| ... |
... |
@@ -1,0
+1,20 @@ |
|
1 |
+Burden |
|
2 |
+1. A prohibition is contingent on the state’s ability to exercise its authority. OXFORD DICTIONARIES: |
|
3 |
+ Oxford Dictionaries. “Definition of Prohibit in English.” No date. All brackets are originally from the evidence. // LHP MK |
|
4 |
+VERB (prohibits, prohibiting… prohibited any tax cuts |
|
5 |
+ |
|
6 |
+2. Analytic |
|
7 |
+ |
|
8 |
+3. Analytic |
|
9 |
+ |
|
10 |
+4. Analytic |
|
11 |
+ |
|
12 |
+1 We cannot create an absolute prohibition – instead we have to adapt our laws to be specific to every individual instance because the nature of rules entails that aren’t stable. DERRIDA ‘02: |
|
13 |
+Derrida, Jacques. 2002. “Force of Law: The ‘Mystical Foundation of Authority’.” Cardozo Law Review 11 (919): pg 961. |
|
14 |
+ |
|
15 |
+To be just… at de droit. |
|
16 |
+ |
|
17 |
+2 The aff can’t prove a probation on nuclear power since making a general decision and trying to promote overall wellness is bad since it can’t account for the inherent nature of violence; the future is inaccessible – implementing a concrete prohibition closes the door to less violent option in the future. HAGGLUND: |
|
18 |
+Martin Hagglund (2006): The Necessity of Discrimination Disjoining Derrida and Levinas // LHP RS |
|
19 |
+ |
|
20 |
+Last but no… transformed or subverted. |