Changes for page Lexington Rourke Neg

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From version < 44.1 >
edited by Oliver Rourke
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edited by Oliver Rourke
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Summary

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1 -INTERPRETATION- Debaters must disclose all broken cases on the NDCA wiki under their own name. In this disclosure, they must post cites, tags, and first three and last three words of all cards read. Debaters may begin disclosing at any point during the season, but they must disclose all broken cases at least an hour before this round in order to meet my interp, regardless of whether the tournament requires disclosure.
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4 -Clash
5 -Academic Integrity
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1 +==CP==
2 +
3 +
4 +====Counterplan Text: Aff actors should remove restrictions on constitutionally protected speech with the exception of Holocaust denial====
5 +Holocaust denial bans fight anti-Semitism
6 +JTA 15 ~~JTA, "Romania Bans Holocaust Denial," July 24, 2015, Forward News.com, http://forward.com/news/breaking-news/317859/romania-bans-holocaust-denial/~~ OR
7 +The World Jewish Congress praised Romanian President Klaus Iohannis for enacting a law that makes
8 +AND
9 +of the fascist Legionnaires’ Movement with prison sentences of up to three years.
10 +
11 +
12 +====Holocaust denial in campus newspapers causes psychological trauma and increases the chance of similar atrocities happening again– the counterplan solves====
13 +**Foxman and Firestone 10** ~~Abraham H. Foxman (National Director Anti-Defamation League), Wayne L. Firestone *President Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life), "Fighting Holocaust Denial in Campus Newspaper Advertisements: A Manual for Action," May 2010~~ OR
14 +Holocaust denial is an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory which claims that the well-
15 +AND
16 +generation of Americans. We urge you to join us in this effort.
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1 +==Donations DA==
2 +
3 +
4 +====Protest are alienating alumni donors, who are of older generations. Hartocollis 8/4
5 +Hartocollis 8/4 – Anemona Hartocollis, writer for NYT: August 4, 2016("College Students Protest, Alumni’s Fondness Fades and Checks Shrink" New York Times Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/05/us/college-protests-alumni-donations.html?'r=0 Accessed on 12/15/16)====
6 +Scott MacConnell cherishes the memory of his years at Amherst College, where he discovered his future métier as a theatrical designer. But protests on campus over cultural and racial sensitivities last year soured his feelings. Now Mr. MacConnell, who graduated in 1960, is expressing his discontent through his wallet. In June, he cut the college out of his will. "As an alumnus of the college, I feel that I have been lied to, patronized and basically dismissed as an old, white bigot who is insensitive to the needs and feelings of the current college community," Mr. MacConnell, 77, wrote in a letter to the college’s alumni fund in December, when he first warned that he was reducing his support to the college to a token $5. A backlash from alumni is an unexpected aftershock of the campus disruptions of the last academic year. Although fund-raisers are still gauging the extent of the effect on philanthropy, some colleges — particularly small, elite liberal arts institutions — have reported a decline in donations, accompanied by a laundry list of complaints. Alumni from a range of generations say they are baffled by today’s college culture. Among their laments: Students are too wrapped up in racial and identity politics. They are allowed to take too many frivolous courses. They have repudiated the heroes and traditions of the past by judging them by today’s standards rather than in the context of their times. Fraternities are being unfairly maligned, and men are being demonized by sexual assault investigations. And university administrations have been too meek in addressing protesters whose messages have seemed to fly in the face of free speech. Scott C. Johnston, who graduated from Yale in 1982, said he was on campus last fall when activists tried to shut down a free speech conference, "because apparently they missed irony class that day." He recalled the Yale student who was videotaped screaming at a professor, Nicholas Christakis, that he had failed "to create a place of comfort and home" for students in his capacity as the head of a residential college. A rally at New Haven Superior Court demanding justice for Corey Menafee, an African-American dining hall worker at Yale’s Calhoun College who was charged with breaking a window pane that depicted black slaves carrying cotton. Credit Peter Hvizdak/New Haven Register, via Associated Press "I don’t think anything has damaged Yale’s brand quite like that," said Mr. Johnston, a founder of an internet start-up and a former hedge fund manager. "This is not your daddy’s liberalism." "The worst part," he continued, "is that campus administrators are wilting before the activists like flowers." Yale College’s alumni fund was flat between this year and last, according to Karen Peart, a university spokeswoman. Among about 35 small, selective liberal arts colleges belonging to the fund-raising organization Staff, or Sharing the Annual Fund Fundamentals, that recently reported their initial annual fund results for the 2016 fiscal year, 29 percent were behind 2015 in dollars, and 64 percent were behind in donors, according to a steering committee member, Scott Kleinheksel of Claremont McKenna College in California. His school, which was also the site of protests, had a decline in donor participation but a rise in giving. At Amherst, the amount of money given by alumni dropped 6.5 percent for the fiscal year that ended June 30, and participation in the alumni fund dropped 1.9 percentage points, to 50.6 percent, the lowest participation rate since 1975, when the college began admitting women, according to the college. The amount raised from big donors decreased significantly. Some of the decline was because of a falloff after two large reunion gifts last year, according to Pete Mackey, a spokesman for Amherst. At Princeton, where protesters unsuccessfully demanded the removal of Woodrow Wilson’s name from university buildings and programs, undergraduate alumni donations dropped 6.6 percent from a record high the year before, and participation dropped 1.9 percentage points, according to the university’s website. A Princeton spokesman, John Cramer, said there was no evidence the drop was connected to campus protests.
7 +
8 +
9 +====Protest lead to reduced donations, enrollments, and financial support by the government. Keller 2/21
10 +**Keller 2/21** – Rudi Keller writer for the Columbia tribune: 2/21/16("University of Missouri fundraising takes $6 million hit in December as donors hold back funds" Available at http://www.columbiatribune.com/news/education/turmoil'at'mu/university-of-missouri-fundraising-takes-million-hit-in-december-as/article'ed7cfd5b-3b3e-5b18-95d9 f2945ac51172.html Accessed on 12/15/16)IF====
11 +New pledges and donations to the University of Missouri fell $6 million in December as the campus weathered the fallout of public discontent that also threatens to erode the school’s finances via state support and tuition revenue. December combines Christmas generosity and the promise of tax deductions on returns due April 15, making it a prime time for fundraisers at major institutions. In December 2014, new pledges and donations for all campus activities including athletics totaled $19.6 million, according to figures compiled by the university’s advancement office. Only $13.6 million came in this December, a drop of about 31 percent. The figures represent new commitments and donations that are not given in fulfillment of previous pledges, Vice Chancellor of University Advancement Tom Hiles said. For the three complete months since campus protests made international news in November, new pledges and donations to MU declined by about $7.4 million. Along with the decrease in new support, pledges totaling about $2 million were withdrawn, Hiles said. About 10 were gifts of $25,000 or more, including one for $500,000, he said. Total new pledges and donations in fiscal year 2015 totaled $147.6 million, down from a record $164.1 million in fiscal year 2014. The advancement office has fielded more than 2,000 calls from people upset with the university and tracks them by topic on a heat map. "It ran the gamut from" Assistant Professor Melissa "Click to Planned Parenthood to just a general lack of leadership," Hiles said. "‘Who’s in charge? Are the students running it?’ If I heard inmates are running the asylum one more time I was going to … . Those were the general categories." Student demonstrations over racism and marginalization on campus made international headlines after the Tiger football team announced it would boycott athletic activities in support of a hunger strike by Concerned Student 1950 member Jonathan Butler. Athletic donations also have dipped, including a 68 percent drop in December cash gifts compared to December 2014 and a 38 percent decline in new pledges and donations as tallied in Hiles’ office during November, December and January. The Athletic Department’s decreased fundraising over that period — $1.3 million — is included in the total campus decline of $7.4 million. Giving by smaller donors, defined as those who give less than $10,000, declined by about 5 percent in the three-month period, with drops in November and December somewhat offset by a January increase in giving. Small donors gave or pledged $4.76 million in the period, down from $5.02 million the previous year. "We definitely got hit in our annual fund and other points," Hiles said. "It was rough because normally December is our best month." While his office fielded calls, Hiles said staff members researched callers who said they would never donate again. The result, he said, was "about a 90 percent correlation with people who ... have never given." The final word on other financial issues is unresolved. A House committee already has denied the university a portion of the budget increase allocated to other state colleges and universities. Chairwoman Donna Lichtenegger, R-Jackson, cited Click’s continued employment and a demonstration that interrupted a UM System Board of Curators meeting for the cut. At a Wednesday hearing of the Joint Committee on Education, interim MU Chancellor Hank Foley said figures show an anticipated enrollment drop of 900 students, which roughly equates to a $20 million loss of tuition revenue.
12 +
13 +
14 +====Endowment funds are key to US competitiveness and innovation – ensures college quality. Leigh 14
15 +**Leigh 14** Steven R. Leigh (dean of CU-Boulder’s College of Arts and Sciences), "Endowments and the future of higher education," UColorado Boulder, March 2014 ====
16 +These broad trends point directly to the need for CU-Boulder’s College of Arts and Sciences to increase endowment funding across the college. Endowments drive improvements in the quality of an institution and reflect alums, donors and supporters who recognize the importance of research universities in the 21st century. Endowed professorships are the first and most important component of increasing our academic quality. Named chairs recognize significant faculty achievements and help the university support faculty salary and research. CU-Boulder professors are among the most productive in the nation and are heavily recruited by competitors, including Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Cornell, Berkeley, Illinois, UC Irvine and many others. Often, these competitors offer our faculty endowed professorships, conferring prestige and research support. CU must provide its faculty with comparable support to be competitive. A second major area for endowments is student scholarships and, for graduate students, fellowships. A stable source of income that helps pay tuition is the most direct and effective way to offset the costs of education. Endowed scholarships are also effective recruiting tools for admitting the nation’s best to CU. Our dynamic programs, departments and majors are attracting more and more applicants, including the best in the nation. Like faculty support, endowed scholarships and fellowships confer prestige and, most importantly, allow students to focus entirely on academics without balancing jobs and worrying about future loan repayments. Finally, endowment funding for programs greatly enriches the institution, providing capabilities that are difficult to attain when tuition revenue provides the majority of funding. Institutions funded mainly by tuition must make sure that expenditures directly benefit students, which sometimes limits options for innovation and risk-taking. Programmatic funding enables faculty and students to take risks in their research and creative work. For example, in my own field, this might involve traveling to an unexplored region to prospect for human fossils or archaeological sites. Support for high-risk projects allows our faculty and students to develop new areas of knowledge, benefitting society by broadening the capacity of the institution to innovate. The future of higher education, including CU’s future, depends to a large degree on how successfully we can build major endowments. Ultimately, U.S. competitiveness and leadership in the global knowledge economy depends on this as well. For alums, donors and supporters, endowments indelibly affirm the importance of higher education and enduringly preserve its viability and vitality.
17 +
18 +
19 +====Analytic
20 +
21 +====Innovation solves great power war====
22 +**Taylor 4** – Professor of Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Mark, "The Politics of Technological Change: International Relations versus Domestic Institutions," Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 4/1/2004, http://www.scribd.com/doc/46554792/Taylor) //RGP
23 +I. Introduction Technological innovation is of central importance to the study of international relations
24 +AND
25 +, and war, international systems would not exist in the first place.
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1 +==DA- Law==
2 +International law banned hate speech
3 +Tsesis 10 ~~Alexander Tsesis (Faculty Loyola University, Chicago, School of Law), "Burning Crosses on Campus: University Hate Speech Codes.", 43 Connecticut Law Review 617 (2010), lawecommons.luc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1125andcontext=facpubs~~ OR
4 +
5 +University administrators wishing to deter hate speech on their campuses will need to review Supreme Court precedents, especially Chaplinsky, R.A. V., and Black, to identify how to achieve the goal while respecting speakers' First Amendment rights. International norms, while not binding on American courts, provide advisory insight for colleges wishing to balance the dignity rights of those targeted by hate speech and the liberty rights of speakers.' 6 3 There are recent signs of some Supreme Court justices' willingness to consider international legal standards. In Lawrence v. Texas, a case recognizing the constitutional value of consensual, adult sexual intimacy,'" and Roper v. Simmons, 65 invalidating the death penalty in cases involving juvenile offenders,'6 6 the majority of the Court demonstrated an openness to international norms. 67 Throughout the world, democracies recognize that on campuses and at other public places hate speech can be suppressed because it poses a social threat and does not constitute a form of legitimate political debate. The general trend is to balance the rights of speakers against the interests of persons who are the targets of hateful statements.'16 In this area of law, countries that bar the use of racial and ethnic incitement tend to follow international standards of civility. Typically, the balance is struck more in favor of the victims' rights, in contrast to the United States' inclination towards the interests of speakers. The international trend began in the aftermath of World War II, when the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. It obligates signatory states to punish the "~~d~~irect and public incitement to commit genocide."' 6 9 Not satisfied with the rather limited scope of the Genocide Convention, multiple members of the United Nations broadened the coverage through the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. The latter convention requires signatories to punish "all dissemination of ideas based on racial superiority or hatred, incitement to racial discrimination." 7 0 The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights is yet another relevant international agreement. It requires that "~~a~~ny advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence" be "prohibited by law." 7'
6 +US adherence to international law concerning hate speech is key to credibility in international human rights
7 +Cohen 15 ~~Tanya Cohen, "It’s Time To Bring The Hammer Down On Hate Speech In The U.S." Thought Catalog, 5/1/2015 ~~
8 +Recent scandals involving right-wing hatemongers like Phil Robertson, Donald Sterling, Bill Maher, and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity have brought to light one of America’s biggest embarrassments: the fact that America remains the only country in the world without any legal protections against hate speech. In any other country, people like Phil Robertson and Donald Sterling would have been taken before a Human Rights Commission and subsequently fined and/or imprisoned and/or stripped of their right to public comment for making comments that incite hatred and violence against vulnerable minorities. But, in the US, such people are allowed to freely incite hatred and violence against vulnerable minorities with impunity, as the US lacks any legal protections against any forms of hate speech – even the most vile and extreme forms of hate speech remain completely legal in the so-called "land of the free". Not only is this a violation of the most basic and fundamental human rights principles, but it’s also an explicit violation of legally-binding international human rights conventions. For many decades, human rights groups around the world – from Amnesty International to Human Rights First to the United Nations Human Rights Council – have told the United States that it needs to pass and enforce strong legal protections against hate speech in accordance with its international human rights obligations. As of 2015, the US is the only country in the world where hate speech remains completely legal. This is, in fact, a flagrant violation of international human rights law. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) both mandate that all countries outlaw hate speech, including "propaganda for war" and the dissemination of any "ideas based on racial superiority or hatred". The ICCPR and ICERD are both legally-binding international human rights conventions, and all nations are required to uphold them in the fullest. By failing to prosecute hate speech, the US is explicitly and flippantly violating international human rights law. No other country would be allowed to get away with this, so why would the US? The United Nations has stated many times that international law has absolute authority. This is quite simply not optional. The US is required to outlaw hate speech. No other country would be able to get away with blatantly ignoring international human rights standards, so why should the US be able to? The US is every bit as required to follow international human rights law as the rest of the world is.
9 +
10 +
11 +====International credibility solves multiple scenarios for extinction.====
12 +Nye and Armitage 07 ~~Joseph Nye (University Distinguished Service Professor at Harvard University, and previous dean of Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government) and Richard Armitage (13th United States Deputy Secretary of State, the second-in-command at the State Department, serving from 2001 to 2005), "CSIS Reports – A Smarter, More Secure America", 11/6, 2007http://www.csis.org/component/option,com'csis'pubs/task,view/id,4156/type,1/~~
13 +Soft power is the ability to attract people to our side without coercion. Legitimacy
14 +AND
15 +least as much as their ability to destroy the enemy’s will to fight.
16 +
17 +
18 +====Analytical
19 +
20 +
21 +==== If the US backs out of being pioneers for human rights abuses, there will be several crises in other countries regarding human rights abuses since we’re the most stringent enforcer. ====
22 +
23 +
24 +====Timeframe – Human rights abuses are occurring now and US can’t back out – we need to take a stance on Korea and the Middle East before these conflicts get worse. ====
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1 +===Interpretation—If the affirmative defends that public colleges and universities in the US ought not restrict any constitutionally protected speech, they must explicitly specify which types of speech are constitutionally protected in the 1AC
2 +
3 +===There are multiple conflicting conceptions of which types of speech are constitutionally protected in the literature
4 +Sullivan 10: Kathleen M. Sullivan, November 19, 2010. Two concepts of Freedom of Speech. Harvard Law Review. http://harvardlawreview.org/2010/11/two-concepts-of-freedom-of-speech/. RW
5 +Does Citizens United mark a reversal in the political valence of free speech? Have liberals grown weary of First Amendment values they once celebrated? Have conservatives flip-flopped and now become free speech devotees? This Comment argues that support for First Amendment values in fact cut across conventional political allegiances, and that both sides in Citizens United are committed to free speech, but to two very different visions of free speech. Where the two visions align, lopsided victories for free speech claims are still possible. For example, last Term in United States v. Stevens, the Court voted 8—1 to invalidate the criminal conviction of a purveyor of dogfight videos, reasoning that a federal criminal ban on depictions of animal cruelty was overbroad. But where the two visions diverge, divisions like that in Citizens United become sharp. The best view of freedom of speech would combine the free-speech-as-liberty perspective with the egalitarian view’s skepticism toward speech-restrictive conditions on government benefits. Under such a capacious approach, the first and third reforms are preferable to the second and fourth, and any new regulation of political money in the wake of Citizens United should abandon source and amount limits or increase disclosure requirements, not distinguish among political speakers or make speech restrictions a price of government largesse.
6 +
7 +
8 +Standards—
9 +
10 +1.) Topic Education
11 +
12 +2.) Strat Skew
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1 +Email: ollierourke55@gmail.com
2 +Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ollierourke55 or search me at Ollie Rourke
3 +
4 +If you have any questions about disclosure, feel free to email or message me. I will probably respond quicker if you use Facebook. I disclose all broken positions, but may also read a position from any of my teammate's wikis - especially Nirmal Balachundhar.
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1 +15,16,17
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