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1 +NLM 1AC
2 +
3 +I affirm Resolved: The United States ought to limit qualified immunity for police officers
4 +
5 +Resolutional Framing
6 +
7 +The value is justice because ought is “used to express justice.” That’s Random House 2k16.
8 +"ought". Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House, Inc. 22 Jul. 2016. Dictionary.comhttp://www.dictionary.com/browse/ought.
9 +
10 +The criterion is minimizing human suffering and subsequently death through youngs politics of differnce
11 +
12 +Every person and institution has an obligation to minimize suffering. Util fails as it has no priorities rather we should have a universal effort to minimize suffering with an emphasis on structural impacts; power relations form many harms thus we should minimize those that are endemic to society first.
13 +Young 2010 Iris Marion. Professor of Political Science at the University ofx Chicago, affiliated with the Center for Gender Studies and the Human Rights program @ UChicago. Responsibility for Justice, published by Oxford University Press in 2010. pp.137-9
14 +Some philosophers reject the claim that the scope of obligations of justice extends only to
15 +AND
16 +can maximize their ability to act jointly and minimize violent conflict among them.
17 +
18 +The resolution is a question of limiting qualified immunity’s justice, so you vote aff as long as limiting qualified immunity is net just regardless of whether there are other more just options.
19 +
20 +Part 1 is Police Brutality
21 +
22 +Qualified Immunity, aka QI, is what fuels and allows for police brutality. We check our police with suits, and QI doesn’t even allow for that. It allows officers to feel safe acting in deadly ways by not allowing prosecution without a court precedent. This means victims of police brutality can rarely bring justice to their attackers. Then since officers are never held accountable, they can hurt as they please often with biases which reinforces social issues like racism. Thus, since limiting QI holds officers accountable, it reduces police brutality by destroying what it roots from- a lack of accountability.
23 +Wright 15 Sam Wright, 11-25-2015, "Want to Fight Police Misconduct? Reform Qualified Immunity," Above the Law, http://abovethelaw.com/2015/11/want-to-fight-police-misconduct-reform-qualified-immunity/?rf=1 Sam Wright is a dyed-in-the-wool, bleeding-heart public interest lawyer who has spent his career exclusively in nonprofits and government.
24 +Recently, police have been killing and otherwise abusing people of color with what seems
25 +AND
26 +show that that conduct’s illegality has already been clearly established in the courts?
27 +
28 +QI’s loophole that allows for police brutality, hurts Natives the most and although anti-Black violence is decreasing, Natives haven’t seen such a decrease- Native fatalities by police are expected to double this year
29 +Indian Country Today 16 Indian Country Today Media Network, 8-4-2016, "Number of Native Americans Killed By Police Could Double By End of 2016," http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2016/08/04/native-americans-killed-police-could-double-end-2016-165372 Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2016/08/04/native-americans-killed-police-could-double-end-2016-165372
30 +The number of Native Americans killed by police is on track to double this year
31 +AND
32 +that it will investigate on grounds of racial bias, The Guardian reported.
33 +
34 +This is what the world hides: Part 2 is Settlerism
35 +
36 +The power that maintains the disappearance of indigenous peoples. Settlers don't just erase indigenous people—but the settler as well—they forget the violent erasure of native people that founds and sustains us—Settlerism forgets the US’ ongoing role as a colonizer and allows it to completely erase its sins and Natives themselves.
37 +Henderson 15 Phil. Department of Political Philosophy at the University of Victoria. “Imagoed communities: the psychosocial space of settler colonialism,” published in SETTLER COLONIAL STUDIES. Pg 2-3. Accessible here at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2201473X.2015.1092194, Reichle
38 +While colonialism is present as an historic fact within public consciousness, settler colonialism remains
39 +AND
40 +‘everywhere that there are settler collectives, and it occurs constantly’. 13
41 +
42 +The discussion of the resolution and police accountability CANNOT continue to ignore Native Americans. The problem for Native Americans is indeed one of accountability- the very thing that qualified immunity prevents. QI helps erase the indigenous by allowing officers to kill them with no repurcusions even being rewarded with the esteemed Medal of Honor. This is a continuation of a centuries old genocide.
43 +Moya-Smith 14 Simon Moya-Smith, 12-24-2014, "Who's most likely to be killed by police?," CNN, http://www.cnn.com/2014/12/24/opinion/moya-smith-native-americans/
44 +As the country continues to debate police accountability and the all-too-routine
45 +AND
46 +only a little. We will still have a long way to go.
47 +
48 +Addressing actual violence comes before abstract revolution since survival is a prerequisite to change. Stopping state violence at its root is just as critical as more abstract radical solutions to fixing settlerism.
49 +Jace WEAVER Director of the Inst. of Native American Studies Franklin Professor of Native American Studies and Religion @ Georgia ‘7 “More Light Than Heat The Current State of Native American Studies” American Indian Quarterly 31 (2) p.248-251
50 +***NAS = Native American Studies
51 +In our histories, we know numerous warriors
52 +AND
53 +then will we stand a chance of consistently generating more light than heat.
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1 +Anti-Ethics 1AC
2 +
3 +I affirm Resolved: Public colleges and universities in the United States ought not restrict any constitutionally protected speech.
4 +
5 +First is Resolution Framing
6 +
7 +The standard is minimizing racism because challenging institutional racism is the prior ethical question— racism violates all conceptions of morality, justice, and what it means to be human.
8 +Albert Memmi 2k, Professor Emeritus of Sociology @ U of Paris, Naiteire, Racism, Translated by Steve Martinot, p. 163-165
9 +The struggle against racism will be long, difficult, without intermission, without remission
10 +AND
11 +. True, it is a wager, but the stakes are irresistible.
12 +
13 +analytic
14 +
15 +Links
16 +
17 +1. Restrictions on speech are inherently oppressive. The status quo’s movement towards silencing protest with things like free speech zones has proven to reaffirm whiteness. Any restriction can be bent to silence dissent.
18 +Elmer and Opel 8 (Greg Elmer, associate professor of communication and culture at Ryerson University, PhD in communication from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, director of the Infoscape Research Lab at Ryerson University, Andy Opel, associate professor of communication at Florida State University, PhD in mass communication from the University of North Carolina, member of the International Communication Association, November 2008, “Preempting Dissent: The Politics of an Inevitable Future,” pages 29-41, GENDER MODIFIED)
19 +SHORTLY AFTER THE LARGE-SCALE PROTESTS against the World Trade Organization in Seattle in
20 +AND
21 +political compliance as it is a technique for reducing actual risks and dangers.
22 +
23 +2. Restrictions’ politics of safety kills radical demands-they are manipulated to uphold the safety of people in power and causes an identification with victimization that papers over power struggles-this form of anti-risk politics inevitably results in reformism as the safest political strategy-safety is constructed against the endemic violence of white civil society.
24 +Wang 2012 Jackie. JackieWang is a Ph.D student in African and African American Studies at Harvard University, a writer, poet, musician, and academic whose writing has been published by Lies Journal, Semiotext(e), and numerous zines. “Against Innocence: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Safety.” Lies: A Journal of Materialist Feminism. Volume 1. 2012. Pg. 145-173.
25 +The discursive strategy of appealing to safety and innocence is also enacted on a micro
26 +AND
27 +, and — above all — are constituted by this repetition of violence.
28 +
29 +3. Reformism reaffirms racism: Restrictions on speech represent a false hope for reform in civil society, Optimism regarding society reifies the rationale of institutions which can never be ethically redeemable for blackness- -time does not progress but accumulates and repeats -from the slave system to the prison system-black death and enslavement are endemic features of civil society which are covered up and only mutated by reforms -means it’s try or die for pessimism- Black agency is found within a refusal of civil society
30 +Dillon 2013 Stephen. Stephen Dillon, assistant professor of Queer Studies at Hampshire College, holds a B.A. from the University of Iowa and a Ph.D. in American Studies with a minor in Critical Feminist and Sexuality Studies from the University of Minnesota. “Fugitive Life: Race, Gender, and the Rise of the Neoliberal-Carceral State.” Ph.D Dissertation. https://conservancy.umn.edu/bitstream/handle/11299/153053/Dillon_umn_0130E_13833.pdf?sequence=1. SH
31 +In one of the first lines of the film, a state newscaster covering the
32 +AND
33 +what the future will be. The future will be what was before.
34 +
35 +4. Abstract Ethics Fail. Saying “we ought to engage in something” implies a moral obligation that the black thinker does not have access to because the world is framed by white supremacy.
36 +Curry 13 Curry, Tommy J. doctor in Associate Professor of Philosophy, Affiliated Professor of Africana Studies, Texas A and M University In the Fiat of Dreams: The Delusional Allure of Hope, the Reality of Anti-Black Violence and the Demands of the Anti-Ethical. 2013.
37 +Ought implies a projected (futural) act. The word commands a deliberate action
38 +AND
39 +what possibility the world allows Blacks to contemplate under the idea of ethics.
40 +
41 +The impact
42 +
43 +is white supremacy, a global modality of genocidal violence – Slavery may have ended in name, but its operational logic continues to fester. Reformist measures simply provide fuel for Whiteness eradicating everything else
44 +Rodriguez ’11 (Dylan, PhD in Ethnic Studies Program of the University of California Berkeley and Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies at University of California Riverside, “The Black Presidential Non-Slave: Genocide and the Present Tense of Racial Slavery”, Political Power and Social Theory Vol. 22, pp. 38-43)
45 +To crystallize what I hope to be the potentially useful implications of this provocation toward
46 +AND
47 +while well over a million Black people are incarcerated with the overwhelming consent of
48 +
49 +Thus the advocacy
50 +
51 +I affirm that public colleges and universities in the United States ought not restrict constitutionally protected speech as a general principle, I reserve the right to clarify in CX
52 +
53 +The demand for ethical action in our debates plays within anti-black structures and can never overcome its unethical violence-a truly liberatory movement requires an anti-ethics which recognizes the impossibility of redeeming whiteness through ethical action.
54 +Curry 2 Curry, Tommy J. doctor in Associate Professor of Philosophy, Affiliated Professor of Africana Studies, Texas A and M University In the Fiat of Dreams: The Delusional Allure of Hope, the Reality of Anti-Black Violence and the Demands of the Anti-Ethical. 2013.
55 +Anti-ethics; the call to demystify the present concept of man as illusion
56 +AND
57 +, the debasement of melaninated bodies and nigger-souls, is totalizing.
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1 +I affirm Resolved: Public colleges and universities in the United States ought not restrict any constitutionally protected speech.
2 +
3 +The value is morality because ought means a moral obligation.
4 +
5 +The resolution is a question of academic freedom. The present convolution around liberty has always been ambiguous and constantly challenged. In order to solve the moral problems in universities, we need to maximize academic freedom, thus the criterion is maximizing academic freedom.
6 +Demaske 2k16 Demaske, Chris (2016). “Not Just A Nice Job Perk”: Academic Freedom As A First Amendment Right, Democratic Communiqué, vol. 27. 2015/2016 pp. 31–53.
7 +Much as journalists frequently assert that they have a “right to know,” scholars
8 +AND
9 +to argue for a more complex and constitutionally grounded conception of academic freedom.
10 +
11 +Free speech is a pre-requisite to any morality- without it self-realization is impossible.
12 +Eberle 94 Eberle, Law @ Roger Williams, 94 (Wake Forest LR, Winter)
13 +The Court's decision in R.A.V. reaffirms the preeminence of free
14 +AND
15 +Accordingly, any suspicion or evidence of governmental censorship must be vigilantly investigated.
16 +
17 +Observation 1
18 +
19 +Hate speech is not constitutionally protected: there are exceptions to the first amendment for harmful types of speech, I don’t defend the non-restriction or protection of harmful speech
20 +Usccourts.gov United States Courts, xx-xx-xxxx, "What Does Free Speech Mean?," http://www.uscourts.gov/about-federal-courts/educational-resources/about-educational-outreach/activity-resources/what-does
21 +Freedom of speech does not include the right: To incite actions that would harm
22 +AND
23 +Morse v. Frederick, __ U.S. __ (2007)
24 +
25 +Thus if the negative says restrictions of hate speech are good, that doesn’t mean anything since it is not protected speech and thus out of the purview of speech that the resolution makes me defend. They have to win that restrictions on constitutionally protected speech are good to win.
26 +
27 +Contention 1 is Academic Freedom
28 +
29 +Universities can crack down even on students and professors with no explanation – this destroys critical thought and expression.
30 +Fiorillo 15 (CCP Adjunct Professor, Black Lives Matter Activist Suspended After Speaking at Rally Divya Nair to face a disciplinary hearing this week. A Change.org petition to reinstate her has over 270 signatures. BY VICTOR FIORILLO , OCTOBER 14, 2015, http://www.phillymag.com/news/2015/10/14/professor-suspended-black-lives-matter-divya-nair/)
31 +Last Thursday, at a rally initiated by the Revolutionary Student Coordinating Committee, PHL
32 +AND
33 +adjunct faculty member, and they think they can get rid of her.”
34 +
35 +Public colleges and universities almost always win their cases and thus can get whoever they want punished. Even though by definition of the first amendment, scholars are protected, the court always interprets cases to favor institutions.
36 +UIUC Journal of Law 2k16 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "First Amendment offers scant protection for professors." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 9 May 2016. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/05/160509191016.htm
37 +A new study by a University of Illinois employment law expert determined that the First
38 +AND
39 +than what it is ~-~- a laboratory of thought, experimentation and speech.".
40 +
41 +Speech restrictions are an oppressive means to control thought production, and although they start with justified limits, admins can bend the rules to use those limits to silence any speech. Allowing for any restrictions leaves this opportunity open and we already know that the admins always win. This destroys student’s potential to truly learn or create change. America has no future when colleges suppress thought.
42 +Wogulis 9 Daniel Wogulis December 15, 2009, 12-15-2009, "On the Consequences of Oppressing Free Speech," FIRE, https://www.thefire.org/on-the-consequences-of-oppressing-free-speech/
43 +Since its inception, the United States of America has been the site of vicious
44 +AND
45 +to freely express themselves-in all places, and at all times.
46 +
47 +The solution is non-restriction and thus preservation of academic freedom, this is the gateway to philosophical thought and moral education itself. Only a blanket protection solves, individual instances don’t get rid of the overarching idea that admins can do what they want.
48 +Demaske 2 Demaske, Chris (2016). “Not Just A Nice Job Perk”: Academic Freedom As A First Amendment Right, Democratic Communiqué, vol. 27. 2015/2016 pp. 31–53.
49 +Given the financial pressures on higher education, and the most recent U.S
50 +AND
51 +new category of speech should receive the utmost protection under the First Amendment.
52 +
53 +Contention 2 is Moral Necessity
54 +
55 +Free speech facilitates the development of moral reasoning- restrictions should be rejected on face
56 +Dwyer 01 (Susan, Phil@Maryland, Nordic Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 2, No. 2 ® Philosophia Press 2001)
57 +Direct Nonconsequentialism Let us return to the central topic: free speech. From the
58 +AND
59 +free speech in one place, we strengthen (protect) it everywhere.
60 +
61 +Even consequentially, Free speech is a gateway to every other impact.
62 +D’Souza 96 (Frances, Prof. Anthropology Oxford, http://www.europarl.europa.eu/hearings/19960425/droi/freedom_en.htm?textMode=on)
63 +In the absence of freedom of expression which includes a free and independent media,
64 +AND
65 +is needed to re-inforce government policies and intentions at every turn.
66 +
67 +Contention 3 is Failure of Restriction
68 +
69 +Restrictions of hate speech are part of a demand for progress that does nothing productive and only anger the masses. Universities become echo chambers where only some voices are sheltered. This creates no change and only hides the reality of America while simultaneously only creating backlash from other voices. Trump’s election and its aftermath prove how we use restrictions to hide ourselves from the reality of other viewpoints.
70 +Kristof 16 Nicholas Kristof, 12-10-2016, "The Dangers of Echo Chambers on Campus," New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/10/opinion/sunday/the-dangers-of-echo-chambers-on-campus.html?_r=0
71 +After Donald Trump’s election, some universities echoed with primal howls. Faculty members canceled
72 +AND
73 +correcting that is for us liberals to embrace the diversity we supposedly champion.
74 +
75 +Allowing for freedom of discussion solves better for issues of hate speech.
76 +ACLU 16 American Civil Liberties Union, Hate Speech On Campus, https://www.aclu.org/other/hate-speech-campus
77 +Where racist, sexist and homophobic speech is concerned, the ACLU believes that more
78 +AND
79 +, possibly change them, and forge solidarity against the forces of intolerance.
80 +
81 +Hate speech does not correlate to violence and hate speech restrictions actually increase hate. Telling racists to stop talking only pushes the problem out of our sight while making racists more angry.
82 +Heinze 14 Eric Heinze, Nineteen arguments for hate speech bans – and against them, Free Speech Debate, 3/31/14, http://freespeechdebate.com/en/discuss/nineteen-arguments-for-hate-speech-bans-and-against-them
83 +Here too, within the LSPD model, no statistically reliable causation from patterns of
84 +AND
85 +as hate groups routinely tailor their responses to the existing bans and penalties.
86 +
87 +Even if they win that restrictions are good, again that’s not a reason to negate. Hate speech is not constitutionally protected since it threatens freedom and safety. Furthermore, the state shouldn’t restrict speech, but rather fight back with arguments. This can actually create change whereas restricting free speech can undercut freedom itself and lead to backlash.
88 +West 2k13 Robin, 4-8-2013, "Coercion and Persuasion and Speech: A Comment on Corey Brettschneider’s book, When the State Speaks, What Should it Say?," https://concurringopinions.com/archives/2013/04/coercion-and-persuasion-and-speech-a-comment-on-corey-brettschneidere28099s-book-when-the-state-speaks-what-should-it-say.html#more-73298 prof. Georgetown Law
89 +The state should in effect counter hateful speech with argument – argument that those beliefs
90 +AND
91 +just a few questions regarding the overall project which might suggest friendly amendments.
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1 +Framework
2 +
3 +Answering the question of how political institutions or policies should be formed is fundamentally a question of justification – government must be responsive to the interests of citizens and must be justifiable to them.
4 +MARTIN RHONHEIMER Prof Of Philosophy at The Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome. “THE POLITICAL ETHOS OF CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRACY AND THE PLACE OF NATURAL LAW IN PUBLIC REASON: RAWLS’S “POLITICAL LIBERALISM” REVISITED” The American Journal of Jurisprudence vol. 50 (2005), pp.1-70
5 +It is a fundamental feature of political philosophy to be part of practical philosophy.
6 +AND
7 +ruled, but who potentially at the same time are also the rulers.
8 +
9 +Equality is an axiom of political theory. Any political arrangement that makes some worse-off would not be acceptable to them, and would be rejected. In order to justify a political arrangement, it is necessary to combat hegemonic power relations because they make any political order unacceptable to those the power relation harms. This creates a dilemma since people have different views, meaning that the government cannot rely on moral truths to rule.
10 +Rawls 97 Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, Harvard University “The Idea of Public Reason Revisited” The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 3 (Summer, 1997), pp. 765-807.
11 +The idea of public reason, as I understand it,' belongs to a
12 +AND
13 +a suitable idea of public reason is a concern that faces them all.
14 +
15 +However, agonistic democracy can form the basis of a mutually acceptable political arrangement. Allowing equal, vibrant participation in democracy makes exclusions visible and contestable – even if exclusions are inevitable, this model is the best way to make them as just as possible
16 +Wingenbach 11 – Ed, Notre Dame Government and international studies, PhD (“Institutionalizing Agonistic Democracy,” pg 190-198)
17 +Third, because Knops ignores the situated source of antagonism and the persistence of hegemony
18 +AND
19 +opened up to greater contestation, generosity, and active re-constitution.
20 +
21 +The standard is preserving avenues for agonistic democratic participation.
22 +
23 +1. Democratic participation is instrumentally necessary to ensure citizens’ interests are met – the forum itself is the source of public value because the public ought to decide what counts as valuable
24 +Festenstein 05 , Matthew. “Dewey’s Political Philosophy.” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Feb 9, 2005.
25 +At the minimum, for Dewey, democracy involves the expression of interests on the
26 +AND
27 +, much democratic politics will not take the form of such questioning.
28 +
29 +2. Democratic participation is key to create policies that benefit people – it’s key to achieve any other social good
30 +Anderson 06 Anderson, Elizabeth. “The Epistemology of Democracy” Episteme: A Journal of Social Epistemology, Volume 3, Issue 1-2, 2006, pp. 8-22 (Article) Published by Edinburgh University Press.
31 +Dewey’s experimentalist model enables a fairly fine-grained assessment of the epistemic powers of
32 +AND
33 +independent associations of citizens by forbidding independent political parties and assemblies of citizens.
34 +
35 +Contention
36 +
37 +Contention 1 is Civic Engagement
38 +
39 +A lack of democratic participation has resulted in elite governments disconnected from their constituents’ experiences - an ethos of democratic participation is key to fair representation and social justice and is best inculcated by colleges and universities
40 +Thomas and Benenson 16 “The Evolving Role of Higher Education in U.S. Democracy” Opening Essay: Volume 5, Issue 2, eJournal of Public Affairs aT
41 +The higher education community has long accepted that colleges and universities serve two distinct but
42 +AND
43 +to the solution of social problems and to the administration of public affairs.”
44 +
45 +Political participation is key to deliberation to reformulate government policy and social movements against injustice – protections must be content-neutral
46 +Tsesis 14 Alexander, Professor of Law, Loyola University Chicago School of Law “Free Speech Constitutionalism” 2014 is last date cited AT
47 +Oral and written deliberations facilitate the relationship between individual constituents and the polity. Speech
48 +AND
49 +through creative endeavors, associations, and day-to-day conversations.
50 +
51 +Contention 2 is solvency
52 +
53 +Campuses are the cornerstone of open dialogue – ending speech restrictions is key to retain their role in protecting American civic life
54 +Maloney 16 (Cliff Maloney, Jr., ) Colleges Have No Right to Limit Students' Free Speech, TIME Oct. 13, 2016 AT
55 +In grade school, I learned that debate is defined as “a discussion between
56 +AND
57 +of ideas. Restrictive campus speech codes are, in fact, regressive.
58 +
59 +The status quo is locked into expert-led forms of dialogue that privilege elite viewpoints – the aff’s deliberationist model is key to revitalize dialogue and combat apathy – colleges are a key site
60 +Carcasson 13 Martín Carcasson, Ph.D. Colorado State University, Rethinking Civic Engagement on Campus: The Overarching Potential of Deliberative Practice Prepared for the Kettering Foundation Project #35.13.00 July 1, 2013 AT
61 +Advocacy is not inherently problematic, and high-quality advocacy is certainly possible.
62 +AND
63 +be introduced, but its place on campus is more difficult to place.
64 +
65 +Colleges are the key site of First Amendment activity – it’s key to academic inquiry which supports students’ abilities to filter through bad arguments
66 +Hall 2 (Kermit L., CONTRIBUTING WRITER, ) Free Speech On Public College Campuses Overview, The First Amendment Center 9-13-2002 AT
67 +Free speech at public universities and colleges is at once the most obvious and the
68 +AND
69 +for their academic freedom and the goal of unfettered inquiry that animates it.
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1 +All debaters with awareness and access to the NDCA 16-17 LD Wiki, located at “hsld.debatecoaches.org”, must disclose all positions on said wiki 12 hours after breaking it. All disclosure must occur on one’s own wiki page including the tags citation, and first and last three words of each card.
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1 +2017-01-15 20:15:51.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Eli Smith
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Chaminade
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +3
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Harvard Westlake
Caselist.RoundClass[18]
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2017-01-18 18:40:00.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Tagalog
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Reagan JG
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +lol
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Churchill
Caselist.RoundClass[19]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +11
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2017-01-18 18:40:42.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Tagalog
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Reagan JG
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2
RoundReport
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +lol
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Churchill
Caselist.RoundClass[20]
Cites
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +12
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2017-02-12 03:56:10.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Ellen Ivens Duran
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Harvard Westlake AM
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +4
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Stanford
Caselist.RoundClass[21]
EntryDate
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +2017-02-18 20:16:49.0
Judge
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Sean Fahey
Opponent
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Dougherty Valley DS
Round
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +1
Tournament
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Cal

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