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... ... @@ -1,47 +1,0 @@ 1 -**There has been a breach in academia – the university space has been hijacked by the state. Stymied democracy in colleges has flawed epistemology in a way that represents the military industrial complex as integral to education. GIROUX ’15:** 2 -Henry A. Giroux 15, 3-3-2015, "Henry A. Giroux," Truthout. LHP MK 3 -What happens to...left-wing affiliations. 4 - 5 -**That justifies certain speech as legitimate over others is the same logic of state control that justifies whole systems of pernicious violence. BUTLER ’97:** 6 -Judith Butler. “Excitable Speech a Politics of the Performative.” 1997. LHP RS 7 -Hate speech is...and protected speech. ¶ 8 - 9 -**That always leads to the exclusion of individuals who inevitably don’t adhere to this ideal worldview. DAVIS ’99:** 10 -Davis, Diane. “‘Addicted to Love’; Or, Toward an Inessential Solidarity.” Vol. 19 No. 4. 1999. LHP MK 11 -Our fix of...processes of identification.17 12 - 13 -**Which precludes the possibility of any other alternative action as the state therefore can preempt its development. INVISIBLE COMMITTEE:** 14 -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/ 15 -Here a new...Third World War.” 16 - 17 -**I advocate that public colleges and universities ought not restrict any constitutionally protected free speech as a rejection the state’s operative control of the college environment. CHOMSKY '16:** 18 -WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 2016 04:45 AM EDT Students vs. neoliberals: The unreported conflict at the heart of our campus culture wars Activists must look beyond microaggressions and safe spaces. The root inequality of our universities is economic AVIVA CHOMSKY 19 -During the past...in their hands. 20 - 21 -**Only free contemplation within the state gives us the chance to break down the draconian norms it establishes. SNOEK ’12:** 22 -(Anke – Ph.D. in Philosophy from Macquarie University, Agamben's Joyful Kafka: Finding Freedom Beyond Subordination, Bloomsbury, 2012, p. 48-52) 23 -According to Agamben...it for good. (SE, 64) 24 - 25 -**And effective action against the state never occurs from outside but within the realm of politics. ZANOTTI 14:** 26 -Dr. Laura Zanotti is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Virginia Tech. Her research and teaching include critical political theory as well as international organizations, UN peacekeeping, democratization and the role of NGOs in post-conflict governance.“Governmentality, Ontology, Methodology: Re-thinking Political Agency in the Global World” – Alternatives: Global, Local, Political – vol 38(4):p. 288-304,. A little unclear if this is late 2013 or early 2014 – The Stated “Version of Record” is Feb 20, 2014, but was originally published online on December 30th, 2013. Obtained via Sage Database. 27 -While there are...universal normative aspirations.13 28 - 29 -**The state and civil society are inevitable as any attempt to deconstruct the law recreates a new unifying ideology. PARRISH:** 30 -Derrida`s Economy of Violence in Hobbes` Social Contract, Richard Parrish. LHP TLO 31 -But even more...creator of meaning. 32 - 33 -**Any violation of free speech is applied in an inconsistent way that gives state apparatus overwhelming power over the individual. WRIGHT ‘17:** 34 -John Paul Wright, 1-2-2017, "The University as a Total Institution," Quillette, http://quillette.com/2017/01/02/the-university-as-a-total-institution/. LHP MK 35 -A post-it...dogma of diversity. 36 - 37 -**Debate should center around representationally combatting structural inequality through minor shifts in tangible realities. Debate should question the representations of our actions in questioning the power structures that allow for oppression to exist – that’s your obligation as a judge. ROCKRIDGE:** 38 -“Frames and Framing,” progressive think tank that uses neuroscience and cognitive linguistics to shape argument form and phrasing for progressive values, former website: rockridge institute.org/aboutus/frames-and-framing/index.html, link not active currently 39 -Expressing progressive political...improve political debate. 40 - 41 -**Agency is not abstract, instead it exists as a result of how empirical power structures confer value on individual identity. BUTLER ‘09:** 42 -Judith. Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? London: Verso, 2009. Print. End of intro pages 24-32. LHP MK 43 -The epistemological capacity...never-recognized as lives. 44 - 45 -**This binds us to counter-balancing these discursive frames that demoralize individuals. BUTLER 2:** 46 - Judith. Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? London: Verso, 2009. Print. End of intro pages 24-32. LHP MK 47 -“Although precarious life...reproducible social institutions. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,43 +1,0 @@ 1 -**The ‘I think’ is not the ‘I am’ DELEUZE:** 2 -Deleuze, Gilles. Difference and Repitition. Translated by Paul Patton. LHP AA 3 -Temporally speaking - in other words, … be the heir of Oedipus? 4 - 5 -**The subject is engaging in a constant desire changing process. SEMETSKY:** 6 -Semetsky. Semetsky, Inna. “Deleuze, Education, and Becoming.” LHP MK 7 -Unconscious formations are ... oft-cited example of wasp and orchid. 8 - 9 -**It stabilizes habits as empirical, which gives no place for contestation since. ROLLI:** 10 -Rolli, Marc. “Immanence and Transcendence” Bulletin de la Sociite Amincaine de Philosophie de Langue Franfais Volume 14, Number 2, Fall 2004. LHP AA 11 -We now arrive at the last … highest ruler: Being itself. 12 - 13 -**Subjects are constructed through language. MASSUMI:** 14 -Brain Massumi. “A User’s Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Deviations from Deleuze and Guattari”. LHP AA 15 -Language is an endless high … speech is the fundamental mode of language. 16 - 17 -**There is a certain view of language has the danger of stabilizing us. DELEUZE AND GUATTARI: ** 18 -Deleuze, Gilles. Guattari, Felix. “A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia.” Translated by Briam Massumi. 2005. LHP MK 19 -Language is not life; …the transformation is attributed. 20 - 21 -**Majoritarian schooling wrecks thought and is unethical . CARLIN AND WALLIN: ** 22 -Carlin, Matthew. Wallin, Jason. “Deleuze and Guattari, Politics and Education.” Bloomsbury. 2014. Pg. 119-121. LHP MK 23 -As a social machine through …thought becomes contracted. 24 - 25 -**Cruel optimism invests us against violence. SCHAEFER 13:** 26 -Schaefer ’13. Schaefer, D. "The Promise of Affect: The Politics of the Event in Ahmed's The Promise of Happiness and Berlant's Cruel Optimism." Theory and Event 16.2 (2013). Project MUSE. Web. LHP MK 27 -At a recent talk at the University of Pennsylvania, … cannot move forward without affect. 28 - 29 -**1 This means basic codes establish a privileged subject and generalize to generic common sense. WILLIAMS AND DELEUZE: ** 30 -James Williams. “The Transversal Thought of Gilles Deleuze: Encounters and Influences”. LHP AA 31 -According to Deleuze, common…representation and recognition. 32 - 33 -**And, this logic happens empirically. GLASSER 16:** 34 -Ira Glasser. “Hate Speech is Free Speech” by Jonothan Haidt. 2016. LHP AA 35 -How is ‘hate speech’ defined, … and blows it back on us. 36 - 37 -**2 A restriction on speech does not allow for the ontological contingency of speech. LACLAU:** 38 -Ernesto Laclau. “Democracy and the Question of Power”. Constellations Volume 8, No 1, 2001. © Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA. LHP AA 39 -If we now come back to the … is constitutive of democracy. 40 - 41 -**This outweighs -~~-~- identifying difference inevitably targets individuals as deviants. EVANS ’10:** 42 -Brad Evans, 2010 “Foucault’s Legacy: Security, War, and Violence in the 21st Century,” Security Dialogue vol.41, no. 4, August 2010, pg. 422-424 43 -Imposing liberalism has …removed from the analytical arena. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,41 +1,0 @@ 1 -**Agents cannot be understood in and of themselves but rather through community – their identity is constituted by exposure to other agents. MAY '97:** 2 -May, Todd. “Reconsidering Difference: Nancy, Derrida, Levinas, and Deleuze.” Pennsylvania State University. 1997. LHP MK 3 -For Nancy, the...individual is impossible. 4 - 5 -**However, the empirical does not fully reflect the ontological, our quantum flux is indeterminate in a way that human subjecthood and worldliness is immanized. ROLLI:** 6 -Rolli, Marc. “Immanence and Transcendence” Bulletin de la Sociite Amincaine de Philosophie de Langue Franfais Volume 14, Number 2, Fall 2004. LHP AER-POTATO 7 -We now arrive...ruler: Being itself. 8 - 9 -**Dislocation within community, undermines difference and identity. JAMES 06:** 10 -James, Ian. “The Fragmentary Demand” Stanford University Press 2006. LHP AA 11 -The very term community...to another could occur. 12 - 13 -**The organic community’s attempt to derive a perfect, unified essence of what community ought to look like presupposes this idealized model of subjectivity. MAY 2:** 14 -May, Todd. “Reconsidering Difference: Nancy, Derrida, Levinas, and Deleuze.” Pennsylvania State University. 1997. LHP MK 15 -For Nancy, any...traversing innumerable significations. 16 - 17 -**My framework rejects any binding tastebuds in community. MAY 3:** 18 -May, Todd. “Reconsidering Difference: Nancy, Derrida, Levinas, and Deleuze.” Pennsylvania State University. 1997. LHP MK 19 -To be in...able common identity. 20 - 21 -**Academic freedom - even ripstein liked this flavor. JOY ‘15:** 22 -Punctum Books Nothing Has Yet Been Said: On the Non-Existence of Academic Freedom and the Necessity of Inoperative Community Posted on May 1, 2015 by Eileen Joy. LHP AA 23 -An “inoperative community...and also free.¶ 24 - 25 -**Racial deviancy and contingency fights the striation of racial politics. SALDANHA ’04:** 26 -Saldaha, Arun. “Reontologising Race: the Machinic Geography of Phenotype.” March 9, 2004. Brackets for Grammar. LHP MK 27 -Every time phenotype...of race's materiality. 28 - 29 -**Ugrešić’s poetry on Central European politics is our argument of identity politics. Disidentification. KRANTIĆ:** 30 -Krantić, Alma. “Community Outside Communion: Exile as an Inoperative Community in the Works of Dubravka Ugrešić.” Central European University Department of Gender Studies. 2015. LHP MK 31 -Ugrešić’s attitude however...disqualified and marginalized. 32 - 33 -**I defend the resolution as a general principle.** 34 - 35 -**Restrictions on discourse assume a nostalgic view of what the community ought to look like. DAVIS ’99:** 36 -Davis, Diane. “‘Addicted to Love’; Or, Toward an Inessential Solidarity.” Vol. 19 No. 4. 1999. LHP MK 37 -Our fix of...processes of identification.17 38 - 39 -**Restrictions on free speech try to render the community operative and justifies the logic of facism. JOY ’16:** 40 -Joy, Eileen A. “It is the Connection of Desire to Reality that Possesses Revolutionary Force, or, Why I Decided Not to Commit Suicide, After All.” 3rd Annual Sub-conference of the Modern Language Association. January 6-7, 2016. LHP MK 41 -As Foucault knew...at the clock - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,45 +1,0 @@ 1 -**First, ethics begins with individual struggles with morality – we search for moral principles to reconcile our existence. POOLE ’99:** 2 -Poole, Ross. “Nation and Identity.” Book, Routledge. 1999. Page 42. 3 -Moral claims are...who we are. 4 - 5 -**A tangible understanding of existence is too narrow – no absolute condition or ideology defines us, but our passions in the face of them confers value on it. DE BEAUVOIR ’48:** 6 -Simon de Beauvoir. “The Ethics of Ambiguity.” Lyle stuart Inc. 1948. Translated by Bernard Frechtman. LHP MK 7 -The failure described...to will itself. 8 - 9 -**A universal accounts of identity can’t account for how we tangibly relate to them differently. BENHABIB ’86:** 10 -Benhabib, Seyla. "The Generalized and the Concrete Other: The Kohlberg-Gilligan Controversy and Feminist Theory." Praxis International. 1986. Pg. 38-60. 11 -It is no longer...or “unlike” yours. 12 - 13 -**The solution is agency by choice. The only way to understand identity or morality is through individual confrontation with transcendent principles under our empirical contexts. This requires radical freedom – defined as free individual value creation within our empirical limitations. CROWELL ’16:** 14 -Crowell, Steven. “Existentialism.” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Spring 2016. LHP MK 15 -Another term for...appeal to values. 16 - 17 -**Not consequentialist. WEBSTER '11:** 18 -Webster, Scott. “Existentialism: Providing an ideal framework for educational research in times of uncertainty.” Monash University. Faculty of Education. 3/6/2011. LHP MK 19 -Individual freedom can...a daunting challenge. 20 - 21 -**Thus, the standard and role of the ballot is embracing radical freedom.** 22 - 23 -**Engaging in radical freedom allows for radical acts of liberation which is a functional prerequisite to solving material harms. CACHO ’12:** 24 -Cacho, Lisa Marie. “Social Death: Racialized Rightlessness and the Criminalization of the Unprotected.” November 2012. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. LHP MK 25 -Indeed, as an...surviving and living. 26 - 27 -**Action theory – when you will an action you are necessarily enacting radical freedom. CROWE:** 28 -Crowe, Jonathan. “Explaining Natural Rights: Ontological Freedom and the Foundations of Political Discourse.” New York University Journal of Law and Liberty. LHP MK 29 -It is tempting...ontological self-image. 30 - 31 -** Speech always lacks a secure ground that concludes in radical freedom’s necessity. GERSHBERG ’08 explains with the analogy of a parlor:** 32 -Gershberg, Zachary. “A Rhetoric of Existentialism.” Louisiana State University, Department of Communication Studies. December 2008. LHP MK 33 -This sentiment reflects...starts from there. 34 - 35 -**Also causes self-censorship. NOTSHINE ’08:** 36 -Notshine, Ray. “Speech codes limit campus freedom.” December 3, 2008. Action Institute. https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2008/12/03/speech-codes-limit-campus-freedom. LHP MK 37 -Millions of high...and constructive dissent. 38 - 39 -**Speech code’s ambiguity guarantee self-censorship out of fear and inconsistent implementation. MAJEED ’09:** 40 -Defying the Constitution: The Rise, Persistence, And Prevalence Of Campus Speech Codes By Azhar Majeed November 18, 2009 41 -As discussed in...First Amendment law.132 42 - 43 -**self-realization isn’t just adhering to a rule but to have a norm you create yourself and follow as good. Speech codes are inconsistent with radical freedom and regulate behavior independent of an individual’s reason to conform. WILD ’65:** 44 -Authentic Existence¶ Author(s): John Wild¶ Source: Ethics, Vol. 75, No. 4 (Jul., 1965), pp. 227-239¶ Published by: The University of Chicago Press 45 -As a matter of...they are unauthentic. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,44 +1,0 @@ 1 -**1 The ‘I think’ is not the ‘I am’. The ‘I think’ does not determine the subject – it is merely its capacity. Thinking only affects a subject as a being in time and so is not a transcendent feature. Transcendent subject hood fails because of differentiation through time causes instability. DELEUZE:** 2 -Deleuze, Gilles. Difference and Repitition. Translated by Paul Patton. LHP AA 3 -Temporally speaking - in...heir of Oedipus? 4 - 5 -**2 The subject is engaging in a constant desire changing process that compels eccentric affects and effects. SEMETSKY:** 6 -Semetsky. Semetsky, Inna. “Deleuze, Education, and Becoming.” LHP MK 7 -Unconscious formations are...wasp and orchid. 8 - 9 -**The politics of stable subjectivity makes critique impossible cause it takes empirical subject features and treats it as a model. It stabilizes habits as empirical, which gives no place for contestation since it is a postulate not a hypothesis. ROLLI:** 10 -Rolli, Marc. “Immanence and Transcendence” Bulletin de la Sociite Amincaine de Philosophie de Langue Franfais Volume 14, Number 2, Fall 2004. LHP AA 11 -We now arrive...ruler: Being itself. 12 - 13 -**Subjects are constructed through language. “I” refers to you as a specific person but ignores the specific things about you because every individual utters “I.” Your subjectivity is marked through this discourse because identification ignores the features that set you apart from the generic category. But linguistic intelligibility risks colonizing us with a given conception of the subject, MASSUMI:** 14 -Brain Massumi. “A User’s Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Deviations from Deleuze and Guattari”. LHP AA 15 -Language is an...mode of language. 16 - 17 -**Now, there is a certain view of language has the danger of stabilizing us – Order word are a view of the operation of language that does this. An officer saying “halt” is not communication but being positioned as a subject in relationship to the power of the state. DELEUZE AND GUATTARI:** 18 -Deleuze, Gilles. Guattari, Felix. “A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia.” Translated by Briam Massumi. 2005. LHP MK 19 -Language is not...transformation is attributed. 20 - 21 -**Thus, the standard and ROB is rejecting order words. That’s key to education – majoritarian schooling wrecks thought and is unethical. CARLIN AND WALLIN:** 22 -Carlin, Matthew. Wallin, Jason. “Deleuze and Guattari, Politics and Education.” Bloomsbury. 2014. Pg. 119-121. LHP MK 23 -As a social...thought becomes contracted. 24 - 25 -**General understandings of the relation between norms, subjects, and the world are insufficient for ethics because there is a gap between discursive regimes and real subjectivity. Only structures of affect distinguish the subject from static concepts of it – it is cruelly optimistic to think we can fit into stable structures. SCHAEFER 13:** 26 -Schaefer ’13. Schaefer, D. "The Promise of Affect: The Politics of the Event in Ahmed's The Promise of Happiness and Berlant's Cruel Optimism." Theory and Event 16.2 (2013). Project MUSE. Web. LHP MK 27 -At a recent...forward without affect. 28 - 29 -**Overcoming anti-blackness cannot begin with a fixed political status; only the aff’s politics of lines of flight and becoming can discount the structures of whiteness. KLINE ‘17:** 30 -The Pragmatics of Resistance: Framing Anti-Blackness and the Limits of Political Ontology David Kline Critical Philosophy of Race, Volume 5, Issue 1, 2017, pp. 61-65 (Article) Published by Penn State University Press. LHP MK 31 -As I’ve argued...create something new. 32 - 33 -**I advocate that public colleges and universities ought not restrict constitutionally protected speech. The 1AC is not an institutional action, rather it critically interrogates the link between speech codes and majoritarian thought to create deviancy. If you win a different framework for evaluating offense, and you would like me to under that framework, I will defend implementation. Now affirm: 34 -1 A Speech code needs to determine good or bad speech – that is why you place restrictions. But a restriction cannot determine this on natural or intrinsic properties of the speech. Instead we determine speech’s harmfulness based on a common sense established by the people it affects. This means basic codes establish a privileged subject and generalize to generic common sense. WILLIAMS:** 35 -James Williams. “The Transversal Thought of Gilles Deleuze: Encounters and Influences”. LHP AA 36 -According to Deleuze...representation and recognition. 37 - 38 -**And this ordering of college speech creates the desire for complexities of subjectivity to be smoothed out into coherence i.e you’re a real American or of the arian race – speech codes embody this commitment to an identity – so the aff precedes macropolitical struggle. DELEUZE AND GUATTARI:** 39 -Deleuze and Guattari 80 (Gilles Deleuze, Felix Guattari “A Thousand Plateaus” pp. 214-215) CEFS 40 -It is not...or inversely proportional. 41 - 42 -**2 A restriction on speech does not allow for the ontological contingency of speech in favor of elevating the ontic’s content. This stabilizes any view of discourse and is the epitome of stable subjectivity. LACLAU:** 43 -Ernesto Laclau. “Democracy and the Question of Power”. Constellations Volume 8, No 1, 2001. © Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA. LHP AA 44 -If we now...constitutive of democracy. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,40 +1,0 @@ 1 -**1 The ‘I think’ is not the ‘I am’. The ‘I think’ does not determine the subject – it is merely its capacity. Thinking only affects a subject as a being in time and so is not a transcendent feature. Transcendent subject hood fails because of differentiation through time causes instability. DELEUZE:** 2 -Deleuze, Gilles. Difference and Repitition. Translated by Paul Patton. LHP AA 3 -Temporally speaking - in...heir of Oedipus? 4 - 5 -**2 The subject is engaging in a constant desire changing process that compels eccentric affects and effects. SEMETSKY:** 6 -Semetsky. Semetsky, Inna. “Deleuze, Education, and Becoming.” LHP MK 7 -Unconscious formations are...wasp and orchid. 8 - 9 -**The politics of stable subjectivity makes critique impossible cause it takes empirical subject features and treats it as a model. It stabilizes habits as empirical, which gives no place for contestation since it is a postulate not a hypothesis. ROLLI:** 10 -Rolli, Marc. “Immanence and Transcendence” Bulletin de la Sociite Amincaine de Philosophie de Langue Franfais Volume 14, Number 2, Fall 2004. LHP AA 11 -We now arrive...ruler: Being itself. 12 - 13 -**Subjects are constructed through language. “I” refers to you as a specific person but ignores the specific things about you because every individual utters “I.” Your subjectivity is marked through this discourse because identification ignores the features that set you apart from the generic category. But linguistic intelligibility risks colonizing us with a given conception of the subject, MASSUMI:** 14 -Brain Massumi. “A User’s Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Deviations from Deleuze and Guattari”. LHP AA 15 -Language is an...mode of language. 16 - 17 -**Now, there is a certain view of language has the danger of stabilizing us – Order word are a view of the operation of language that does this. An officer saying “halt” is not communication but being positioned as a subject in relationship to the power of the state. DELEUZE AND GUATTARI:** 18 -Deleuze, Gilles. Guattari, Felix. “A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia.” Translated by Briam Massumi. 2005. LHP MK 19 -Language is not...transformation is attributed. 20 - 21 -**Thus, the standard and ROB is rejecting order words. That’s key to education – majoritarian schooling wrecks thought and is unethical. CARLIN AND WALLIN:** 22 -Carlin, Matthew. Wallin, Jason. “Deleuze and Guattari, Politics and Education.” Bloomsbury. 2014. Pg. 119-121. LHP MK 23 -As a social...thought becomes contracted. 24 - 25 -**General understandings of the relation between norms, subjects, and the world are insufficient for ethics because there is a gap between discursive regimes and real subjectivity. Only structures of affect distinguish the subject from static concepts of it – it is cruelly optimistic to think we can fit into stable structures. SCHAEFER 13:** 26 -Schaefer ’13. Schaefer, D. "The Promise of Affect: The Politics of the Event in Ahmed's The Promise of Happiness and Berlant's Cruel Optimism." Theory and Event 16.2 (2013). Project MUSE. Web. LHP MK 27 -At a recent...forward without affect. 28 - 29 -**I advocate that public colleges and universities ought not restrict constitutionally protected speech. The 1AC is not an institutional action, rather it critically interrogates the link between speech codes and majoritarian thought to create deviancy. If you win a different framework for evaluating offense, and you would like me to under that framework, I will defend implementation. Now affirm: 30 -1 A Speech code needs to determine good or bad speech – that is why you place restrictions. But a restriction cannot determine this on natural or intrinsic properties of the speech. Instead we determine speech’s harmfulness based on a common sense established by the people it affects. This means basic codes establish a privileged subject and generalize to generic common sense. WILLIAMS:** 31 -James Williams. “The Transversal Thought of Gilles Deleuze: Encounters and Influences”. LHP AA 32 -According to Deleuze...representation and recognition. 33 - 34 -**And this ordering of college speech creates the desire for complexities of subjectivity to be smoothed out into coherence i.e you’re a real American or of the arian race – speech codes embody this commitment to an identity – so the aff precedes macropolitical struggle. DELEUZE AND GUATTARI:** 35 -Deleuze and Guattari 80 (Gilles Deleuze, Felix Guattari “A Thousand Plateaus” pp. 214-215) CEFS 36 -It is not...or inversely proportional. 37 - 38 -**2 A restriction on speech does not allow for the ontological contingency of speech in favor of elevating the ontic’s content. This stabilizes any view of discourse and is the epitome of stable subjectivity. LACLAU:** 39 -Ernesto Laclau. “Democracy and the Question of Power”. Constellations Volume 8, No 1, 2001. © Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA. LHP AA 40 -If we now...constitutive of democracy. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Lake Highland Khattak Aff - Title
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... ... @@ -1,32 +1,0 @@ 1 -Identity is bound by two sides - the subjective and the objective. Both of these attempt to ascribe a full identity that we can never reach. STAVRAKAKIS: 2 -Stavrakakis, Yannis. “Lacan and the Political.” Routeledge. Pg. 41-42. 1999. LHP MK 3 -My starting point in this chapter is … being is experienced as something lost. 4 - 5 -However, with this lack comes a desire to complete it. Desire from lack is a fantasy that posits the subject can fulfill themselves by attaining the object of lack, but this identification with entities that ‘complete us’ is impossible and recreates the subject’s lack. STAVRAKAKIS 2: 6 -Stavrakakis, Yannis. “Lacan and the Political.” Routeledge. Pg. 42-43. 1999. LHP MK 7 -What are the implications of the … revealed as the politics of impossibility. 8 - 9 -And, only a psychoanalytic confrontation and an acceptance of our lack can answer the question of why we desire the oppression of other racialized groups to feel non-lacking. SHELDON: 10 -Sheldon, Associate Professor and Director of the Graduate Program in English. Simmons College of Arts and Sciences, “From alienation to cynicism: Race and the Lacanian unconscious,” Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society 19.4, (Dec 2014): 370-378. Recut LHP MK 11 -In Lacanian terms, the goal …along the path of this loop. 12 - 13 -This is key to any global material change. Desire from lack and the fantasy involved in constructing policy allows material violence to persist. FOTAKI: 14 -Fotaki, Marianna. (Organization Studies Group @ Manchester Business School). “Why do public policies fail so often? Exploring health policy-making as an imaginary and symbolic construction.” June 15, 2010. Sage, 713-716. LHP SG 15 -Towards an alternative conception of … being in organizations and society. 16 - 17 -Thus the standard and role of the ballot is to endorse the best methodology for orientation towards the subject’s inevitable lack. ZIZEK: 18 -Slavoj, International Director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities at University of London, Senior Researcher at the Institute of Sociology at University of Llubljana, the Elvis of cultural theory, former candidate for Slovenian presidency, For They Know Not What They Do, p.70-2. Recut LHP MK. 19 -Herein lies, strictly speaking, … more it insists and pursues its "silent weaving". 20 - 21 -And – that’s especially true of education. BRITON 2k: 22 -Briton, Derek. "Pedagogy, Practice, and Psychoanalysis." American Educational Research Conference Association, 2000. 23 -According to Pitt et al (1998, p. 3… preparation of preservice teachers? 24 - 25 -I defend the resolution as a general principle. 26 -1 A Speech code needs to determine good or bad speech – that is why you place restrictions. But a restriction cannot determine this on natural or intrinsic properties of the speech. Instead we determine speech’s harmfulness based on a common sense established by the people it affects. WILLIAMS: 27 -James Williams. “The Transversal Thought of Gilles Deleuze: Encounters and Influences”. LHP AA 28 -According to Deleuze, common sense …identity, representation and recognition. 29 - 30 -2 A restriction on speech does not allow for the ontological contingency of speech in favor of elevating the ontic’s contents as it ascribes a set goodness or badness. LACLAU: 31 -Ernesto Laclau. “Democracy and the Question of Power”. Constellations Volume 8, No 1, 2001. © Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA. LHP AA 32 -If we now come back to the question … the contingency of those aims; - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-04-30 19:48:10.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Rahul - Opponent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -34 - Round
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Lake Highland Khattak Aff - Title
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -JANFEB - 1AC - Chinchilla - Tournament
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-02-17 03:13:23.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -David Dosch Brandon Garrett - Opponent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Newark Science BA - Round
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -25 - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-02-20 00:25:08.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Jeff Merrill - Opponent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Loyola DW - Round
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Berkeley
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -26 - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-02-20 18:09:14.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Sarah Sherwood Steve Knell Sean Fahey - Opponent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Newark Science OS - Round
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -27 - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-04-01 20:49:59.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Djorn Patel Harry Kern - Opponent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Whitman XR - Round
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -29 - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-04-30 15:16:37.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Sean Fahey - Opponent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -30 - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2017-04-30 15:17:03.0 - Judge
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Michael Harris - Opponent
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