HX
Round
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,3 +1,0 @@
1 -1AC - SV Policymaking
2 -1N - Cap K Gentrification Turn Empirics Turn Analytic Responses
3 -1AR - Neoliberalism Inevitable Cap Solves Poverty Neolib Solves Structural Violence Neoliberalism Increases Human Welfare Neoliberalism Solves Infant Mortality and Economic Ability
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -TFA State
Caselist.CitesClass[47]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,37 @@
1 +====Discourse shapes reality and actually creates policy thus making it more important than the policies themselves.====
2 +
3 +=====Doty:=====
4 +**Doty 93 (Roxanne Doty, Professor at Arizona State University. "Foreign Policy as Social Construction: A Post-Positivist Analysis of US Counterinsurgency Policy in the Philippines" International Studies Quarterly)**
5 +**This kind of approach addresses the how-question discussed earlier because it does not **
6 +**AND**
7 +**policy-making contexts as well as statements made in society more generally 8**
8 +
9 +
10 +**====Thus the role of the ballot is to vote for the debater that best methodologically and performatively deconstructs controlling, dominant discourse. ====**
11 +
12 +
13 +====in 2^^nd^^ card the AC referred to people as "victims." "Victim" discourse objectifies and denies their humanity.====
14 +
15 +=====Dunn:=====
16 +**Jennifer L. Dunn ~~Professor of Sociology at Southern Illinois University~~, ""Victims" and "Survivors": Emerging Vocabularies of Motive for "Battered Women Who Stay"" Sociological Inquiry Vol. 75, Issue 1, p. 1-30(Dec 2004) FD ~~formatted for gendered language~~**
17 + **"Barry discusses what she calls "victimism": "In creating new definitions **
18 +**AND**
19 +" and to whom things "are done"** (1979:38)."**
20 +
21 +
22 +====The rhetoric of "victim" instructs others to perceive them as helpless, passive, only as an individual – creating a loss of agency. Third, the rhetoric of "victim" causes a loss of agency, instructing others to perceive the abused as a helpless, passive, individual. ====
23 +
24 +=====Dunn:=====
25 +**Jennifer L. Dunn ~~Professor of Sociology at Southern Illinois University~~, ""Victims" and "Survivors": Emerging Vocabularies of Motive for "Battered Women Who Stay"" Sociological Inquiry Vol. 75, Issue 1, p. 1-30(Dec 2004) FD**
26 +**In sum, the cultural context within which typifications of battered women as "survivors**
27 +**AND**
28 +**appropriates** one's personal identity as a competent efficacious actor **(1997:43)".**
29 +
30 +
31 +====The alt is to reject victim centered discourse and replace it with survivor. "Victim" denotes entrapment while "survivor" implies decision making and agency. ====
32 +
33 +=====Dunn:=====
34 +**Jennifer L. Dunn ~~Professor of Sociology at Southern Illinois University~~, ""Victims" and "Survivors": Emerging Vocabularies of Motive for "Battered Women Who Stay"" Sociological Inquiry Vol. 75, Issue 1, p. 1-30(Dec 2004) FD**
35 +**"Early images of battered women as (mostly) "victims" and more **
36 +**AND**
37 +, holding all else equal that victimization is bad and agency is good.
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2016-12-18 23:38:59.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Alberto Tohme
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Winston Churchill BY
ParentRound
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +20
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2
Team
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2 Victim Discourse K
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Strake Jesuit
Caselist.CitesClass[48]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,37 @@
1 +Universal rules fail. Any application of rules can never be verified because rules are indeterminate, as they require prior knowledge to understand them, which can never be the basis for truth. KRIPKE:
2 +"Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language" by Saul A. Kripke Harvard University Press Cambridge, Massachusetts 1982 DD
3 +"Normally, when we consider a mathematical rule such as addition, we think of ourselves as guided in our application of it to each new instance. Just this is the difference between someone who computes new values of a function and someone who calls out numbers at random. Given my past intentions regarding the symbol '+', one and only one answer is dictated as the one appropriate to '68+57'. On the other hand, although an intelligence tester may suppose that there is only one possible continuation to the sequence 2, 4, 6, 8,…, mathematical and philosophical sophisticates know that an indefinite number of rules (even rules stated in terms of mathematical functions as conventional as ordinary polynomials) are compatible with any such finite initial segment. So if the tester urges me to respond, after 2, 4, 6, 8, . . ., with the unique appropriate next number, the proper response is that no such unique number exists, nor is there any unique (rule determined) infinite sequence that continues the given one. The problem can then be put this way: Did I myself, in the directions for the future that I gave myself regarding ~~plus~~ '+', really differ from the intelligence tester? True, I may not merely stipulate that ~~plus~~ '+' is to be a function instantiated by a finite number of computations. In addition, I may give myself directions for the further computation of ~~plus~~ '+', stated in terms of other functions and rules. In turn, I may give myself directions for the further computation of these functions and rules, and so on. Eventually, however, the process must stop, with 'ultimate' functions and rules that I have stipulated for myself only by a finite number of examples, just as in the intelligence test. If so, is not my procedure as arbitrary as that of the man who guesses the continuation of the intelligence test? In what sense is my actual computation procedure, following an algorithm that yields '125', more justified by my past instructions than an alternative procedure that would have resulted in '5'? Am I not simply following an unjustifiable impulse?" Of course, these problems apply throughout language and are not confined to mathematical examples, though it is with mathematical examples that they can be most smoothly brought out. I think that I have learned the term 'table' in such a way that it will ~~to~~ apply to indefinitely many future items. So I can apply the term to a new situation, say when I enter the Eiffel Tower for the first time and see a table at the base. Can I answer a sceptic who supposes that by `table' in the past I meant tabair, where a 'tabair' is anything that is a table not found at the base of the Eiffel Tower, or a chair found there? Did I think explicitly of the Eiffel Tower when I first `grasped the concept of' a table, gave myself directions for what I meant by `table'? And even if I did think of the Tower, cannot any directions I gave myself mentioning it be reinterpreted compatibly with the sceptic's hypothesis? Most important for the 'private language' argument, the point of course applies to predicates o f sensations, visual impressions, and the like, as well: "How do I know that in working out the series -f 2 I must write " 20,004, 20,006" and not " 20,004, 20,008" ? - (The question: "How do I know that this color is-'red'?" is similar.)" (Remarks on the Foundations ofMathematics, I, §3.) The passage strikingly illustrates a central thesis of this essay: that Wittgenstein regards the fundamental problems o f the philo­ sophy of mathematics and of the 'private language argument' - the problem of sensation language ~~ as at root identical, stemming from his paradox. The whole o f §3 is a succinct and beautiful statement o f the Wittgensteinian paradox; indeed the whole initial section of part I of Remarks' on the Foundations of Mathematics is a development o f the problem with special reference to mathematics and logical inference. It has been supposed that all Ineed to do to determine my use ofthe word 'green' is to have an image, a sample, of green that I bring to mind whenever I apply the word in the future. When I use this tojustify my application of'green'to anew object, should not the sceptical problem be obvious to any reader of Goodman?14 Perhaps by 'green', in the past I meant grue,15 and the color image, which indeed was grue, was meant to direct me to apply the word 'green' tourne objects always. If the blue object before me now is grue, then it falls in the extension o f'green', as I meant it in the past. It is no help to suppose that in the past I stipulated that 'green' was to apply to all and only those things 'of the same color as' the sample. The sceptic can reinterpret 'same color' as same schmolor, l 6 where things have the same schmolor if . . ." (1hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh7-20)
4 +And, this means ethics cannhhhhhhhhhh yytguhgbf
5 +~-~-~-~~-~-+
6 +ot be apriori, but rather established through community norms. Virtues are inter-subjectively normative. We disagree in specific instances, but this does not deny that these norms are binding of our communities. Virtue ethics recognizes that complexity is required, and shifts the ethical question to one of character. The context informs hhhhhhhhhhit means to be virtuous. LEIBOWITZ:
7 +PARTICULARISM IN ARISTOTLE'S NICOMACHEAN ETHICS * Uri D. Leibowitz University of Nottingham (Forthcoming in The Journal of Moral Philosophy) DD
8 +"Following Burnyeat (1980)
9 +AND
10 +resolve the conflict." (7-14)
11 +
12 +Thus the standard is appealing to virtuous character clarified by the moral complexities of specific situations.
13 +
14 +Prefer additionally- Virtues are constitutive of action. Our passions provide a necessary orientation towards the good. KORSGAARD:
15 +"How to be an Aristotelian Kantian Constitutivist" Christine M. Korsgaard DD
16 +"On this interpretation,
17 +AND
18 +constitutive of her will." (26-27)
19 +
20 +Finally, the standard is not ends based:
21 +A. Analytic .
22 +B. Analytic
23 +C. Analytic
24 +D. Analytic
25 +
26 +Offense::
27 +1. Analytic
28 +
29 +2. they protect constitutionally protected speech, Silvia says we need to treat laws as contextual
30 +States must promote virtuous decision-making. Lawa cannot guide action in all cases. SILVIA:
31 +"VIRTUE ETHICS AND COMMUNITARIANISM" by Rui Silva, University of the Azores DD
32 +"The second distinctive
33 +AND
34 +of virtue ethics:" (3-4)
35 +We need to treat laws as contextual so it wouldn't make sense to vote aff and agree to follow it in every instance.
36 +
37 +3. Analytic
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2016-12-18 23:39:00.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Alberto Tohme
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Winston Churchill BY
ParentRound
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +20
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2
Team
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +JAN-FEB Virtue Ethics NC
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Strake Jesuit
Caselist.CitesClass[49]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,7 @@
1 +All affirmatives must have a framework or some sort of delineated standard that gives the judge a way to evaluate offense and they must be able to justify what counts as offense or a turn under it.
2 +
3 +This is key to engagement -
4 +
5 +Also vital for fairness -
6 +
7 +Key to judge resolvability -
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2016-12-18 23:39:00.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Alberto Tohme
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Winston Churchill BY
ParentRound
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +20
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2
Team
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Cy-Fair Welch Neg
Title
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +1 Affirmatives Must Have FW
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Strake Jesuit
Caselist.RoundClass[20]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +47,48,49
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2016-12-18 23:38:57.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Alberto Tohme
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Winston Churchill BY
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,3 @@
1 +1AC - Speak Evil Into the Machine AC
2 +1N - Victim Discourse K Virtue Ethics NC Paragraph Theory on the AC
3 +1AR - Funditionality Shell 2 Paragraphs on the AFF Line by Line the Victim K
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Strake Jesuit

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