Changes for page Lexington Roy Aff
Summary
-
Objects (0 modified, 7 added, 1 removed)
Details
- Caselist.RoundClass[0]
-
- EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2016-10-14 18:15:42.808 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Any - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Any - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -1 - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Byram
- Caselist.CitesClass[3]
-
- Cites
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,128 @@ 1 +Iran Full Ban 1AC 2 + 3 +Framing 4 + 5 +Non ideal theory good 6 + 7 +Mills 05 8 +Charles W. Mills, “Ideal Theory” as Ideology, 2005 9 +I suggest that this spontaneous reaction, far from being philosophically naïve or jejune 10 +AND 11 +that the ideal-as-idealized-model will never be achieved. 12 + 13 +Pain provides an objective for why oppression is bad. Thus the standard is maximizing expected well-being. 14 + 15 +Gray 09 16 +Gray, James W. "An Argument for Moral Realism." Ethical Realism. N.p., 07 Oct. 2009. Web. 04 Sept. 2015. https://ethicalrealism.wordpress.com/2009/10/07/an-argument-for-moral-realism/. MA in philosophy from San Jose State University (2008) 17 +If we have evidence that anything in particular has intrinsic value, then we also 18 +AND 19 +attempt to show that the alternatives are less justified in the next section. 20 + 21 +Extinction scenarios are key to genuine resistance to power- the state is inevitable but images of apocalypse are a useful tool for resisting dominant power structures. 22 + 23 +Schatz 12 24 +JL, Binghamton U, "The Importance of Apocalypse: The Value of End-‐Of-‐ The-‐World Politics While Advancing Ecocriticism," The Journal of Ecocriticism: Vol 4, No 2 (2012) KB 25 +Any hesitancy to deploy images of apocalypse out of the risk of acting in a 26 +AND 27 +where multitudes, and not governments, guide the fate of the planet. 28 + 29 +Humanity has a right to exist— anything else excludes infinite future generations which outweighs their impacts on scope- the 1AC’s discussion is uniquely important 30 + 31 +Cerutti 14 32 +Furio, Professor of Political Philosophy emeritus at the University of Florence and Adjunct Professor at the Scuola superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa. In the last fifteen years, Cerutti has been aVisiting Professor at Harvard, the Universit´e de Paris 8, the Humboldt Universit ¨at zu Berlin, the London School of Economics and Political Science,(China Foreign Affairs University), Beijing, and Stanford University in Florence. Beyond the publications quoted in this article, Cerutti has written widely on the political identity of the Europeans and the legitimacy of the European Union (last publication: Debating Political Identity and Legitimacy in the European Union, ed. with S. Lucarelli and V. Schmidt, Routledge: London 2011), “Humankind’s First Fundamental Right: Survival,” Constellations, 2014 33 +I have explained elsewhere9 why survival rather than justice is the leading category of a 34 +AND 35 +everybody, not just to the practitioners of academic philosophy Schulphilosophie. 36 + 37 +Plan 38 + 39 +Plan Text: Resolved- The federal government of the Islamic Republic of Iran ought to prohibit the production of nuclear power 40 + 41 +That causes shift to renewables and solves regional stability—current nuclear program is comparatively worse than alternatives. 42 + 43 +Lovins 15 (#1) 44 +Amory B. Lovins- an American physicist, environmental scientist, writer, and Chairman/Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute. He has worked in the field of energy policy and related areas for four decades. 27 August 2015, updated 29 September 2015. Iran’s Invisible Opportunity for Energy and Security: Modern energy investments could sideline nuclear ambiguity. RW. 45 +The tense standoff and emerging potential shift in America’s vexed relationship with Iran creates a 46 +AND 47 +To explore this thesis, we need to start with a little history. 48 + 49 +The current nuclear program is weak and unreliable. 50 + 51 +Lovins 15 (#2) 52 +Amory B. Lovins- an American physicist, environmental scientist, writer, and Chairman/Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute. He has worked in the field of energy policy and related areas for four decades. 27 August 2015, updated 29 September 2015. Iran’s Invisible Opportunity for Energy and Security: Modern energy investments could sideline nuclear ambiguity. RW. 53 +Amory B. Lovins- an American physicist, environmental scientist, writer, and Chairman/Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute. He has worked in the field of energy policy and related areas for four decades. 27 August 2015, updated 29 September 2015. Iran’s Invisible Opportunity for Energy and Security: Modern energy investments could sideline nuclear ambiguity. VR 54 +In striking contrast 55 +AND 56 + were cheaply done abroad. 57 + 58 +Adv 1: Middle East Proliferation 59 + 60 +Squo 61 + 62 +Iran is dangerously close to building a nuclear bomb in the status quo. 63 + 64 +Rubin 16 65 +Jennifer Rubin, Writer for Washington Post 7-19-2015, "By 2016, Iran could be back building a nuke," https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2015/07/19/by-2016-iran-could-be-back-building-a-nuke/?utm_term=.2df33f746c82 66 +To repeat: What was supposed to be a phased withdrawal of the sanctions so 67 +AND 68 +This is only one reason the deal must be thwarted before it begins. 69 + 70 +The plan solves because a complete halt of nuclear power is key to preventing nuclear weapons capability. 71 + 72 +Lovins 15 (#3) 73 +Amory B. Lovins, 1-17-2010, “Proliferation, oil, and climate: solving for pattern,” FOREIGN POLICY, http://www.rmi.org/Knowledge-Center/Library/2010-02_ProliferationOilClimatePatternVR 74 +We can have proliferation with nuclear power, via either end of any fuel cycle 75 +AND 76 +nuclear power is both a necessary and a nearly sufficient condition for nonproliferation. 77 + 78 +Impacts 79 + 80 +The Iranian nuclear program causes Middle East nuke weapon proliferation – regardless of whether the bomb exists. 81 + 82 +Maloney 15 (#1) 83 +Suzanne Maloney, 8-5-2015, "U.S. policy toward the Middle East after the Iranian nuclear agreement," Brookings, https://www.brookings.edu/testimonies/u-s-policy-toward-the-middle-east-after-the-iranian-nuclear-agreement/VR 84 +That said, the Saudis may react in other ways. First, we should 85 +AND 86 +if they do not force Iran to live up to its new commitment. 87 + 88 +Iranian breakout capability leads to Middle East instability and war. 89 + 90 +Maloney 15 (#2) 91 +Suzanne Maloney, 8-5-2015, "U.S. policy toward the Middle East after the Iranian nuclear agreement," Brookings, https://www.brookings.edu/testimonies/u-s-policy-toward-the-middle-east-after-the-iranian-nuclear-agreement/VR 92 +Especially in light of these assessments of likely Iranian and Israeli behavior after the nuclear 93 +AND 94 +pursue policies that could lead to untold and possibly dramatic consequences.”6 95 + 96 +Middle East war goes nuclear. 97 + 98 +Goldberg 12 99 +Jeffrey Goldberg, 1-24-2012, "How a Nuclear War Would Start in the Middle East," Atlantic, http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/01/how-a-nuclear-war-would-start-in-the-middle-east/251915/VR 100 +But the mullahs are also men interested in keeping hold of temporal power, and 101 +AND 102 +nuclear weapon could be delivered by sea or land, not by air. 103 + 104 +Underview 105 + 106 +Neg must defend a competitive post-fiat advocacy. Anything else means they moot the 1AC by up-layering, giving them a 13-7 time advantage that makes it impossible to affirm. My interp also preserves clash by forcing them to answer the aff, which ensures topic education. The resolution is a question of comparative worlds. 107 + 108 +NELSON 08 109 +Nelson, Adam F. 2008. Towards A Comprehensive Theory of Lincoln-Douglas Debate. 110 +And the truth-statement model of the resolution imposes an absolute burden of proof 111 +AND 112 +much smaller range of options: advocacy of the resolution as a whole. 113 + 114 +OED defines ought as “Used to indicated a desirable of expected state” Textuality is a jurisdictional issue that forms the basis of preround prep and reframes what it means to negate a statement 115 + 116 +Aff gets RVIs. Prefer because 117 + 118 +A) Time skew – the 2AR doesn’t have enough time to cover both theory and substance since the 2NR is twice as long so I have half the offense at the end of the debate – I should be able to collapse to the highest layer. 119 + 120 +B) The 1AR is too short to read theory especially if I have to cover his shell – I need an RVI for theory to be reciprocal, which is key to equal access to the ballot. 121 + 122 +The framework and paradigm for the round must conform to the aff. A change after the 1AC results in the neg dodging 6 minutes of offense. This creates a 13-7 difference in argument time and allows the neg to avoid clash with 1AC arguments, thereby harming fairness and education. 123 + 124 +Abstract questioning is useless - debate should seek to design concrete alternatives. 125 +Bryant 12 (EDITED FOR GENDERED LANGUAGE – the author said “she” and it was replaced with the word “to” – Levi Bryant is currently a Professor of Philosophy at Collin College. In addition to working as a professor, Bryant has also served as a Lacanian psychoanalyst. He received his Ph.D. from Loyola University in Chicago, Illinois, where he originally studied 'disclosedness' with the Heidegger scholar Thomas Sheehan. Bryant later changed his dissertation topic to the transcendental empiricism of Gilles Deleuze, “Critique of the Academic Left”, http://larvalsubjects.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/underpants-gnomes-a-critique-of-the-academic-left/) 126 +I must be in a mood today– half irritated, half amused –because 127 +AND 128 +things contain dirty secrets, ugly motives, and are doomed to fail. - EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-17 23:43:52.0 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - ParentRound
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +3 - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +1 - Team
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Lexington Roy Aff - Title
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +SO - Iran AC - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Byram
- Caselist.CitesClass[4]
-
- Cites
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,238 @@ 1 +Iran AC Bronx 2 + 3 +ROB 4 + 5 +The role of the ballot is vote for the debater whos governmental policy option has the most ethically desirable, simulated consequences. Prefer because, 6 + 7 +1. Simulating policymaking is key to causing change. We need to be able to speak the language of power. 8 + 9 +Coverstone 5 10 +Alan Coverstone- masters in communication from Wake Forest University and longtime debate coach. “Acting on Activism: Realizing the Vision of Debate with Pro-social Impact,” Paper presented at the National Communication Association Annual Conference, www.ibrarian.net/navon/paper/Acting_on_Activism___1.pdf?paperid=11704249 11 +Control of the US government is exactly what an active, participatory citizenry is supposed 12 +AND 13 +that is a fundamental cause of voter and participatory abstention in America today. 14 + 15 +2. The negative must defend a competitive governmental policy option or the status quo. 16 + 17 +A. Strat skew. Anything else moots 6 minutes of 1AC offense, which means they get a 13-7 time advantage making it impossible for the aff to win. That’s a form of structural abuse, which destroys 100 of fairness. 18 + 19 +B. Clash. Shifting out of comparative worlds makes meaningful clash impossible since they don’t have to respond to any of the 1AC. 20 + 21 +C. Asymmetrical prep. The aff is forced to take a stance on lots of issues that can have representational implications. That means they can prep out any single one and win which makes the aff burden impossible and means aff loses every round. Only hold me accountable to the effects of the plan. 22 + 23 +D. A 1AR restart kills education and clash since we don’t get enough time to talk about the issues that results in bad discussion. 24 + 25 +Prefer fairness because debate is a game requires equitable access to the ballot, prefer education because it’s the purpose of the activity, and prefer clash because without it debate’s value is non-unique since we’re just yelling past each other. These are all voters. 26 +. 27 + 28 +Debate should design concrete material alternatives – no reps or conceptual focus. 29 + 30 +Bryant 12 31 +Levi Bryant-Professor of Philosophy at Collin College. 2012, “A Critique of the Academic Left,” N.p, https://larvalsubjects.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/underpants-gnomes-a-critique-of-the-academic-left/ 32 +Unfortunatly, the academic left falls prey to its own form of abstraction. It’s 33 +AND 34 +of shelters, the distribution of medicines, etc., etc., etc. 35 + 36 +Framework 37 + 38 +The standard is maximizing expected wellbeing. Prefer because, 39 + 40 +1. Ethical frameworks must be theoretically justified because 41 + 42 +A. Even if a framework is substantively good- if it’s not fair then the discussion we have is meaningless. 43 + 44 +The Standards: 45 + 46 +A. Ground. Util includes the most types of impacts, which means the least ground loss. Other frameworks skew ground. Ground key to fairness since I can’t win if I can’t make arguments. 47 + 48 +B. Topic Lit. Most articles about nuclear power are written through the lens of util since they are written for policymakers, not philosophers. 49 + 50 +Parkins 11 51 +Parkins, John Russell, and Randolph Haluza-DeLay (Parkings is a researcher at the University of Alberta on energy and society; energy transition; food security; sustainable agriculture; social impact assessment; natural resource management, Randolph is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Kings College), 2011, ”Social and ethical considerations of nuclear power development,” University of Alberta, Faculty of Agricultural, Life and Environmental Sciences, Department of Rural Economy, http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstream/103237/2/StaffPaper11-01.pdf 52 +A new urgency is emerging around nuclear power development around the world, and this 53 +AND 54 +way of understanding the social dimensions of nuclear power within any given context. 55 + 56 + Topic lit controls internal link to fairness and education since we do research in the lit and it determines how we can make arguments. 57 + 58 +2. Is phenomenal introspection 59 + 60 +A. There is widespread moral disagreement; we need a reliable method to determine beliefs. 61 + 62 +Sinhababu 63 +Neil Sinhababu-Associate Professor of Philosophy at National University of Singapore. N.d, “The epistemic argument for hedonism,” Philpapers, http://philpapers.org/archive/SINTEA-3.pdfVR 64 +Human history offers similarly striking examples of disagreement on a variety of topics. These 65 +AND 66 +The rest of this paper discusses the only reliable process I know of. 67 + 68 +B. Phenomenal introspection is reliable and leads to util. 69 + 70 +Sinhababu 71 +Neil Sinhababu-Associate Professor of Philosophy at National University of Singapore. N.d, “The epistemic argument for hedonism,” Philpapers, http://philpapers.org/archive/SINTEA-3.pdfVR 72 +Phenomenal introspection, a reliable way of forming true beliefs about our experiences, produces 73 +AND 74 +favors the kind of universal hedonism that supports utilitarianism, not egoistic hedonism. 75 + 76 +3. Only naturalism is epistemically accessible. 77 + 78 +Papineau 07 79 +David Papineau- Professor of Philosophy of Science at King's College London, “Naturalism,” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2007 80 +Moore took this argument to show that moral facts comprise a distinct species of non 81 +AND 82 +it is hard to see how we can have any knowledge of them. 83 + 84 +This also implies that all a priori facts devolve into empirical facts because 85 + 86 +A) Collapses- Abstract ideas that we can undergo through reasoning can only be explained by simpler empirical actions, all perceptions are derived from experiences. 87 + 88 +B) Agency- Agents can only ever recognize these abstract a priori normative facts if they are knowable to them via empirical sensations that they undergo. 89 + 90 +Images of the apocalypse are key to genuine power resistance. 91 + 92 +Schatz 12 93 +JL, Binghamton U, "The Importance of Apocalypse: The Value of End-‐Of-‐ The-‐World Politics While Advancing Ecocriticism," The Journal of Ecocriticism: Vol 4, No 2 (2012) KB 94 +Any hesitancy to deploy images of apocalypse out of the risk of acting in a 95 +AND 96 +where multitudes, and not governments, guide the fate of the planet. 97 + 98 +Current analytic and critical philosophy doesn’t consider the future of the human race- that poses an ethical problem. 99 + 100 +Cerutti 14 101 +Furio, Professor of Political Philosophy emeritus at the University of Florence and Adjunct Professor at the Scuola superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa. In the last fifteen years, Cerutti has been aVisiting Professor at Harvard, the Universit´e de Paris 8, the Humboldt Universit ¨at zu Berlin, the London School of Economics and Political Science,(China Foreign Affairs University), Beijing, and Stanford University in Florence. Beyond the publications quoted in this article, Cerutti has written widely on the political identity of the Europeans and the legitimacy of the European Union (last publication: Debating Political Identity and Legitimacy in the European Union, ed. with S. Lucarelli and V. Schmidt, Routledge: London 2011), “Humankind’s First Fundamental Right: Survival,” Constellations, 2014 102 +I have explained elsewhere9 why survival rather than justice is the leading category of a 103 +AND 104 +everybody, not just to the practitioners of academic philosophy Schulphilosophie. 105 + 106 +Plan 107 + 108 +Plan Text: Resolved- The federal government of the Islamic Republic of Iran ought to prohibit the production of nuclear power 109 + 110 +That causes shift to renewables and solves regional stability—current nuclear program is comparatively worse than alternatives. 111 + 112 +Lovins 15 (#1) 113 +Amory B. Lovins- an American physicist, environmental scientist, writer, and Chairman/Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute. He has worked in the field of energy policy and related areas for four decades. 27 August 2015, updated 29 September 2015. Iran’s Invisible Opportunity for Energy and Security: Modern energy investments could sideline nuclear ambiguity. RW. 114 +The tense standoff and emerging potential shift in America’s vexed relationship with Iran creates a 115 +AND 116 +To explore this thesis, we need to start with a little history. 117 + 118 +The current nuclear program is weak and unreliable. 119 + 120 +Lovins 15 (#2) 121 +Amory B. Lovins an American physicist, environmental scientist, writer, and Chairman/Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute. He has worked in the field of energy policy and related areas for four decades. 27 August 2015, updated 29 September 2015. Iran’s Invisible Opportunity for Energy and Security: Modern energy investments could sideline nuclear ambiguity. VR 122 +In striking contrast, Iran’s nuclear power faces severe headwinds. Its tangled history has 123 +AND 124 +energy-strategy rationale even if all their enrichment were cheaply done abroad. 125 + 126 +Adv: Middle East Proliferation (2:37 – slow) 127 + 128 +Squo 129 + 130 +Iran is on a trajectory towards building nukes. 131 + 132 +Himelfarb 15 133 +Joel Himelfarb. “Obama administration admits Iran still pursuing nuclear program. News Max. January 28, 2015. http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/iran-nuclear-weapons-work/2015/01/28/id/621313/.RW 134 +"There is no question that, as Deputy Secretary Blinken said, the Iranians 135 +AND 136 +Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David Cohen agreed with Blinken, the Free Beacon reports 137 + 138 +The current deal allows massive circumvention—only decommissioning solves 139 + 140 +Dodge 15: 141 +Michaela Dodge. Michaela Dodge specializes in missile defense, nuclear weapons modernization and arms control as policy analyst for defense and strategic policy in The Heritage Foundation’s Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies. August 14, 2015. The Daily Signal. http://dailysignal.com/2015/08/14/yes-iran-can-hide-nuclear-material-in-24-days-iran-deals-details-show-fatal-flaws/. RW 142 +But many things have to happen before the 24 days clock starts ticking. Iran 143 +AND 144 +The more Americans learn about the deal, the cleared the fact becomes. 145 + 146 +The plan solves because a complete halt of nuclear power is key to preventing nuclear weapons capability. 147 + 148 +Lovins 15 (#3) 149 +Amory B. Lovins, 1-17-2010, “Proliferation, oil, and climate: solving for pattern,” FOREIGN POLICY, http://www.rmi.org/Knowledge-Center/Library/2010-02_ProliferationOilClimatePatternVR 150 +We can have proliferation with nuclear power, via either end of any fuel cycle 151 +AND 152 +nuclear power is both a necessary and a nearly sufficient condition for nonproliferation. 153 + 154 +Impacts 155 + 156 +The current deal destabilizes the region- leads to nuclear Saudi war. 157 + 158 +Maloney 15 159 +Suzanne Maloney, 8-5-2015, "U.S. policy toward the Middle East after the Iranian nuclear agreement," Brookings, https://www.brookings.edu/testimonies/u-s-policy-toward-the-middle-east-after-the-iranian-nuclear-agreement/VR 160 +Especially in light of these assessments of likely Iranian and Israeli behavior after the nuclear 161 +AND 162 +reassure the Gulf states and deter Iran, things could get very ugly. 163 + 164 +A nuclear capable Iran would cause Iran-Israeli war and increased terror, regardless of intentions. 165 + 166 +Hooper and Borghard 13 167 +Mira Rapp-Hooper and Erica D. Borghard, 8-1-13, "Hezbollah and the Iranian Nuclear Program," Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, http://www.cfr.org/iran/hezbollah-iranian-nuclear-program/p31779(Both have PhD in Political Science from Columbia University)VR 168 +It is important to determine the explicit responsibilities Iran would have to Hizbullah, and 169 +AND 170 +stemming from uncertainty on all sides about the robustness of Iran’s commitment to Hizbullah 171 + 172 +Iran-Israeli war goes global – turns into WWIII. 173 + 174 +Ivashov 7 175 +General Leonid Ivashov vice-president of the Academy on geopolitical affairs. He was the chief of the department for General affairs in the Soviet Union’s ministry of Defense, secretary of the Council of defense ministers of the Community of independant states (CIS), chief of the Military cooperation department at the Russian federation’s Ministry of defense and Joint chief of staff of the Russian armies. “Iran: the Threat of a Nuclear War” Global Research April 9, 2007. http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=vaandaid=5309RW 176 +What might cause the force major event of the required scale? Everything seems to 177 +AND 178 +that this clash will be in all respects much more nightmarish than WWII. 179 + 180 +Middle East war goes nuclear. 181 + 182 +Goldberg 12 183 +Jeffrey Goldberg, 1-24-2012, "How a Nuclear War Would Start in the Middle East," Atlantic, http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/01/how-a-nuclear-war-would-start-in-the-middle-east/251915/VR 184 +But the mullahs are also men interested in keeping hold of temporal power, and 185 +AND 186 +nuclear weapon could be delivered by sea or land, not by air. 187 + 188 +Underview 189 + 190 +Truth testing makes affirming impossible because it allows the neg to have a near infinite amount of NIBS since they can prove morality is false or inaccessible. Also takes out textuality standards on T since they presume my burden is to prove the res is true. 191 + 192 +Aff gets 1AR theory- key to check neg abuse. 1AR is drop the debater because it’s too late to rectify abuse and restart in the 1AR. 193 + 194 +Fairness is a gateway to engaging in kritikal issues – turns Ks. 195 + 196 +Galloway 07 197 +Ryan Galloway- Professor of communication studies at Samford University.” DINNER AND CONVERSATION AT THE ARGUMENTATIVE TABLE: RECONCEPTUALIZING DEBATE AS AN ARGUMENTATIVE DIALOGUE,” Contemporary Argumentation and Debate The Journal of the Cross Examination Debate Association Volume 28 2007, http://www.cedadebate.org/files/2007CAD.pdf 198 +Debate as a dialogue sets an argumentative table, where all parties receive a relatively 199 +AND 200 +1985, p. 114). Hugh Duncan furthers this line of reasoning: 201 + 202 +More reasons to prefer comparative worlds: 203 +1. Textuality. 204 +A. OED defines ought as “Used to indicated a desirable or expected state” hijacks what it means to negate a statement- grammar context proves 205 +Oxford Dictionary “ought, ought not” Oxford American Large Print Dictionary 2008 Oxford 206 +AND 207 +duty, or necessity, and use should for expressing suitability or appropriateness. 208 + 209 +B. The res requires existential specification 210 +Cohen 02 Cohen 2002ARIEL COHEN AND NOMI ERTESCHIK-SHIR “TOPIC, FOCUS, AND THE INTERPRETATION OF BARE PLURALS*” http://amor.cms.hu-berlin.de/~h2816i3x/Lehre/2006_HS_Quantifikation/Quantifikation_HS_Texte/CohenShirBarePlurals.pdf CB 211 +In this paper we show that focus structure determines the interpretation of bare plurals in 212 +AND 213 +activity verbs, where an existential closure operator quantifies over the event variable. 214 + 215 +2. Reciprocity. 216 +A. Risk analysis as a tie breaker on permissibility debates- there’s a risk of an ethical reason to prefer a world 217 +B. Prevents the aff from to prove infinite truth while the neg only has 218 +AND 219 +isn’t sufficient to beat uplayering – we should be able to leverage the aff 220 + 221 +3. Resolvability. Absolute Big T truths can’t exist because truths are constructed- particularity is the best standard – otherwise offense isn’t comparative so we don’t know who to vote for 222 + 223 +Price 98 224 + 225 + (RICHARD PRICE is a former prof in the Department of Anthropology at Yale University. Later, he moved to Johns Hopkins University to found the Department of Anthropology, where he served three terms as chair. A decade of freelance teaching (University of Minnesota, Stanford University, Princeton University, University of Florida, Universidade Federal da Bahia), ensued. This article is co-authored with CHRISTIAN REUS-SMIT – Monash University – European Journal of International Relations Copyright © 1998 via SAGE Publications – http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/~courses/PoliticalScience/661B1/documents/PriceReusSmithCriticalInternatlTheoryConstructivism.pdf) 226 +One of the central departures of critical international theory from 227 +AND 228 +critical international theory than does critical theory itself. 229 + 230 +Aff gets RVIs. 231 + 232 +A) Time skew – the 2AR doesn’t have enough time to cover both theory and substance since the 2NR is twice as long so I have half the offense at the end of the debate – I should be able to collapse to the highest layer. 233 + 234 +B) The 1AR is too short to read theory especially if I have to cover his shell – I need an RVI for theory to be reciprocal, which is key to equal access to the ballot. 235 + 236 +C) The aff is always open to theory since I have to take a stance on some interpretational issues – RVIs are key to check frivolous theory – key to a discussion of the topic which is key to education, and ensures the aff gets access to the 1AC. 237 + 238 +D) Only the neg can read T, which potentially precludes theory and all aff offense, so I need an RVI on it to compensate for that advantage. - EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-17 23:44:10.0 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - ParentRound
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +4 - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +1 - Team
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Lexington Roy Aff - Title
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +SO - Iran AC V2 - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Bronx
- Caselist.CitesClass[5]
-
- Cites
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,112 @@ 1 +QI- Ableism 1AC 2 + 3 +Framing 4 + 5 +Structural violence necessitates the exclusion of certain groups—this renders ethical theories meaningless 6 + 7 +Winter and Leighton 99 8 + 9 + Winter and Leighton ‘99 Deborah DuNann Winter (Professor of Psychology Department of Psychology Whitman College) and Dana sC. Leighton (Ph.D. I teach and do research in social psychology and peace psychology.). Winter "Peace, conflict, and violence: Peace psychology in the 21st century." 10 +Finally, to recognize the operation 11 +AND 12 +building lasting peace. 13 + 14 +That’s a pre-requisite to other ethical theories; even if they win that their ethical theory is the most coherent or sound, resisting structural oppression is a prior concern since it prevents individuals from participating in that moral space to begin with. 15 + 16 +Ableism operates as foundational tactic of oppression that must be resisted 17 + 18 +Siebers 09 19 +University of Michigan, Professor of Literary and Cultural Criticism ¶ (Tobin, “The Aesthetics of Human Disqualification”, Oct 28, Lecture, http://www.google.com/url?sa=tandrct=jandq=andesrc=sandsource=webandcd=1andved=0CCoQFjAAandurl=http3A2F2Fdisabilities.temple.edu2Fmedia2Fds2Flecture20091028siebersAesthetics_FULL.docandei=LWz4T6jyN8bHqAHLkY2LCQandusg=AFQjCNGdkDuSJkRXMHgbXqvuyyeDpldVcQandsig2=UCGDC4tHbeh2j7-Yce9lsA, accessed 7/7/12, sl) 20 +Oppression is the systematic victimization of one group by another. It is a form 21 +AND 22 +represents at this moment in time the final frontier of justifiable human inferiority. 23 + 24 +Thus, the Role of the ballot is to endorse the strategy for resisting ableist oppression 25 + 26 +Social constructions of disability are the root cause of other forms of oppression since the drive for normalization and the desire for aesthetic coherence forms the basis of our politics—thus, the Role of the judge is to facilitate disability scholarship. 27 + 28 +Siebers 10 29 + Tobin, Professor of English at the University of Michigan, Disability Aesthetics, pg. 58-63 30 +These two episodes may seem worlds apart, their resemblance superficial. The first turns 31 +AND 32 +kids that do weird things. (Cited by Fine and Asch 48) 33 + 34 +Offense 35 + 36 +Plan Text: The United States federal government should overturn San Francisco v Sheehan and rule that police officers found to have violated the Americans with Disabilities act (or ADA) should be denied qualified immunity. 37 + 38 +Contention 1- Accountability 39 + 40 +The court’s decision in San Fransico v. Sheehan ruled that officer’s actions need not comply with the ADA to be granted qualified immunity 41 + 42 +SCOTUS 15 43 + SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. Syllabus CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, ET AL. v. SHEEHAN CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT. No. 13–1412. Argued March 23, 2015—Decided May 18, 2015 201. RW 44 +Respondent Sheehan lived in a group home for individuals with mental illness. After Sheehan 45 +AND 46 +ill person who has been acting irrationally and has threatened anyone who enters. 47 + 48 +That makes legal recourse for disabled people impossible, weakens ADA protections and justifies police atrocities—training doesn’t solve 49 + 50 +Çevik 15 51 + Mrs. Kerima Çevik is curently a blogger for disabilty rights, autistic inclusion, accommodation, communication rights, and representation. A parent activist, editor and contributing writer who consults on Autism and Ethnicity, she blogs on topics of critical race, intersectionality, autism and social justice. An independent researcher, she focuses on shining a light on disparities in qualify of life for marginalized intersected disabled populations and their families through grassroots community building activities and pay it forward activism models. She is a married mother of two children, and world traveler currently homeschooling her adventurous son Mustafa, who is intensely Autistic and nonspeaking.. Standing at the intersectino of adolescence, race, and disability. The Autism Wars. June 9, 2015. http://theautismwars.blogspot.com/2015/06/standing-at-intersection-of-adolescence.html. RW 52 +When I realized that roughly 70 of people with disabilities encountered law enforcement more 53 +AND 54 +no one will ever answer for the innocent lives taken that day either. 55 + 56 +Qualified immunity as a defense legitimizes ableist stigmas and enables police killings—that’s a state-sanctioned form of structural violence that normalize genocidal practices—accountability is at the heart of this problem 57 + 58 +Mack 16 59 + Tracy Mack. January 6, 2016. International Socialists. Legitmizing police violence: Sanism, ableism, and racism. http://www.socialist.ca/node/2978. RW 60 +Even when damning evidence exists against Toronto police officers, they have not been held 61 +AND 62 +legitimized practice of the state and of the social order that authorizes it. 63 + 64 +Plan solves—Overturning San Fransisco v. Sheehan is key to stop ableist police violence by holding police accountable for their actions—it also enables more effective policing 65 + 66 +Perry 15 67 + David M. Perry. Aljazeera America. A chance to reduce police killings of the disabled. March 23, 2015. http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2015/3/a-chance-to-reduce-police-killings-of-the-disabled.html. RW 68 +Twenty-five years after the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA 69 +AND 70 +officers did not reasonably accommodate her disability. Furthermore, her attorneys argue that 71 + 72 +Threat of litigation specifically in ADA cases incentivizes better policing and catalyzes reform necessary for inclusion 73 + 74 +Auner 16 75 + Thomas J. Auner. “For the Protection of Society's Most Vulnerable, the ADA Should Apply to Arrests." Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 49.1 (2016). RW 76 +When courts deem the ADA applicable to specific situations, public and private entities typically 77 +AND 78 +but more importantly, will tangibly improve the safety of the mentally ill. 79 + 80 +ADA lawsuits are a crucial check on state power—reforming qualified immunity is a good first step to transform the criminal justice landscape to better suit the needs of disabled people 81 + 82 +Perry 2 83 + David M. Perry. Aljazeera America. A chance to reduce police killings of the disabled. March 23, 2015. http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2015/3/a-chance-to-reduce-police-killings-of-the-disabled.html. RW 84 +tthe violation of the ADA should exempts the officers from qualified immunity, 85 +AND 86 +need legal reform to convince law enforcement of that on a national level. 87 + 88 +Qualified immunity blocks larger social movements by fragmenting systemic problems into individual cases—the aff is key 89 + 90 +Hassel 99 91 + Hassel, Diana. "Living a Lie: The cost of Qualified Immunity" Winter 1999. Volume 64. Missouri law Review. Available at: http://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/mlr/vol64/iss1/9 NB 92 +The problem with qualified immunity is not so much that the outcomes are sometimes unfair 93 +AND 94 +us peace, but it keeps from us the tools required for reform. 95 + 96 +Contention 2- Competence 97 + 98 +Qualified immunity cases are decided based on a standard of “reasonable competence”—letting good officers off the hook and punishing the incompetent ones 99 + 100 +Blum 13 101 + Karen M. Blum. Suffolk University Law School. February 1, 2013. Qualified immunity: Update on absolute immunity. http://www.njd.uscourts.gov/sites/njd/files/Section1983QualifiedImmunity.pdf. RW 102 +Messerschmidt v. Millender, 132 S. Ct. 1235, 1244-51 103 +AND 104 +not entitled to the shield of immunity, even after Van de Kamp.”). 105 + 106 +The law enforcement and justice system’s perpetuation of competent/incompetent binaries institutionalize ableist violence and marginalization—rejecting them is a key form of resistance 107 + 108 +Brown 13 109 + Lydia X.Z. Brown. Organizer, Editor, Writer, Speaker. Interrogation of competency in the mentally disabled subject. May 25, 2013. http://www.autistichoya.com/2013/05/interrogating-competency-in-mentally.html. RW 110 +Those of us who live with psychiatric, developmental, and neurological disabilities know intimately 111 +AND 112 +those are only the natural consequences of such and systemic ableism. - EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-17 23:44:45.0 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Davis-Marks, Isis - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Byram LG - ParentRound
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +5 - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2 - Team
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Lexington Roy Aff - Title
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +ND - Ableism AC - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Princeton
- Caselist.RoundClass[3]
-
- Cites
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +3 - EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-17 23:43:51.0 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +1 - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Byram
- Caselist.RoundClass[4]
-
- Cites
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +4 - EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-17 23:44:08.0 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +1 - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Bronx
- Caselist.RoundClass[5]
-
- Cites
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +5 - EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-17 23:44:44.0 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Davis-Marks, Isis - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Byram LG - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2 - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Princeton
- Caselist.RoundClass[6]
-
- EntryDate
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +2017-02-18 00:07:48.419 - Judge
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Opponent
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any - Round
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +1 - Tournament
-
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Any