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... ... @@ -1,78 +1,0 @@ 1 -===Part 1 is the Framework=== 2 - 3 - 4 -====The debate space is a discursive space designed for the negotiation of the subject and how we, as subjects, interact with structures that shape our identity and create the conditions for violence. ==== 5 -Sarroub and Quadros 15 Sarroub, Loukia K. and Quadros, Sabrina, "Critical Pedagogy in Classroom Discourse" (2015). Faculty Publications: Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education. Paper 156. Pg 252 6 -The classroom is a unique discursive space for the enactment of critical pedagogy. In 7 -AND 8 -the ideological and material conditions that contribute to sites of domination and struggle. 9 - 10 - 11 -====This means that the ontology of the subject is key, embracing an ontological state of becoming is a prerequisite to the determination of the ethical and political character of the subject which dictates how that subject engages with the world ==== 12 -Shudak 14 Shudak, Nicholas J. "The Re-Emergence of Critical Pedagogy: A Three-Dimensional Framework for Teacher Education in the Age of Teacher Effectiveness" Creative Education, 2014, 5, pg 995. 13 -Regarding ontology, Freire is quite clear. According to Freire, there are two 14 -AND 15 -one grade level to the next and from one teacher to the next. 16 - 17 - 18 -====The Role of the Ballot is to thus embrace a pedagogy of world opening, creating the opportunity for students to engage with signatures that allow for them to connect with the world and develop their ontologies. Vote for the best praxis that aligns itself with allowing the world and, its signifiers, to be open and clear to us. ==== 19 -Riley 11 Riley, Dawn (Education Studies Department, Skidmore College) p 805 "Heidegger Teaching: An analysis and interpretation of pedagogy" Educational Philosophy and Theory,Vol. 43, No. 8, 2011 doi: 10.1111/j.1469-5812.2009.00549.x 20 -Because learning begins with being-in-the-world and depends upon sensitivity 21 -AND 22 -. It is these ways that confer meaning for the engagement of learning. 23 - 24 - 25 -====This entails a detachment of those things that create a separation of ourselves towards the world, this is a precondition for our configuration of ethics and the world around us. Continuously rejecting forms of technology that conceal the world from our Being. ==== 26 -**Rojcewicz 1 06** (Richard Rojcewicz, Philosophy at Point Park College in Pittsburgh, The Gods And Technology: A Reading Of Heidegger, 2006, Kindle Edition. Kindle 578) 27 -In the final analysis, then, what exactly is Heidegger recommending to ward off 28 -AND 29 -creatively if we are to imitate art in our everyday dealings with things. 30 - 31 - 32 -====Predictions are governed by calculative thinking— these predivtive models are subject to agendas that culminate in securitization and concealment - We gesture towards meditative thought, a patient approach to the world, simply trying to understand the world ==== 33 -**Swazo** ‘02Swazo 2002 (Norman Swazo, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Crisis Theory and World Order: Heideggerian Reflections, pp. 73-74) 34 -In a memorial address delivered in 1955 in commemoration of composer Conradin Kreutzer, Heidegger 35 -AND 36 -ontology be stated in broad outline. For this I turn to Heidegger. 37 - 38 - 39 -====My affirmative endorses a new existential meta-physics – only through addressing the underlying thoughts of our social formations can we address material harms.==== 40 -**Niemoczynski**, Leon. "21ST CENTURY SPECULATIVE PHILOSOPHY: REFLECTIONS ON THE "NEW METAPHYSICS" AND ITS REALISM AND MATERIALISM" Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, vol. 9, no. 2, 2013 41 - 42 -Truth, therefore, as exposed by the power of reason, becomes 43 -AND 44 -somehow required within the edifice of reality and knowledge that is the world. 45 - 46 - 47 -===Part 2 Is Offense === 48 - 49 - 50 -====I advocate that countries ought to prohibit the production of nuclear power. ==== 51 - 52 - 53 -====The Modern Era of energy policy concerns with a politics of systematic ordering of things with the sole purpose of exploitation, this ordering takes the natural world and imports an ontological value upon it that alters the way that it unconceals itself towards us==== 54 -Schalow 2006 (Frank Schalow, Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of New Orleans. The Incarnality of Being: The Earth, Animals, and the Body in Heidegger’s Thought, pg. 96-97) 55 -Can we classify Heidegger as an ecologist, or even as a protoecologist? This 56 -AND 57 -, or better yet, the orderability of what is to be seized. 58 - 59 - 60 -====The nuclear age is particularly characterized by the danger of importing an ontological form on nature, this risks our connection with the natural world and conceals us from the essential truth nature has to offer. ==== 61 -**Kokubun**, Koichiro, Associate Professor @ Takasaki City University of Economics. "Philosiphy in the Atomic Age" May 30, 2013. Pp 4-5 62 -Heidegger had great insight into the potential danger of the nuclear power, which is 63 -AND 64 -of controlling ~~...~~ betrays the inability of human beings to overcome this power" 65 - 66 - 67 -====This essence of the technological risks a framing of the subject that leads to an objectification and disclosive praxis that eliminates the unconcealment of the other and the self. This leaves humanity subject to objectification and categorization rooted in a frame that perceives the subject as a standing reserve. ==== 68 -**Rojcewicz 2 6** (Richard Rojcewicz, philosophy at point park college in Pittsburgh, The Gods and Technology: a Reading of Heidegger, kindle edition. kindle locations 944-969, 2006) 69 -Heidegger now launches an extended discussion of the danger inherent in modern technology. 70 -AND 71 -the earth," and yet their self-blindness would make them slaves. 72 - 73 - 74 -====Technological rational leads endless constructions of nihilistic approaches to life.==== 75 -**Herman,** Professor of History, George Mason, 1997 (Arthur, THE IDEA OF DECLINE IN WESTERN HISTORY, p.337.) SVK 76 -According to Heidegger, the Western rational animal had evolved into the mechanical laboring animal 77 -AND 78 -that he may tear himself to pieces and annihilate himself in empty nothingness." - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,229 +1,0 @@ 1 -==Advantages == 2 - 3 - 4 -===Inherency=== 5 - 6 - 7 -====Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons has ceased in light of the nuclear deal==== 8 - 9 -=====Sanger ‘16===== 10 -David E. Sanger, 7-13-2016, "Iran Sticks to Terms of Nuclear Deal, but Defies the U.S. in Other Ways," New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/14/world/middleeast/iran-nuclear-deal.html//KOHS-AG 11 -WASHINGTON — A year after President Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran, the worst predictions 12 -AND 13 -Tel Aviv, "and greatly reduced the threat over the longer term." 14 - 15 - 16 -====And, the root cause of Iran’s desire to proliferate is Israeli aggression and nuclear power—addressing these concerns is key==== 17 - 18 -=====Fisher ‘15===== 19 -Max Fisher, 2-25-2015, "The real reasons Iran is so committed to its nuclear program," Vox, http://www.vox.com/2015/2/25/8101383/iran-nuclear-reasons 20 -"Tehran wanted to guard against a future surprise analogous to Iraq's repeated use of 21 -AND 22 -want a nuclear deterrent, which only makes the US threaten more strenuously. 23 - 24 - 25 -===Advantage 1: Meltdown=== 26 - 27 - 28 -====Meltdown of the Dimona reactor is inevitable==== 29 - 30 -=====Levinsonn ‘16===== 31 -Chaim Levinson Apr 26, 2016 9, 4-26-2016, "Israel's Dimona nuclear reactor plagued by 1,537 defects, scientists say," Haaretz, http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.716312 32 -An innovative ultrasound examination has show~~ed~~n signs of 1,537 33 -AND 34 -the past and requires safety checks each time as well as various permits. 35 - 36 - 37 -====Meltdown causes extinction==== 38 - 39 -=====Lendman ‘11===== 40 -Stephen, Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization,** ** 41 -03/ 13/11, "Nuclear Meltdown in Japan,", The People’s Voice http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/TPV3/Voices.php/2011/03/13/nuclear-meltdown-in-japan 42 -Reuters said the 1995 Kobe quake caused $100 billion in damage, up to 43 -AND 44 -entire region. "It could be, literally, an apocalyptic event. 45 - 46 - 47 -===Advantage 2: Stability (1:15)=== 48 - 49 - 50 -====Arabian instability is building now—border escalation proves==== 51 - 52 -=====Crooke 7-6===== 53 -Alastair Crooke (Fmr. MI-6 agent; Author, ‘Resistance: The Essence of Islamic Revolution’), 7-6-2016, "Is Israel Preparing for War Against Hezbollah?," Huffington Post, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alastair-crooke/israel-war-hezbollah'b'10829902.html 54 -BEIRUT — How does Israel read the Middle East these days? Few details on 55 -AND 56 -in this respect. Israel does not want Iranian troops at its border. 57 - 58 - 59 -====Israeli nuclear power escalates tensions—causes prolif==== 60 - 61 -=====Abuzayyad ‘10===== 62 -Ziad Abuzayyad. Volume 16. No 34. 2010. "Palestine-Israel Journal: The Nuclear Option and Peace in the Middle East," No Publication, http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=1264 63 -The Middle East is a small region and, practically speaking, the geographic proximity 64 -AND 65 -will be heard more loudly if Iran gets away with its nuclear program. 66 - 67 - 68 -====Arabian prolif leads to nuclear war==== 69 - 70 -=====Edelman ‘11===== 71 -Edelman, 11 (Jan/Feb, Distinguished Fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments and Former U.S. Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, Foreign Affairs, http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/67162/eric-s-edelman-andrew-f-krepinevich-jr-and-evan-braden-montgomer/the-dangers-of-a-nuclear-iran) 72 -There is, however, at least one state that could receive significant outside support 73 -AND 74 -Middle East could lead to a new Great Game, with unpredictable consequences. 75 - 76 - 77 -===Advantage 3: Hamas=== 78 - 79 - 80 -====Hamas striking now—conflict likely to escalate—Hamas is determined==== 81 - 82 -=====AP 8-21===== 83 -Associated Press. 8-21-2016, "Palestinian rocket strikes Israel, drawing Israeli reprisal," Stars and Stripes,http://www.stripes.com/news/middle-east/palestinian-rocket-strikes-israel-drawing-israeli-reprisal-1.424873//KOHS-AG 84 -JERUSALEM —The Israeli military carried out a series of airstrikes in the Gaza Strip 85 -AND 86 -destruction, would continue its struggle against Israel until "victory is achieved." 87 - 88 - 89 -====Empirics prove—Hamas wants to strike the Dimona reactor==== 90 - 91 -=====Pollak ‘14===== 92 -Joel B. Pollak,10 Jul 2014, "'Nuclear Terrorism': Hamas Targeting of Dimona Reactor Meets UN Definition," Breitbart, http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2014/07/10/nuclear-terrorism-hamas-targets-israel-s-dimona-reactor/ 93 -The terrorist group Hamas claimed late Wednesday that it attempted to target Israel’s nuclear reactor 94 -AND 95 -targets was Dimona. The hope is to destroy Israel through nuclear contamination. 96 - 97 - 98 -====Attacks on nuclear reactors are devastating—they’re equivalent to dirty bombs==== 99 - 100 -=====PSR ‘16===== 101 -~~"Dirty, Dangerous And Expensive: The Truth About Nuclear Power". 2016.Psr.Org. Accessed August 8 2016. http://www.psr.org/chapters/washington/resources/nuclear-power-factsheet.html?referrer=https://www.google.com/~~ 102 -In addition to the threat of nuclear materials, nuclear reactors are themselves potential terrorist 103 -AND 104 --term deaths from cancer among individuals within 50 miles of the reactor. 105 - 106 - 107 -====Nuclear attack causes extinction—miscalculation likely==== 108 - 109 -=====Barrett et al ‘13===== 110 -PhD in Engineering and Public Policy from Carnegie Mellon University, Fellow in the RAND Stanton Nuclear Security Fellows Program, and Director of Research at Global Catastrophic Risk Institute—AND Seth Baum, PhD in Geography from Pennsylvania State University, Research Scientist at the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, and Executive Director of Global Catastrophic Risk Institute—AND Kelly Hostetler, BS in Political Science from Columbia and Research Assistant at Global Catastrophic Risk Institute (Anthony, 24 June 2013, "Analyzing and Reducing the Risks of Inadvertent Nuclear War Between the United States and Russia," Science and Global Security: The Technical Basis for Arms Control, Disarmament, and Nonproliferation Initiatives, Volume 21, Issue 2, Taylor and Francis) 111 -War involving significant fractions of the U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals, 112 -AND 113 -, making one or both nations more likely to misinterpret events as attacks. 114 - 115 - 116 -==Plan== 117 - 118 - 119 -===Text=== 120 - 121 - 122 -====Plan Text: Israel ought to adopt Uzi Even’s proposal and prohibit nuclear power.==== 123 - 124 -=====Silverstein ‘12===== 125 -Richard Silverstein, 8-20-2012, "Leading Israeli Nuclear Scientist Proposing Closing Dimona in Return for Ending Iranian Nuke Program," Tikun Olam תיקון עולם, http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/08/20/leading-israeli-nuclear-scientist-proposing-closing-dimona-in-return-for-ending-iranian-nuke-program/ 126 -Uzi Even, one of Israel’s leading nuclear scientists, proposed in an article in 127 -AND 128 -it moves the debate away from military force and toward a negotiated solution. 129 - 130 - 131 -===Solvency=== 132 - 133 - 134 -====Plan solves stability—==== 135 - 136 - 137 -====Removal of the Iranian threat is a palliative for Israel, while removal of Israeli nuclear power prevents Iran from reproliferating==== 138 - 139 -=====Abuzayyad 2===== 140 -Ziad Abuzayyad. Volume 16. No 34. 2010. "Palestine-Israel Journal: The Nuclear Option and Peace in the Middle East," No Publication, http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=1264 141 -It is likely that Iran will proceed with its program, and the only thing 142 -AND 143 -nuclear capability. Achieving a comprehensive peace settlement to the Arab-Israeli conflict 144 - 145 - 146 -====The nuclear deal will eventually expire—the aff is k2 long term peace==== 147 - 148 -=====Abrams ‘15===== 149 -Elliot Abrams 7/15,senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, "Iran got a far better deal than it had any right to expect," National Review 2015. 150 -Then, the United States conceded to Iran ~~1~~ the right to have 151 -AND 152 -negotiators sat in Vienna and Lausanne smiling across the table at John Kerry. 153 - 154 - 155 -====Plan spills over to Israel abolishing its entire nuclear arsenal while preventing terrorist attacks on facilities==== 156 - 157 -=====Sleiman ‘10===== 158 -Mounzer Sleiman (2010) Shutting down Dimona: Israel’s nuclear programme, arsenal and environmental threat, Contemporary Arab Affairs, 3:4, 437-479, DOI: 10.1080/17550912.2010.528203 159 -Although Israel has an impressive (if unacknowledged) nuclear arsenal, it does not 160 -AND 161 -of these systems would actually encourage the countries to eliminate their WMD arsenals. 162 - 163 - 164 -====Existing nuclear weapons are outdated and futile—stopping escalation now is key==== 165 - 166 -=====Sleiman ‘10===== 167 -Mounzer Sleiman (2010) Shutting down Dimona: Israel’s nuclear programme, arsenal and environmental threat, Contemporary Arab Affairs, 3:4, 437-479, DOI: 10.1080/17550912.2010.528203 168 -Given the current realities in the Arab Middle East, it can be seen that 169 -AND 170 -and they can also be used in more scenarios than can nuclear devices. 171 - 172 - 173 -====We create movements for environmental change==== 174 - 175 -=====Sleiman ‘10===== 176 -Mounzer Sleiman (2010) Shutting down Dimona: Israel’s nuclear programme, arsenal and environmental threat, Contemporary Arab Affairs, 3:4, 437-479, DOI: 10.1080/17550912.2010.528203 177 -If nuclear weapons could be demonstrated to be unnecessary and be dismantled, the need 178 -AND 179 -be a first step towards solving the attendant environmental problems there and elsewhere. 180 - 181 - 182 -==Framework== 183 - 184 -====Non-naturalist theories are epistemically inaccessible—reject abstractions==== 185 - Papineau ‘07 186 -David Papineau, "Naturalism". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2007//KOHS-AG 187 -Moore took this argument to show that moral facts comprise a distinct species of non 188 -AND 189 -to see how we can ~~we~~ have any knowledge of them~~?~~. 190 - 191 - 192 -====Naturalism means util—phenomenal introspection means we can export our experience of pleasure to others==== 193 -Sinhababu ‘13 194 -Sinhababu, Neil. "The epistemic argument for hedonism." 2013. ~~University of Singapore~~//KOHS-AG 195 -To see how we can detect moral properties through phenomenal introspection, consider intense pain 196 -AND 197 -bright. This fits how we regard the intrinsic properties of phenomenal states. 198 - 199 - 200 -====The standard is maximizing expected well-being. Prefer—==== 201 - 202 -====Util is the only pragmatic option for policymakers—they can only look at macropolitical impacts==== 203 - 204 -=====Goodin===== 205 -Robert Goodin, Professor of Government, University of Essex, Australian National Defense University, "THE UTILITARIAN RESPONSE," p. 141-2, 1990. 206 -My larger argument turns on the proposition that there is Something special about the situation 207 -AND 208 -want to use it at all – to choose general rules or conduct. 209 - 210 - 211 -====No act-omission distinction for states—they are responsible for their consequences==== 212 - 213 -=====Sunstein and Vermeule===== 214 -Cass R. Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule, "Is Capital Punishment Morally Required? The Relevance of Life‐Life Tradeoffs." John M. Olin Law and Economics Working Paper No. 239 The Law School, The University of Chicago, March 2005//KOHS-AG 215 -In our view, any effort to distinguish between acts and omissions goes wrong by 216 -AND 217 -a set of policy instruments that do not adequately or fully discourage it. 218 - 219 - 220 -====Util calc is k2 moral equality==== 221 - 222 -=====Cummiskey===== 223 -Cummiskey, David. "Kantian consequentialism." Ethics (1990): 586-615. Published by Oxford University Press.//KOHS-AG 224 -We must not obscure the issue by characterizing this type of case as the sacrifice 225 -AND 226 -may never force another to bear some cost in order to benefit others. 227 - 228 -Analytic 229 -Analytic - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,6 +1,0 @@ 1 -If you need anything or want me to disclose anything not on the wiki or want me to modify anything that is on the wiki, feel free to contact me: 2 -Facebook: Alan George 3 -Email: algeor99@gmail.com 4 -Facebook is probably best because I'll check it most often. 5 -My preferred pronoun is he/him. 6 -If you would be upset by something read on here, please tell me before the round. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,106 +1,0 @@ 1 -Part 1: Framework 2 - 3 -Structural Violence 4 - 5 -The standard is minimizing structural barriers, defined as alleviating the material conditions that commit structural violence on marginalized groups. Prefer— 6 - 7 -1) Debate should deal with material impacts—abstraction reflects privilege 8 -Curry ‘14 9 -Dr. Tommy J. Curry 14, “The Cost of a Thing: A Kingian Reformulation of a Living Wage Argument in the 21st Century”//KOHS-AG 10 -Despite the pronouncement of debate as an activity and intellectual exercise pointing to the real 11 -AND 12 -used to currently justify the living wages in under our contemporary moral parameters. 13 - 14 -2) Structural violence is based in moral exclusion—ethics do not apply if individuals are not included 15 -Winter and Leighton 16 -Deborah DuNann Winter and Dana C. Leighton. Psychologist that specializes in Social Psych, Counseling Psych, Historical and Contemporary Issues, Peace Psychology. Leighton: PhD graduate student in the Psychology Department at the University of Arkansas. Knowledgable in the fields of social psychology, peace psychology, and justice and intergroup responses to transgressions of justice “Peace, conflict, and violence: Peace psychology in the 21st century.” Pg 4-5//KOHS-AG 17 -Finally, to recognize the operation of structural violence forces us to ask questions about 18 -AND 19 -local cultures, will be our most surefooted path to building lasting peace. 20 - 21 -Part 2: Status Quo 22 - 23 -Qualified immunity creates a police state immune to criticism—it justifies police abuse 24 -Pattis ‘10 25 -Norm Pattis. Qualified Immunity And The Police State. October 16, 2010.//KOHS-AG 26 -I get many calls each week from people who believe they have been abused by 27 -AND 28 -accomplices in a police state; most of them don't even realize it. 29 - 30 -Courts use the “clearly established” clause to avoid clarifying core constitutional rights—leads to circular rights violations that justify future police misconduct 31 -Carbado ‘16 32 -Drew Carbado (The Honorable Harry Pregerson Professor of Law). “BLUE‐ON‐BLACK VIOLENCE: A PROVISIONAL MODEL OF SOME OF THE CAUSES.” Georgetown Law Journal 1479. No. 16-31. 2016.//KOHS-AG 33 -A third way in which legal actors translate police violence into justifiable force in the 34 -AND 35 -a significant doctrinal hurdle to holding police officers accountable for acts of violence. 36 - 37 -Qualified immunity serves to diffuse critique and stops expansion civil rights claims elsewhere—it makes police misconduct appear to be ISOLATED instead of SYSTEMIC 38 -Hassel ‘99 39 -Diana Hassel (Associate Professor at the Roger Williams University School of Law). “ Living a Lie: The Cost of Qualified Immunity.” Missouri Law Review 1999//KOHS-AG 40 -The problem with qualified immunity is not so much that the outcomes are sometimes unfair 41 -AND 42 -can develop into an obstacle to the very aims it professes to accomplish. 43 - 44 -Part 3: Advocacy 45 - 46 -Text 47 - 48 -Plan Text: The United States federal government ought to eliminate the “clearly established” clause of qualified immunity and replace it with a “clearly unconstitutional” clause for police officers. 49 -Catlett ‘05 50 -Michael S. Catlett “CLEARLY NOT ESTABLISHED: DECISIONAL LAW AND THE QUALIFIED IMMUNITY DOCTRINE.” Arizona Law Review. 2005.//KOHS-AG 51 -In trying to decide whether a constitutional right is “clearly established,” courts should 52 -AND 53 -case?;197 (4) How recently was the constitutional right pronounced? 54 - 55 -Solvency 56 - 57 -Restricting qualified immunity is key to unveil abuse within the police state—the aff calls out abusive police 58 -Bernick ‘15 59 -Evan Bernick (Evan is the Assistant Director of the Center for Judicial Engagement at the Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm). “To Hold Police Accountable, Don't Give Them Immunity.” Foundation for Economic Education. May 6, 2015//KOHS-AG 60 -In the wake of the tragic deaths of Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Walter 61 -AND 62 -granted, discovery stops, and there is no trial on the merits. 63 - 64 -Limiting qualified immunity is a uniquely key starting point to create policy accountability—alternatives are inaccessible 65 -De Stefan ‘16 66 -De Stefan, Lindsey, "“No Man Is Above the Law and No Man Is Below It:” How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct" (2017). Law School Student Scholarship. Paper 850.//KOHS-AG 67 -Altering the qualified immunity doctrine is an excellent way to begin the path to restoring 68 -AND 69 -of the stringent immunity afforded to police officers could take effect relatively quickly. 70 - 71 -Civil suits rebuild relations between communities and police 72 -De Stefan ‘16 73 -De Stefan, Lindsey, "“No Man Is Above the Law and No Man Is Below It:” How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct" (2017). Law School Student Scholarship. Paper 850.//KOHS-AG 74 -By beginning to mending the qualified immunity doctrine in these ways, 75 -AND 76 -surely be a long path to rebuilding the trust that is so crucial. 77 - 78 -Civil lawsuits are uniquely key to hold police accountable—compensation for victims creates change 79 -Cheh ‘96 80 -Cheh, Mary (Professor of Law, George Washington University Law School), “Are Lawsuits an Answer to Police Brutality,” in POLICE VIOLENCE, 248 (William Geller and Hans Toch eds., Yale University Press 1996)//KOHS-AG 81 -By contrast, the civil law, because of its greater flexibility and scope, 82 -AND 83 -but to reform so that the harm is not likely to be repeated. 84 - 85 -The aff refocuses civil movements—instead of focusing on individual acts, we take the police state out head-on 86 -Hassel ‘99 87 -Diana Hassel (Associate Professor at the Roger Williams University School of Law). “ Living a Lie: The Cost of Qualified Immunity.” Missouri Law Review 1999//KOHS-AG 88 -The focus on the intent of the actor in equal protection claims rather than the 89 -AND 90 -of an open debate concerning which civil rights should be protected and how. 91 - 92 -Underview 93 - 94 -Ideal theory can never guide action—you as a judge must reject abstractions 95 -Friere 96 -Freire, Paulo. Pedagogy of the Oppressed 1970 97 -Many Persons, bound to a mechanistic view of reality, do not perceive that 98 -AND 99 -of "communiques," whose contents are intended to exercise a domesticating influence. 100 - 101 -Only material realities are epistemically accessible 102 -Papineau ‘07 103 -David Papineau, “Naturalism”. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2007//KOHS-AG 104 -Moore took this argument to show that moral facts comprise a distinct species of non 105 -AND 106 -to see how we can we have any knowledge of them?. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,62 +1,0 @@ 1 -The presumption of static meaning misunderstands the interconnected nature of the world and its constant changing or becoming. 2 -Malins 1. Peta (2004). Machinic Assemblages: Deleuze, Guattari and an Ethico-Aesthetics of Drug Use. Janus Head, 7(1), 84-104. http://www.janushead.org/7-1/malins.pdf. AKB 3 -However it is the particular concept of the body activated by the excerpt–the 4 -AND 5 -LSD, a tripper. The drug using body is multiple. 6 - 7 - 8 -But, western metaphysics continually reaffirms the question of “is”, creating distinct, static categories that are then branded upon the world. I am me, you are you, two distinct, separate entities, always. This mode of thought traps bodies within a singular subjectivity, preventing any becoming other. 9 -Malins 2. Peta (2004). Machinic Assemblages: Deleuze, Guattari and an Ethico-Aesthetics of Drug Use. Janus Head, 7(1), 84-104. http://www.janushead.org/7-1/malins.pdf. AKB 10 -The concept of the rhizome developed by Deleuze and Guattari in A Thousand Plateaus provides 11 -AND 12 -prove themselves; to manoeuvre themselves into the privileged branch of each binary. 13 - 14 -Specifically, the state apparatus holds these categories in place, harshly defining the limits of becoming through a security logic that seeks to reduce everything to its predictable origin. This management creates the conditions in which any infraction upon order warrants infinite violence. 15 -Bell 07. Daniel M., Associate Professor of Theological Ethics, Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary, Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory, JCRT 8.2 SPRING 2007 55,d http://www.jcrt.org/archives/08.2/ 16 -Like Hobbes and Foucault, Deleuze holds that Life is constituted by motion; specifically 17 -AND 18 -we will have to look elsewhere. To this alternative we now turn. 19 - 20 -Status quo educational systems operate as extensions of the state apparatus zones of detainment par-excellence, harshly defining the conditions of education within rigid and predictable regulations. A recoding would require an upending of the current system. Thus, the Role of the Ballot is to vote for the debater who best embraces becoming. 21 -Allan 7. Julie, Rethinking Inclusive Education: The Philosophers of Difference in Practice. 2007. 22 -DETERRITORIALIZATION The striation of space is, according to Deleuze and Guattari (1987), 23 -AND 24 -suggests that it is worth further efforts to secure smooth spaces for inclusion. 25 - 26 -Nowhere has this been clearer than in student protests: 27 -May 4th, 1970; US soldiers at Ken State fire 67 rounds into a student protest. Thirteen seconds pass. 4 students are dead and 9 are injured. 28 -December 11th, 2009; Students protest a tuition increase at UC Berkeley. The 29 -AND 30 -, citing its commentary on lynching to be a disruption of public order. 31 - 32 -I advocate that public colleges and universities in the United States ought not restrict protest. 33 - 34 -We affirm protest in the educational space. We take the bricks from the classroom of reason and smash the windows to look beyond. 35 -Woods et. al., Michael, Jon Anderson, Steven Guilbert, and Suzie Watkin. "Rhizomic Radicalism and Arborescent Advocacy: A Deleuzo-Guattarian Reading of Rural Protest." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space Environment 31 (2012): 434-50. Print. 36 -Proposition 1. Rhizomic political assemblages are heterogeneous. They involve multiple connections between points 37 -AND 38 -on new lines” (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988, page 9). 39 - 40 -Specifically, this re-territorialization continually draws out trajectories against state domination. That’s key to a world beyond fascism. 41 -Bogue 07 (Ronald, Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Georgia Deleuze's Way: Essays in Transverse Ethics and Aesthetics pg. 130-131) 42 -By Identifying nomads with the war machine, Deleuze and Guattari suggest that a nomadic 43 -AND 44 -of smooth-spacing is a generative production and circulation of nomadic flows. 45 - 46 -The unrestrained and explorative nature of rhizomatic protest opens up new epistemic possibilities – challenging the very nature of the frame of life introduces a pedagogy of radical critique, the only way to account for the ever-changing nature of the world. 47 -Livingston 12. Alexander, “Avoiding Deliberative Democracy? Micropolitics, Manipulation, and the Public Sphere”, Philosophy and Rhetoric, Vol. 45, No. 3 (2012), pp. 269-294. AKB 3’s Michigan 48 -It is important here to stress what a critical theory of Deliberative democracy is not 49 -AND 50 -as to displace old prejudices and allow new identities and claims to flourish. 51 - 52 -And, university movements have potential – that’s empirically proven by the Occupation at the New School in 09 53 -Research and Destroy 09. Communiqué from an Absent Future 2009. “On the Terminus of Student Life.” Anti-Capital Projects. 11-26-2009. http://anticapitalprojects.wordpress.com/2009/11/26/communique-from-an-absent-future-on-the-terminus-of-student-life/. AKB 54 -We must begin by preventing the university from functioning and. We must interrupt 55 -AND 56 -real and the possible can push the struggle in a more radical direction. 57 - 58 -Successful protest is always met with detainment by the state apparatus stemming from university policy; the same holds true here. 59 -Moynihan and Chan 09. Colin, Sewell. New York Times. Police Arrest 22 at New School Building. April 10, 2007, 10:05 AM. http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/10/students-occupy-new-school-building-again/?_r=0. AKB 60 -Updated, 10:37 p.m. | About 20 Police officers wearing 61 -AND 62 -back of a white van, around 11:30 a.m. - EntryDate
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