Changes for page Quarry Lane Karavadi Neg
on 2017/03/09 06:10
on 2017/04/06 15:37
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... ... @@ -1,31 +1,0 @@ 1 -=Borders K= 2 -==1NC== 3 -The aff’s use of "countries" as independent hegemonic agents to carry out the ban re-entrenches the harms that brought us to this point in the first place – international politics provided the threat of nuclear power. A blanket ban by individual nations will never solve – if it isn’t nukes it’ll be something even worse – the AC misjudges the origins of its harms. 4 -Taylor 14 summarizes Arendt: ~~~~Double brackets for gendered language, single brackets already in text~~~~ 5 -Taylor, Nicholas A.J. 2014. ‘Rethinking Cosmopolitan Solidarity: Nuclear Harm from a Cosmic Point of View’. Paper presented at the annual meeting for the International Society for Environmental Ethics and the International Association of Environmental Philosophy, Allenspark, CO, 17–20 June 2014. (KW) 6 -More important still is the passage where Arendt (2007b) asserts that 7 -AND 8 -a world that is thoroughly nonnatural’. 9 -Focus on making countries distinct from one another originates from colonial power structures – the map is the military blueprint. State sovereignty is the root of imperialism and domination – historical analysis proves. 10 -Craib 09 11 -Raymond B. Craib – Associate Professor in the Department of History, Cornell University, “Relocating cartography”, Postcolonial Studies (2009), vol. 12 no. 4, pp. 481-490, http://history.arts.cornell.edu/relocating20cartograhy.pdf (KW) 12 -The summation is a powerful and important one 13 -AND 14 -new forms of enclosure and classification, and the expansion of state power. 15 -And, the aff’s focus on territory and international politics exclusively creates in and out-groups – means that the NC is a prerequisite to solving all harms – otherwise villainizes other bodies and enables the inevitability of AC impacts. 16 -Shapiro 97 17 -Michael J., Department of Political Science, University of Hawai’I, Violent Cartographies: Mapping Cultures of War, pp. 149-51 (KW) 18 -The complicity of the social sciences, psychology, and psychiatry 19 -AND 20 -This is especially evident in the orchestration of Norman Schwarzkopf's career as a media personality. 21 -The alt is to radically reject notions of statehood and impose a nuclear ban from a globally human perspective. No perm – a) Aff already specified countries, b) competes through net benefits, c) doesn’t affirm – countries will NOT ban nuclear energy. Text of the res first – 1) spirit is vague and subject to interpretation, only text provides a solid determination of what’s topical, 2) key to real world, actions need to be phrased intentionally, rigid interpretation is the best way to communicate specific actions and not general concepts. 22 -Nuclear power affects all of humanity – even one slip-up could potentially end the human race. Self-preservation means the issue must be globally challenged – the political nature of the AC inevitably distances us from the true threat and prioritizes superficial political argumentation over mutual survival. Embracing the alt takes us away from the separatist national mindset, key to ending colonialism and approaching real peace. 23 -Taylor 2 24 -Several decades before planet Earth was scientifically accepted as operating as a single, self-regulating system (with interlinked processes and subsystems), 25 -AND 26 -whether by design or as an ancillary benefit.12 27 -The role of the ballot and judge as an educator is to reject arguments based on asymmetrical power relations—because pedagogical contexts are inherently political, we have a unique opportunity to promote real change. Tejeda and Espinoza 03 28 -Carlos Tejeda and Manuel Espinoza, "Toward a Decolonizing Pedagogy: Social Justice Reconsidered," in Peter Trifonas’s PEDAGOGIES OF DIFFERENCE: RETHINKING EDUCATION FOR SOCIAL CHANGE/ RoutledgeFalmer. New York, London. 2003. Questia (KW) 29 -Just as objective social reality exists not by chance, 30 -AND 31 -both the means and the ends of schooling. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,42 +1,0 @@ 1 -=Eco-Psychoanalysis K= 2 -==1NC== 3 -====1. The central question of the debate is how we use the environment, in terms of responses to anxiety—-energy production is a dangerous palliative that gives us the allusion of control by affirming our mastery over nature and distracting us from our consumptive practices—-ensures serial policy-failure.==== 4 -**Dodds 12 ** 5 -(Joseph, MPhil, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK, MA, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK BSc, Psychology and Neuroscience, Manchester University, UK, Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) of the British Psychological Society (BPS), and a member of several other professional organizations such as the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Psychoanalysis and Ecology at the Edge of Chaos p 27 *gender mod) 6 -Why psychoanalysis? On the face of it, it seems frankly irrelevant. Surely 7 -AND 8 -environments', the ultimate 'environment mother' (Winnicott 1999,1987). 9 - 10 -====2. Technological management is an expression of the death drive—-causes projection of our fears onto the human AND non-human world to justify their annihilation—-turns and outweighs the case ==== 11 -**Dodds 12** 12 -(Joseph, MPhil, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK, MA, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK BSc, Psychology and Neuroscience, Manchester University, UK, Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) of the British Psychological Society (BPS), and a member of several other professional organizations such as the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Psychoanalysis and Ecology at the Edge of Chaos p 70 *gender mod) 13 -Here there are echoes of Freud's (1916) idea of 'anticipatory mourning' and the 14 -AND 15 -of bringing about our extinction. (Searles 1972: 371-372) 16 - 17 -====3. The doctrine of continued re-engineering of nature results in more insidious destructive practices that make their impacts inevitable—-unforeseen non-linearities ensure serial policy failure and extinction. Prohibiting nuclear energy in favor of renewables and/or other alternatives still doesn’t solve the core of the issue. **Backhaus 9 ====** 18 -(Gary, Phil @ Loyola Maryland, "Automobility: Global Warming as Symptomatology" April 2009, www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/1/2/187) 19 -Many environmental thinkers have questioned the presupposed tenets, e.g., the doctrine 20 -AND 21 -are destroying the life of, and on, the planet. 22 - 23 -====4. These pathologies distort not only how we respond to crisis but also why and to which crises —- what value nature/the environment has—-as such, your primary role is to investigate the aff’s psychological investment in energy production as an exercise in reprogramming our position in a non-linear and inevitably chaotic world.==== 24 -**Dodds 12 ** 25 -(Joseph, MPhil, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK, MA, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK BSc, Psychology and Neuroscience, Manchester University, UK, Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) of the British Psychological Society (BPS), and a member of several other professional organizations such as the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Psychoanalysis and Ecology at the Edge of Chaos p 198 ( ) – gender modified) 26 -The metaphor of an acrobat on a high wire referred to by Bateson (2000 27 -AND 28 -as a species among the interconnected life systems of the Earth. 29 - 30 -====5. Don’t be blackmailed by their threat of immediate consequences—-actomania in the face of environmental apocalypse not only requires a fantasy of natural manipulation but it actively blinds us to a reconfiguration of our consumptive practices ==== 31 -**Swyngedouw 6** 32 -(Erik, Dept of Geography, School of Environment and Development, Manchester University "Impossible "Sustainability" and the Post-Political Condition," Forthcoming in: David Gibbs and Rob Krueger (Eds.) Sustainable Development, http://www.liv.ac.uk/geography/seminars/Sustainabilitypaper.doc) 33 -This chapter seeks to destabilise some of the most persistent myths about nature, sustainability 34 -AND 35 -practicing expanding energy use and widening and deepening its ecological footprint. 36 - 37 -====6. We don’t need an alternative besides our framework of analysis—-the fantasy will reveal itself as long as we continue asking questions to expose their concealment of the lack—-in other words, it’s your job to confuse and frustrate them via a refusal to partake in their politics—-this crushes the permutation ==== 38 -**Dean 6 ** 39 -(Jodi, Prof of Political Science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, 2006, Zizek’s Politics. Xviii-xx) 40 -Žižek emphasizes that Lacan conceptualized this excessive place, this place without guarantees, in 41 -AND 42 -we can organize, consider, and formalize our experiences as ideological subjects. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,31 +1,0 @@ 1 -=Classism DA= 2 -==1NC== 3 -====~~Lawyers~~ Qualified immunity applies to civil lawsuits and the aff seeks to gain advantages by regulating civil lawsuits. Civil suits require plaintiffs to pay for lawsuits that they can’t afford. Lawyers.com. 4 -~~Lawyers.com. Legal Website "What are "Costs" in a Civil Lawsuit?" No date.~~ 5 -No matter what kind of case you're involved in 6 -AND 7 -the actual costs incurred, thereby reducing the amount of its net recovery. 8 - 9 - 10 -==== ~~Higdon 1~~ And, this leads to the exploitation of the poor. Higdon 10==== 11 -~~Higdon, Woodrow L. Investigative Photo Journalist, Former Police Officer "Public Corruption Cover Up Through Civil Litigation." GTI News, March 2010.~~ 12 -Less than ten percent (10) of American citizens can afford the high cost 13 -AND 14 -ninety percent of the cover up is complete, and all of the criminal exposure is gone. 15 -~~He continues~~ 16 -Law enforcement has the capability, and the incentive, 17 -AND 18 -The public unions are insulated from criminal investigations, and civil damage. 19 - 20 - 21 -==== ~~Higdon 2~~ This means only the rich can afford the liberation the aff seeks and means the only people who benefit from the aff are the already rich. Turns the case – reject their classist policy. Higdon 2==== 22 -The so-called "Civil and Criminal Justice Systems" in the United States 23 -AND 24 -one of the most effective public corruption cover up tools available to public agencies. 25 - 26 - 27 -==== ~~Marsh~~ Class domination is the dominant form of injustice – it twists all other antagonisms to its own needs. Means we control the internal link to solvency. Marsh 95 ==== 28 -~~James L., Fordham University, "Critique, Action, and Liberation", p.343-344 GAL) 29 -Because capitalism is a system with interrelated social, economic, and political components, 30 -AND 31 -positively by common aspirations, norms, and ideals and a common enemy. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,14 +1,0 @@ 1 -=Campaign Expenditures DA= 2 -==1NC== 3 -====~~Buckley 14~~ A right to free speech necessarily includes a removal of campaign donation limits. Buckley 14==== 4 -~~Buckley, James Contributor, The Amendment Gazette "How Spending Money Became a Form of Speech." The Amendment Gazette. January 2014.~~ 5 -The doctrine that money is a form of speech was not passed in any American 6 -AND 7 -has made these expensive modes of communication indispensable instruments of effective political speech." 8 - 9 - 10 -==== ~~Kennedy 13~~ Unlimited spending kills democracy. Kennedy 13==== 11 -~~Kennedy, Liz Contributor, US News "Campaign Spending Limits Protect Our Democracy from Corruption." US News. October 2013.~~ 12 -Americans are outraged over the power of money on our government. In Citizens United 13 -AND 14 -economic interests. We have the right to protect our democracy from corruption. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,30 +1,0 @@ 1 -~Shah 16~ Brownfacing in Hollywood bastardizes the culture of brown people while simultaneously perpetuating racial tropes and cultural fetishization. Shah 16 2 -~Shah, Ekta. "Remnants of Caste in Casting: Cast Aside Untouchables in India and Hollywood." Selected Works. Northwestern University, 17 June 2016. Web. 9 Jan. 2017. (https://works.bepress.com/ekta-shah/1/)~~ 3 -In a Hollywood phenomenon known as "brownfacing," non-Indian actors are cast 4 -AND 5 -whether it be within caste or casting realms (Anand 128, 137). 6 - 7 -~Bitter and Curt~ Cultural fetishization is a form of systemic oppression that steals and bastardizes entire cultures in order for supposedly exotic appearances. Bitter and Curt 13 8 -~Bitterandcurt. "Cultural Fetishization as a Form of Cultural Appropriation." Bitter and Curt. Tumblr, 01 Oct. 2013. Web. 09 Jan. 2017.~ 9 -A large part of systemic oppression that minorities face boils down to being treated and 10 -AND 11 -phrase from the Bible poorly translated and tattooed in Mandarin across his chest. 12 - 13 -~Kumashiro 10~ AND, The university is a microcosm for society writ large - Asian American adolescents are constantly pressured into assimilating whiteness despite a persistent perception as indelibly foreign. Kumashiro 10 14 -~Kevin K. Kumashiro, 2010, "Supplementing normalcy and otherness: Queer Asian American men reflect on stereotypes, identity, and oppression" from International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, No URL, Dean of the School of Education at the University of San Francisco, 497-498.~ 15 -While growing up, Michael felt Othered because of his race. His unassimilable Asian 16 -AND 17 -model" minority) (Haney Lopez, 1996 ; Lowe, 1996). 18 - 19 -~ROTB~ THUS, the role of the ballot is to endorse the best performative or methodological liberatory strategy for brown (or oppressed) voices. 20 -~McGregory 14~ Therefore, the alt is the enactment of the brown killjoy. McGregory 14 21 -~McGregory, Aileen. "Queer Killjoys: Individuality, Niceness, and the Failure of Current Ally Culture." CiteSeerX. Pennsylvania State University, Apr. 2014. Web. 21 Dec. 2016.~ 22 -Sara Ahmed writes about the "feminist killjoy," who refuses to orient herself towards 23 -AND 24 -tolerance that depoliticizes LGBT ~queer~-ally relationships and rejects critical engagement. 25 - 26 -~Osajima 07~ AND, the performance of the k also serves as a form of conscientization, which is a method for me to name my world and understand the ways I relate to it in educational spaces such as debate: this is a starting point for real world change. Osajima 07 27 -~Keith Osajima, 2007, REPLENISHING THE RANKS: Raising Critical Consciousness Among Asian Americans; JOURNAL OF ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES (JAAS), February, Volume 10, No. 1; p. 64~, sourced from Scribd, https://www.scribd.com/document/254510841/Asian-Conscientization, Professor and Director of the Race and Ethnic Studies Program at the University of Redlands, 67.~ 28 -Conscientization for these respondents meant being able to "name their world." That is 29 -AND 30 -individual lives. Their descriptions of this process were quite consistent and similar. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,68 +1,0 @@ 1 -====~~Coker~~ Limiting qualified immunity seeks to remedy the impacts of crimes and restore the state to its so-called prior utopian society. For womxn, there is no such prior utopia. Transforming the state by moving beyond police officers is key to achieving actual justice for the battered womxn. Coker 02.==== 2 -~~Coker, Donna, Transformative Justice: Anti-Subordination Processes in Cases of ~~IPV~~ domestic violence (2002). in Restorative Justice and Family Violence (Heather Strang and John Braithwaite Eds. 2002) Cambridge University Press. Pg.128–152~~ 3 -As some restorative justice writers have noted, the criminal justice system may not be 4 -AND 5 -have the option to choose processes that operate with a transformative justice ideal. 6 - 7 - 8 -==== ~~Ayylidiz 1~~ Society’s inactivity forces womxn to embrace vigilantism to repair the moral order and bring justice to the abuser. Ayylidiz 95==== 9 -~~Ayylidiz, Elisabeth. "WHEN BATTERED WOMXN'S SYNDROME DOES NOT GO FAR ENOUGH: THE BATTERED WOMXN AS VIGILANTE." Journal of Gender and The Law 4.141 (1995): 141-66. Print.~~ 10 -The phenomenon of vigilantism has been explored from many different angles. Several of these 11 -AND 12 -that ~~IPV~~ domestic violence offenders do not serve any time at all 13 - 14 - 15 -==== ~~Lowry~~ In the squo, we criminalize female vigilantes. Lowry 11==== 16 -~~Hit Her Once, She'll Shoot You Dead: Did Janice Soprano Have It Right? Mary Pauline Lowry Posted: 09/19/11 11:42 AM ET~~ 17 -But while I might cheer on the fictional Janice Soprano as she murders the fictional 18 -AND 19 -Nearly all abused inmates will be released back into their communities without neededsupport. 20 - 21 - 22 -==== ~~Ayylidiz 2~~ The AC perpetuates criminalization of female vigilantism by working through a justice ideal founded on masculine heteronormativity where qualified immunity is granted to police officers who refuse to help the battered womxn, but criminalize the battered womxn who kill their abuser. The battered womxn cannot rely on retribution. Ayylidiz 2==== 23 -Courts have long been threatened by vigilantism.9 The legal system, fearing vigilantism, claims that retribution is the objective of the criminal justice system. 24 -AND 25 -abuser was killed and McBride was sentenced to life in prison without parole. 26 - 27 - 28 -==== ~~Alt~~ Thus, the alt is to replace the criminal justice system and the prison industrial complex with the female vigilante.==== 29 - 30 - 31 -==== ~~Smith 1~~ We need to displace ourselves from the prison industrial complex to be able to reimagine the heteronormativity of the criminal justice system. Smith 11^^ ^^==== 32 -An abolitionist politic does not believe that the prison system is "broken" and in need of reform; 33 -AND 34 -abolition must also include at its center a reworking of gender and sexuality that displaces both heterosexuality and gender normativity as measures of worth. 35 - 36 - 37 -==== ~~Smith 2~~ Prisons are the way that the state criminalizes the other and how it endorses heteronormativity—abolishing current prisons systems is a must in order to change heteronormative society. Smith 2^^ ^^==== 38 -In the recent past, the term prison industrial complex has been offered to begin to name the enormity of the prison system. 39 -AND 40 -What, then, might a world look like in which harm is met with healing and support, rather than the displacement and reviolation produced by the PIC? 41 - 42 - 43 -==== ~~Leavitt~~ AND, our discourse is key—we need to interrupt the policing that continues to permeate our public spaces. Policing manifests in all social spaces. Leavitt 12^^ ^^==== 44 -Policing of deviant sexualities and gender identities lies at the core of queer criminalization 45 -AND 46 -petitioners assert that the Crimes Against Nature statute violates constitutional equal protection guarantees because it creates an irrational distinction between sex that is oral or anal, rather than vaginal. 47 - 48 - 49 -==== ~~Ayylidiz 3~~ Thus, we must embrace the female vigilante. A revolution that rejects the solely male vigilante begins with embracing the female vigilante. This means we replace the criminal justice system with the female vigilante to transform the patriarchal state. Ayylidiz 3==== 50 -A feminist view of battered womxn who kill 51 -AND 52 -should extend the same respect and sympathy to the battered womxn vigilante as it does to the archetypal male vigilante. 53 - 54 - ~~ROTB/J~~ Thus, the role of the ballot and judge is to endorse the best liberatory strategy for womxn. 55 - 56 - 57 -==== ~~Jaggar~~ To have a productive solution with an accurate understanding of reality, we must first start with a female epistemology. Jaggar 83==== 58 -~~Jaggar, Alison M. ~~Professor of Philosophy and Wom~~x~~n’s Studies, University of Colorado-Boulder~~ Feminist Politics and Human Nature. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Allanheld, 1983. Print.~~ 59 -Both liberal and Marxist epistemologists consider that, in order to arrive at an adequate 60 -AND 61 -distorted in ways that promote the interests of men above those of womxn. 62 - 63 - 64 -====~~Beland~~ Injecting gender consciousness into discourse is key to change the frames of political discussions and fostering better knowledge production. Beland 09==== 65 -~~(Daniel Beland. "Gender, Ideational Analysis, and Social Policy" Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State and Society. Vol 16 Num 4. Pp 558-581. Winter 2009) SK~~ 66 -To further illustrate the role of frames in politics and policy change, let me 67 -AND 68 -and social policy make a strong and original contribution to this ideational literature. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,31 @@ 1 +=Classism DA= 2 +==1NC== 3 +====~~Lawyers~~ Qualified immunity applies to civil lawsuits and the aff seeks to gain advantages by regulating civil lawsuits. Civil suits require plaintiffs to pay for lawsuits that they can’t afford. Lawyers.com. 4 +~~Lawyers.com. Legal Website "What are "Costs" in a Civil Lawsuit?" No date.~~ 5 +No matter what kind of case you're involved in 6 +AND 7 +the actual costs incurred, thereby reducing the amount of its net recovery. 8 + 9 + 10 +==== ~~Higdon 1~~ And, this leads to the exploitation of the poor. Higdon 10==== 11 +~~Higdon, Woodrow L. Investigative Photo Journalist, Former Police Officer "Public Corruption Cover Up Through Civil Litigation." GTI News, March 2010.~~ 12 +Less than ten percent (10) of American citizens can afford the high cost 13 +AND 14 +ninety percent of the cover up is complete, and all of the criminal exposure is gone. 15 +~~He continues~~ 16 +Law enforcement has the capability, and the incentive, 17 +AND 18 +The public unions are insulated from criminal investigations, and civil damage. 19 + 20 + 21 +==== ~~Higdon 2~~ This means only the rich can afford the liberation the aff seeks and means the only people who benefit from the aff are the already rich. Turns the case – reject their classist policy. Higdon 2==== 22 +The so-called "Civil and Criminal Justice Systems" in the United States 23 +AND 24 +one of the most effective public corruption cover up tools available to public agencies. 25 + 26 + 27 +==== ~~Marsh~~ Class domination is the dominant form of injustice – it twists all other antagonisms to its own needs. Means we control the internal link to solvency. Marsh 95 ==== 28 +~~James L., Fordham University, "Critique, Action, and Liberation", p.343-344 GAL) 29 +Because capitalism is a system with interrelated social, economic, and political components, 30 +AND 31 +positively by common aspirations, norms, and ideals and a common enemy. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,42 @@ 1 +=Eco-Psychoanalysis K= 2 +==1NC== 3 +====1. The central question of the debate is how we use the environment, in terms of responses to anxiety—-energy production is a dangerous palliative that gives us the allusion of control by affirming our mastery over nature and distracting us from our consumptive practices—-ensures serial policy-failure.==== 4 +**Dodds 12 ** 5 +(Joseph, MPhil, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK, MA, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK BSc, Psychology and Neuroscience, Manchester University, UK, Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) of the British Psychological Society (BPS), and a member of several other professional organizations such as the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Psychoanalysis and Ecology at the Edge of Chaos p 27 *gender mod) 6 +Why psychoanalysis? On the face of it, it seems frankly irrelevant. Surely 7 +AND 8 +environments', the ultimate 'environment mother' (Winnicott 1999,1987). 9 + 10 +====2. Technological management is an expression of the death drive—-causes projection of our fears onto the human AND non-human world to justify their annihilation—-turns and outweighs the case ==== 11 +**Dodds 12** 12 +(Joseph, MPhil, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK, MA, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK BSc, Psychology and Neuroscience, Manchester University, UK, Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) of the British Psychological Society (BPS), and a member of several other professional organizations such as the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Psychoanalysis and Ecology at the Edge of Chaos p 70 *gender mod) 13 +Here there are echoes of Freud's (1916) idea of 'anticipatory mourning' and the 14 +AND 15 +of bringing about our extinction. (Searles 1972: 371-372) 16 + 17 +====3. The doctrine of continued re-engineering of nature results in more insidious destructive practices that make their impacts inevitable—-unforeseen non-linearities ensure serial policy failure and extinction. Prohibiting nuclear energy in favor of renewables and/or other alternatives still doesn’t solve the core of the issue. **Backhaus 9 ====** 18 +(Gary, Phil @ Loyola Maryland, "Automobility: Global Warming as Symptomatology" April 2009, www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/1/2/187) 19 +Many environmental thinkers have questioned the presupposed tenets, e.g., the doctrine 20 +AND 21 +are destroying the life of, and on, the planet. 22 + 23 +====4. These pathologies distort not only how we respond to crisis but also why and to which crises —- what value nature/the environment has—-as such, your primary role is to investigate the aff’s psychological investment in energy production as an exercise in reprogramming our position in a non-linear and inevitably chaotic world.==== 24 +**Dodds 12 ** 25 +(Joseph, MPhil, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK, MA, Psychoanalytic Studies, Sheffield University, UK BSc, Psychology and Neuroscience, Manchester University, UK, Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol) of the British Psychological Society (BPS), and a member of several other professional organizations such as the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Psychoanalysis and Ecology at the Edge of Chaos p 198 ( ) – gender modified) 26 +The metaphor of an acrobat on a high wire referred to by Bateson (2000 27 +AND 28 +as a species among the interconnected life systems of the Earth. 29 + 30 +====5. Don’t be blackmailed by their threat of immediate consequences—-actomania in the face of environmental apocalypse not only requires a fantasy of natural manipulation but it actively blinds us to a reconfiguration of our consumptive practices ==== 31 +**Swyngedouw 6** 32 +(Erik, Dept of Geography, School of Environment and Development, Manchester University "Impossible "Sustainability" and the Post-Political Condition," Forthcoming in: David Gibbs and Rob Krueger (Eds.) Sustainable Development, http://www.liv.ac.uk/geography/seminars/Sustainabilitypaper.doc) 33 +This chapter seeks to destabilise some of the most persistent myths about nature, sustainability 34 +AND 35 +practicing expanding energy use and widening and deepening its ecological footprint. 36 + 37 +====6. We don’t need an alternative besides our framework of analysis—-the fantasy will reveal itself as long as we continue asking questions to expose their concealment of the lack—-in other words, it’s your job to confuse and frustrate them via a refusal to partake in their politics—-this crushes the permutation ==== 38 +**Dean 6 ** 39 +(Jodi, Prof of Political Science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, 2006, Zizek’s Politics. Xviii-xx) 40 +Žižek emphasizes that Lacan conceptualized this excessive place, this place without guarantees, in 41 +AND 42 +we can organize, consider, and formalize our experiences as ideological subjects. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,31 @@ 1 +=Borders K= 2 +==1NC== 3 +The aff’s use of "countries" as independent hegemonic agents to carry out the ban re-entrenches the harms that brought us to this point in the first place – international politics provided the threat of nuclear power. A blanket ban by individual nations will never solve – if it isn’t nukes it’ll be something even worse – the AC misjudges the origins of its harms. 4 +Taylor 14 summarizes Arendt: ~~~~Double brackets for gendered language, single brackets already in text~~~~ 5 +Taylor, Nicholas A.J. 2014. ‘Rethinking Cosmopolitan Solidarity: Nuclear Harm from a Cosmic Point of View’. Paper presented at the annual meeting for the International Society for Environmental Ethics and the International Association of Environmental Philosophy, Allenspark, CO, 17–20 June 2014. (KW) 6 +More important still is the passage where Arendt (2007b) asserts that 7 +AND 8 +a world that is thoroughly nonnatural’. 9 +Focus on making countries distinct from one another originates from colonial power structures – the map is the military blueprint. State sovereignty is the root of imperialism and domination – historical analysis proves. 10 +Craib 09 11 +Raymond B. Craib – Associate Professor in the Department of History, Cornell University, “Relocating cartography”, Postcolonial Studies (2009), vol. 12 no. 4, pp. 481-490, http://history.arts.cornell.edu/relocating20cartograhy.pdf (KW) 12 +The summation is a powerful and important one 13 +AND 14 +new forms of enclosure and classification, and the expansion of state power. 15 +And, the aff’s focus on territory and international politics exclusively creates in and out-groups – means that the NC is a prerequisite to solving all harms – otherwise villainizes other bodies and enables the inevitability of AC impacts. 16 +Shapiro 97 17 +Michael J., Department of Political Science, University of Hawai’I, Violent Cartographies: Mapping Cultures of War, pp. 149-51 (KW) 18 +The complicity of the social sciences, psychology, and psychiatry 19 +AND 20 +This is especially evident in the orchestration of Norman Schwarzkopf's career as a media personality. 21 +The alt is to radically reject notions of statehood and impose a nuclear ban from a globally human perspective. No perm – a) Aff already specified countries, b) competes through net benefits, c) doesn’t affirm – countries will NOT ban nuclear energy. Text of the res first – 1) spirit is vague and subject to interpretation, only text provides a solid determination of what’s topical, 2) key to real world, actions need to be phrased intentionally, rigid interpretation is the best way to communicate specific actions and not general concepts. 22 +Nuclear power affects all of humanity – even one slip-up could potentially end the human race. Self-preservation means the issue must be globally challenged – the political nature of the AC inevitably distances us from the true threat and prioritizes superficial political argumentation over mutual survival. Embracing the alt takes us away from the separatist national mindset, key to ending colonialism and approaching real peace. 23 +Taylor 2 24 +Several decades before planet Earth was scientifically accepted as operating as a single, self-regulating system (with interlinked processes and subsystems), 25 +AND 26 +whether by design or as an ancillary benefit.12 27 +The role of the ballot and judge as an educator is to reject arguments based on asymmetrical power relations—because pedagogical contexts are inherently political, we have a unique opportunity to promote real change. Tejeda and Espinoza 03 28 +Carlos Tejeda and Manuel Espinoza, "Toward a Decolonizing Pedagogy: Social Justice Reconsidered," in Peter Trifonas’s PEDAGOGIES OF DIFFERENCE: RETHINKING EDUCATION FOR SOCIAL CHANGE/ RoutledgeFalmer. New York, London. 2003. Questia (KW) 29 +Just as objective social reality exists not by chance, 30 +AND 31 +both the means and the ends of schooling. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +SeptOct ~-~- Borders K - Tournament
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,17 @@ 1 +=Revenge Porn DA= 2 +==1NC== 3 +====~~Franks 16~~ BIPARTISAN revenge porn legislation on college campuses is coming now. Franks 16==== 4 +~~Franks, Mary Anne. "It's Time For Congress To Protect Intimate Privacy." The Huffington Post. The Huffington Post, 18 July 2016. Web. 27 Jan. 2017.~~ 5 +The recognition that the right to privacy extends to intimate photographs and videos is one 6 +AND 7 +and videos of nudity or sexual activity. IPPA seeks to change that. 8 + 9 + 10 +==== ~~Goldberg 16~~ Aff means public colleges and universities shouldn’t restrict revenge porn. Goldberg 16 ==== 11 +~~Erica Goldberg JD, Cardozo, Columbia Law Review Volume 116, No. 3 April 2016 "FREE SPEECH CONSEQUENTIALISM"~~ 12 +The regulation of revenge porn presents thorny First Amendment issues, even though the speech is considered both highly injurious and of low value. Some argue that revenge porn can be regulated as obscenity, but, like much pornography, sexually explicit speech that does not rise to the level of obscenity is still protected speech. Criminal statutes and torts based on the invasion of privacy and emotional distress caused by revenge porn compromise the freedom to distribute protected speech lawfully obtained. Indeed, the Supreme Court has recognized a right for the media to publish even unlawfully obtained content, so long as the publisher was not involved in the illegal conduct that produced the content. And in United States v. Stevens, the Supreme Court held that individuals cannot be held criminally liable for distributing speech depicting illegal acts, so long as the individuals did not perpetrate the underlying act. Revenge porn, as defined here, is both legally obtained and depicts a legal act. In the ultimate articulation of free speech consequentialism, Mary Anne Franks argues for criminalization of revenge porn because "some expressions ~~of free speech~~ are just considered so socially harmful and don’t contribute any benefits to society." Yet this does not separate revenge porn from any number of categories of protected speech that may cause others emotional distress and are considered by some to possess little value; this is nothing more than a call for judges to make wholesale and retail judgments about the value and harms that flow from particular forms of speech. If revenge porn can be regulated, legislators should not target the victim’s emotional distress or the invasion of privacy, as these focal points threaten to undermine strong free speech protections exceptional to America’s free speech regime. 13 + 14 + 15 +==== ~~Citron 14~~ And–the impacts of revenge porn are horrific. Citron 14 16 +~~Morton and Sophia Macht Professor of Law at the University of Maryland Francis School of Law, Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review~~==== 17 +Victims’ fear can be profound. They do not feel safe leaving their homes Jane, for example, did not go to work for days after she discovered the postings. Hollie Toups, a thirty-three-year-old teacher’s aide, explained that she was afraid to leave her home after someone posted her nude photograph, home address, and Facebook profile on a porn site. "I don’t want to go out alone," she explained, "because I don’t know what might happen." Victims struggle especially with anxiety, and some suffer panic attacks. Anorexia nervosa and depression are common ailments for individuals who are harassed online. Researchers have found that cyber harassment victims’ anxiety grows more severe over time. Victims have difficulty thinking positive thoughts and doing their work. According to a study conducted by the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, over 80 of revenge porn victims experience severe emotional distress and anxiety. Revenge porn is often a form of domestic violence. Frequently, the intimate images are themselves the result of an abuser’s coercion of a reluctant partner. In numerous cases, abusers have threatened to disclose intimate images of their partners when victims attempt to leave the relationship. Abusers use the threat of disclosure to keep their partners under their control, making good on the threat once their partners find the courage to leave. The professional costs of revenge porn are steep. Because Internet searches of victims’ names prominently display their naked images or videos, many lose their jobs. Schools have terminated teachers whose naked pictures appeared online. A government agency ended a woman’s employment after a coworker circulated her nude photograph to colleagues. Victims may be unable to find work at all. Most employers rely on candidates’ online reputations as an employment screen. According to a 2009 study commissioned by Microsoft, nearly 80 of employers consult search engines to collect intelligence on job applicants, and, about 70 of the time, they reject applicants due to their findings. Common reasons for not interviewing and hiring applicants include concerns about their "lifestyle," "inappropriate" online comments, and "unsuitable" photographs, videos, and information about them. Recruiters do not contact victims to see if they posted the nude photos of themselves or if someone else did in violation of their trust. The "simple but regrettable truth is that after consulting search results, employers don’t call revenge porn victims to schedule" interviews or to extend offers. Employers do not want to hire individuals whose search results might reflect poorly on the employer. To avoid further abuse, targeted individuals withdraw from online activities, which can be costly in many respects. Closing down one’s blog can mean a loss of income and other career opportunities. In some fields, blogging is key to getting a job. According to technology blogger Robert Scoble, people who do not blog are "never going to be included in the ~~technology~~ industry." When victims shut down their profiles on social media platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter, they are saddled with low social media influence scores that can impair their ability to obtain employment. Companies like Klout measure people’s online influence by looking at their number of social media followers, updates, likes, retweets, and shares. Not uncommonly, employers refuse to hire individuals with low social media influence scores. Aside from these traditional harms, revenge porn can also amount to a degrading form of sexual harassment. It exposes victims’ sexuality in humiliating ways. Victims’ naked photos appear on slut-shaming sites, such as Cheaterville.com and MyEx.com. Once their naked images are exposed, anonymous strangers can send e-mail messages that threaten rape. Some have said: "First I will rape you, then I’ll kill you." Victims internalize these frightening and demeaning messages. Women would more likely suffer harm as a result of the posting of their naked images than their male counterparts. Gender stereotypes help explain why—women would be seen as immoral sluts for engaging in sexual activity, whereas men’s sexual activity is generally a point of pride. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,48 @@ 1 +=Queer Rage K= 2 + 3 + 4 +==1NC== 5 + 6 + 7 +==== ~~Schamel 15~~ The promulgation of free speech as a right and an avenue for justice is inaccessible to queer people. Free speech is a façade of equality, co-opted by heteronormativity to foster debate not for us but about us. Schamel 15==== 8 +~~Craig. "The Liberal As An Enemy Of Queer Justice." Catalyst: A Social Justice Forum. Vol. 6. No. 1. 2015.~~ 9 +The liberal discourse of hate and hate speech is really a misbegotten and weak apologetics 10 +AND 11 +this right to abuse, the most protected right of the liberal state. 12 + 13 +==== ~~Analytic~~ ==== 14 + 15 +==== ~~Schamel 2~~ AND, The idea of liberatory speech is a distractionary tactic that forces queer people to buy back into the system, because if we try hard enough, and fight for long enough, we can totally win back their hearts and minds! Schamel 2==== 16 +A fourth enemy position which corrupts any progress toward queer justice is the liberal discourse 17 +AND 18 +heterosexuals hate is beside the point. Whom they abuse is the point. 19 + 20 +==== ~~Analytic~~ ==== 21 + 22 +==== ~~Elia 1~~ Violence against queerness results in the annihilation of identity—this is a form of soul murder. Elia 03 ==== 23 +(John Elia, Professor at San Francisco University, Journal of Homosexuality, Vol. 45, no. 2/3/4, p. 64, 2003) 24 +These are the internal injuries that individuals inflict upon themselves. Very early in life 25 +AND 26 +and others, of the heteronormative mandate a widespread form of soul murder? 27 + 28 + 29 +==== ~~Elia 2~~ Thus, the primary role of the ballot and the role of the judge as an educator is to endorse the best performative OR methodological liberatory strategy for queer bodies. Elia 2==== 30 +Wedded to disseminating the idea that heterosexuality is the ultimate and best form of sexuality, 31 +AND 32 +a more in-depth description and analysis of this form of sexuality education will follow later in this essay. 33 + 34 + 35 +==== ~~Alt – Copenhaver 14~~ My alternative is Queer Rage – The K is an embodiment and exemplification of queer rage, my rage that is critical to challenge all forms of oppression. My experiences as a cis, able bodied Indian queer person of color differs from other bodies, but rage translates into accessibility - we engage in a new world where everyone can use anger that tears at the walls of normalcy. Queer rage creates organic restrictions on speech by raging against the Aff’s ontological investment in it. Queer rage is beautiful and energizing. It demands change. Copenhaver 14==== 36 +~~Robert Copenhaver identified as a Queer person of faith, graduate of Idaho State University, whose interests include queer theory, politics, and theology. He will be starting a masters in theological studies at The Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago next fall; "Queer Rage"; published 2/19/14; http://coperoge.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/queer-rage/~~ 37 +I hate straight people who can’t listen to queer anger without saying "hey, 38 +AND 39 +in which anti-queerness continue to perpetuate violence against queer bodies everywhere. 40 + 41 +==== ~~Analytic~~ ==== 42 +==== ~~Analytic~~ ==== 43 + 44 +==== ~~Vaccaro 12~~ Classrooms, such as the debate space, create a unique pedagogical experience where ideologies of queer identities can change. Vaccaro et. al. 12 ==== 45 +~~(Annemarie (Department of Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Rhode Island), Gerri August (Department of Educational Studies at Rhode Island College), and Megan S. Kennedy (faculty member in the Department of Education at Westfield State University,). Inside the Classroom Walls, Chapter 5, pg 83-84) SK~~ 46 +Classroom walls create an impression of dichotomy—the academic arena within, the personal 47 +AND 48 +progresses as young people move through our educational system—kindergarten through college. - EntryDate
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +Stanford