West Ranch Won Neg
| Tournament | Round | Opponent | Judge | Cites | Round Report | Open Source | Edit/Delete |
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| All | 1 | All | All |
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| CPS | 2 | Harvard-Westlake KK | Arjun Tambe |
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| CPS | 3 | Brentwood WJ | Michael Harris |
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| CPS | 6 | Ashland GD | Sheelah Bearfoot |
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| Cal RR | 1 | Success Academy SC | Wheeler, Merrill |
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| Cal RR | 3 | Lynbrook VV | Phillips, Dosch |
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| Cal RR | 5 | Harvard-Westlake EE | Tambe, Harris |
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| Damus | 1 | Harker AC | Michael OKrent |
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| Damus | 3 | Marlborough MC | Panny Shan |
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| Damus | 6 | Harvard-Westlake JaNa | Dan Miyamoto |
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| DebateLA | 2 | Rowland Hall KO | Louisa Melcher, Nadia Hussein |
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| DebateLA | 4 | Greenhill SK | Elijah Smith, David Dosch |
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| DebateLA | 6 | Harrison RP | Jordan Durrani, Chris Castillo |
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| Emory | 2 | Greenhill BZ | Akhil Gandra |
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| Emory | 3 | Christopher Colombus AT | Chris Castillo |
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| Emory | 6 | Greenhill SK | Scott Phillips |
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| Emory | Doubles | Newark Science DA | Wiora, Kuang, Fee |
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| Glenbrooks | 3 | Scarsdale GZ | Alex Tisher |
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| Glenbrooks | 2 | Apple Valley CR | Bennett Eckert |
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| Glenbrooks | 6 | Harvard-Westlake EE | Rebecca Kuang |
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| Glenbrooks | 7 | WDM Valley AJ | Chetan Hertzig |
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| Greenhill | 2 | Loyola DW | Eric Melin |
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| Greenhill | 4 | Strake Jesuit AS | Megan Nubel |
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| Greenhill | 6 | Cypress Woods LC | Michael OKrent |
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| Greenhill | Doubles | Marlborough LG | Agarwala, Gandra, Phillips |
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| Harvard Westlake | 6 | Meadows ER | David Dosch |
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| Harvard Westlake | Doubles | Brentwood JD | Kuang, Gandra, Chapman |
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| Harvard-Westlake | 2 | Harker KS | Erik Legried |
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| Harvard-Westlake | 4 | Palo Alto CF | Michael OKrent |
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| Loyola | 1 | Lynbrook VV | Michael Fried |
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| Loyola | 4 | San Marino BK | David Dosch |
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| Loyola | 6 | Peninsula IG | Joseph Barquin |
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| Loyola | Octas | Lynbrook CW | Phillips, Tambe, Lallas |
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| Loyola | Quarters | La Canada AZ | Steele, Tan, Bistagne |
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| Stanford | 4 | Lake Highland SS | Jackson Lallas |
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| Stanford | 2 | Oakwood SM | Inbar Grava |
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| Stanford | 5 | Harvard Westlake JN | Scott Nielson |
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| Stanford | Triples | University HS JC | Kaya, Gray, Pothamsetty |
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| Stanford | Octas | Lynbrook VV | Kadie, Hunt, Haas |
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| Stanford | Quarters | Sunset AB | Tambe, Kadie, Dadah |
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| Stanford | Semis | North Hollywood JS | Tambe, Hunt, Fife |
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| Voices | 1 | San Marino ED | Jack Coyle |
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| Voices | 4 | Mission San Jose JP | Kris Kaya |
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| Voices | 6 | Polytechnic JL | Travis Fife |
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| Voices | Octas | Mountain View DZ | Wheeler, Fife, Walton |
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| Voices RR | 2 | Dougherty Valley CS | Michael Harris, Nick Steele |
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| Voices RR | 3 | Lynbrook VV | Scott Wheeller, Anna-Marie Hwang |
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| Tournament | Round | Report |
|---|---|---|
| CPS | 2 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake KK | Judge: Arjun Tambe 1AC college papers aff |
| CPS | 3 | Opponent: Brentwood WJ | Judge: Michael Harris 1AC Resistance SV aff |
| CPS | 6 | Opponent: Ashland GD | Judge: Sheelah Bearfoot 1AC Sexual Assault Aff |
| Cal RR | 1 | Opponent: Success Academy SC | Judge: Wheeler, Merrill 1AC black speech |
| Cal RR | 3 | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Phillips, Dosch 1AC militarism aff |
| Cal RR | 5 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake EE | Judge: Tambe, Harris 1AC journalism aff |
| Damus | 1 | Opponent: Harker AC | Judge: Michael OKrent 1AC Structual violence aff |
| Damus | 3 | Opponent: Marlborough MC | Judge: Panny Shan 1AC Structural violence with race and LGBT advantages |
| Damus | 6 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake JaNa | Judge: Dan Miyamoto 1AC Radical Democracy Aff |
| DebateLA | 2 | Opponent: Rowland Hall KO | Judge: Louisa Melcher, Nadia Hussein 1AC biopower aff |
| DebateLA | 4 | Opponent: Greenhill SK | Judge: Elijah Smith, David Dosch 1AC Marketplace of Ideas aff |
| DebateLA | 6 | Opponent: Harrison RP | Judge: Jordan Durrani, Chris Castillo 1AC whole res aff |
| Emory | 2 | Opponent: Greenhill BZ | Judge: Akhil Gandra 1AC whole res |
| Emory | 3 | Opponent: Christopher Colombus AT | Judge: Chris Castillo 1AC non topical mestiza aff |
| Emory | 6 | Opponent: Greenhill SK | Judge: Scott Phillips 1AC marketplace of ideas aff |
| Emory | Doubles | Opponent: Newark Science DA | Judge: Wiora, Kuang, Fee 1AC whole res aff |
| Glenbrooks | 3 | Opponent: Scarsdale GZ | Judge: Alex Tisher 1AC Kant aff w a prioris and uncondo route spike |
| Glenbrooks | 2 | Opponent: Apple Valley CR | Judge: Bennett Eckert 1AC Ableism |
| Glenbrooks | 6 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake EE | Judge: Rebecca Kuang 1AC Rule of Law aff |
| Glenbrooks | 7 | Opponent: WDM Valley AJ | Judge: Chetan Hertzig 1AC Alienation aff |
| Greenhill | 2 | Opponent: Loyola DW | Judge: Eric Melin 1AC Natives AC |
| Greenhill | 4 | Opponent: Strake Jesuit AS | Judge: Megan Nubel 1AC Butler AC |
| Greenhill | 6 | Opponent: Cypress Woods LC | Judge: Michael OKrent 1AC Floating Reactors AC w warming and Russia advs |
| Greenhill | Doubles | Opponent: Marlborough LG | Judge: Agarwala, Gandra, Phillips 1AC EU aff about home solidarity |
| Harvard Westlake | 6 | Opponent: Meadows ER | Judge: David Dosch 1AC courts aff |
| Harvard Westlake | Doubles | Opponent: Brentwood JD | Judge: Kuang, Gandra, Chapman 1AC stock resistance aff |
| Harvard-Westlake | 2 | Opponent: Harker KS | Judge: Erik Legried 1AC War on Terror aff |
| Harvard-Westlake | 4 | Opponent: Palo Alto CF | Judge: Michael OKrent 1AC non-T ableism aff |
| Loyola | 1 | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Michael Fried 1AC Belgium AC with terror and meltdowns advantages |
| Loyola | 4 | Opponent: San Marino BK | Judge: David Dosch 1AC Whole Res Indigenous AC |
| Loyola | 6 | Opponent: Peninsula IG | Judge: Joseph Barquin 1AC Util AC w prolif and meltdowns advantages |
| Loyola | Octas | Opponent: Lynbrook CW | Judge: Phillips, Tambe, Lallas 1AC Beligum AC |
| Loyola | Quarters | Opponent: La Canada AZ | Judge: Steele, Tan, Bistagne 1AC Egypt AC |
| Stanford | 4 | Opponent: Lake Highland SS | Judge: Jackson Lallas 1AC Democracy to come aff |
| Stanford | 2 | Opponent: Oakwood SM | Judge: Inbar Grava 1AC whole res structural violence aff |
| Stanford | 5 | Opponent: Harvard Westlake JN | Judge: Scott Nielson 1AC journalism aff |
| Stanford | Triples | Opponent: University HS JC | Judge: Kaya, Gray, Pothamsetty 1AC neolib |
| Stanford | Octas | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Kadie, Hunt, Haas 1AC militarism |
| Stanford | Quarters | Opponent: Sunset AB | Judge: Tambe, Kadie, Dadah 1AC anarchy of becoming |
| Stanford | Semis | Opponent: North Hollywood JS | Judge: Tambe, Hunt, Fife 1AC mexico aff |
| Voices | 1 | Opponent: San Marino ED | Judge: Jack Coyle 1AC Bell hooks love aff |
| Voices | 4 | Opponent: Mission San Jose JP | Judge: Kris Kaya 1AC stock util aff |
| Voices | 6 | Opponent: Polytechnic JL | Judge: Travis Fife 1AC rewilding aff |
| Voices | Octas | Opponent: Mountain View DZ | Judge: Wheeler, Fife, Walton 1AC militarism aff |
| Voices RR | 2 | Opponent: Dougherty Valley CS | Judge: Michael Harris, Nick Steele 1AC Neolib Aff |
| Voices RR | 3 | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Scott Wheeller, Anna-Marie Hwang 1AC Belgium AC with relations and terror advs |
To modify or delete round reports, edit the associated round.
Cites
| Entry | Date |
|---|---|
0-Contact InfoTournament: All | Round: 1 | Opponent: All | Judge: All | 9/10/16 |
JANFEB - CPS R2 NCTournament: CPS | Round: 2 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake KK | Judge: Arjun Tambe 1-off1NC ShellA. Interpretation: The affirmative may not specify a specific form of constitutionally protected speech that they defend not restricting.
2-offHate speech is permissible under the first amendment despite the exceptionsVolokh 15 ~Eugene Volokh, Law Professor at UCLA, "No, there's no "hate speech" exception to the First Amendment," The Washington Post, May 7, 2015, https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/07/no-theres-no-hate-speech-exception-to-the-first-amendment/?utm_term=.9e1ed85e9262~~ JW Free speech used as a cover to justify hate speech like anti-semitic speechMarcus 08 ~Kenneth L. Marcus, Lillie and Nathan Ackerman Chair in Equality and Justice in America, Baruch College School of Public Affairs, "Higher Education, Harassment, and First Amendment Opportunism," 16 Wm. and Mary Bill Rts. J. 1025 (2008), http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol16/iss4/5~~ JW Empirics prove that hate speech leads to hate crimesSingh 12 ~Hansdeep Singh, Co-Founder and Director of Legal Programs for the International Center for Advocates Against Discrimination, Simran Jeet Singh, a scholar and activist who writes primarily on culture and religion "The Rise of Hate Crimes Can Be Tied Directly to Hateful Speech," The Daily Beast, Sept. 6, 2012, http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/09/06/the-rise-of-hate-crimes-can-be-tied-directly-to-hateful-speech.html~~ JW 3-offCP Text: AFF actors should remove all restrictions on constitutionally protected free speech, and ban the usage of all hate speech, including hate speech not protected by the First Amendment. Hate speech poses a direct threat to the oppressed. Banning it is necessary to promote inclusiveness.Jared Taylor summarizes Waldron, 12, Why We Should Ban "Hate Speech", American Renaissance, summarizing Jeremy Waldron, The Harm in Hate Speech, Harvard University Press, 2012, 292 pp., 26.95. 8/24/12, http://www.amren.com/features/2012/08/why-we-should-ban-hate-speech/ Note – Taylor does not agree with but is summarizing Waldron's position LADI 4-offDebate should deal with the real-world consequences of oppression.Curry 14, Tommy, The Cost of a Thing: A Kingian Reformulation of a Living Wage Argument in the 21st Century, Victory Briefs, 2014, Ethics is divided between ideal and non-ideal theory. Ideal theory ask what justice demands in a perfect world while non-ideal theory ask what justice demands in a world that is already unjust. Prefer non-ideal theory as a meta-ethical starting point:1. Motivation: Ideal theory cannot guide action since its starting point has diverged from the descriptive model of the real world. Non-ideal theory is key for ethical motivation. MILLS: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"A first possible argument might be the simple denial that moral theory should have any concern with making realistic assumptions about human beings, their capacities, and their behavior. Ethics is concerned with the ideal, so it doesn't have to worry about the actual. But even for mainstream ethics this wouldn't work, since, of course, ought is supposed to impl~ies~ can the ideal has to be achievable by humans. Nor could it seriously be cal imed that moral theory is concerned only with mapping beautiful ideals, not their actual implementation. If any ethicist actually said this, it would be an astonishing abdication of the classic goal of ethics, and its link with practical reason. The normative here would then be weirdly detached from the prescriptive: this is the good and the right—but we are not concerned with their actual realization. Even for Plato, a classic example in at least one sense of an ideal theorist, this was not the case: the Form of the Good was supposed to motivate us, and help philosophers transform society. Nor could anyone seriously say that ideal theory is a good way to approach ethics because as a matter of fact (not as a conceptual necessity following from what "model" or "ideal" means), the normative here has come ~is~ close to converging with the descriptive: ideal- as-descriptive-model has approximated to ideal-as-idealized-model. Obviously, the dreadful and dismaying course of human history has not remotely been a record of close-to-ideal behavior, but rather of behavior that has usually been quite the polar opposite of the ideal, with oppression and inequitable treatment of the majority of humanity (whether on grounds of gender, or nationality, or class, or religion, or race) being the norm. So the argument cannot be that as a matter of definitional truth, or factual irrelevance, or factual convergence, ideal theory is required. The argument has to be, as in the quote from Rawls above, that this is the best way of doing normative theory, better than all the other contenders. But why on earth should anyone think this? Why should anyone think that abstaining from theorizing about oppression and its consequences is the best way to bring about an end to oppression? Isn't this, on the face of it, just completely implausible?" 2. Descriptive Ideality: ideal theory ignores social realities, which in turn contradicts ideals. Normative ideals aren't created separately from the social norms that govern us because those influence what we can count as an ideal in the first place. MILLS 2: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"I suggest that this spontaneous reaction, far from being philosophically naïve or jejune, is in fact the correct one. If we start from what is presumably the uncontroversial premise that the ultimate point of ethics is to guide our actions and make ourselves better people and the world a better place, then the framework above will not only be unhelpful, but will in certain respects be deeply antithetical to the proper goal of theoretical ethics as an enterprise. In modeling humans, human capacities, human interaction, human institutions, and human society on ideal-as-idealized-models, in never exploring how deeply different this is from ideal-as-descriptive-models, we are abstracting away from realities crucial to our comprehension of the actual workings of injustice in human interactions and social institutions, and thereby guaranteeing that the ideal-as-idealized-model will never be achieved." (170) Thus, the standard is resisting material inequalities. Non-ideal theory necessitates consequentialism since instead of following rules that assume an already equal playing field, we take steps to correct the material injustice. | 12/17/16 |
JANFEB - CPS R3 NCTournament: CPS | Round: 3 | Opponent: Brentwood WJ | Judge: Michael Harris 1-off1NCFree Speech Link: Free speech protections are not neutral. They're what conservatives and large corporations use to cover their actionsBalkin 90 ~J.M. BALKIN, Professor of Law and Graves, Dougherty, Hearon, and Moody Centennial Faculty Fellow, University of Texas, "SOME REALISM ABOUT PLURALISM: LEGAL REALIST APPROACHES TO THE FIRST AMENDMENT," Duke Law Journal, June 1990~ JW The First Amendment is seen as a neutral mechanism to produce a free marketplace of ideas when in actuality it favors a status quo that maintains oppressive power structuresDelgado 94 ~Delgado, Richard. Charles Inglis Thomson Professor of Law, University of Colorado, "First Amendment formalism is giving way to First Amendment legal realism." Harv CR-CLL Rev. 29 (1994): 169~ Protests at the University of Missouri prove this true. Unhindered exercise of the First Amendment structurally antagonizes black studentsTyler Kingkade Lilly Workneh Ryan Grenoble Nov 16th, 2015 Campus Racism Protests Didn't Come Out Of Nowhere, And They Aren't Going Away Quickly Mizzou seems to have catalyzed years of tension over inequality and race. Senior Editor/Reporter, The Huffington Post, Senior Black Voices Editor, The Huffington Post News Editor, The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/campus-racism-protests-didnt-come-out-of-nowhere_us_56464a87e4b08cda3488bfb Ignoring the rule of law's hidden violence fuels euro-centric imperialismDossa 99 ~Shiraz, Department of Political Science, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, "Liberal Legalism: Law, Culture and Identity," The European Legacy, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 73-87,1~ The alternative is to embrace the indeterminacy of the law. The rule of law only has power when people believe in its objective powerHasnas 95 ~John Hasnas, Associate Professor McDonough School of Business Georgetown University, "The Myth of the Rule of Law," Wisconsin Law Review 199 (1995) http://faculty.msb.edu/hasnasj/GTWebSite/MythWeb.htm~~ JW The Role of the Judge is to be a critical legal educator that tests the underlying assumptions of the aff. Engaging in critical examination of the law enables us to challenge its imperialistic violence. Omitting this analysis is to be complicit with the violence the law createsValdes 03 ~Francisco Valdes, Professor of Law and Co-Director, Center for Hispanic and Caribbean Legal Studies, University of Miami, "Outsider Jurisprudence, Critical Pedogogy and Social Justice Activism: Marking the Stirrings of Critical Legal Education," Asian American Law Journal Vol 10 Issue 1, January 2003~ JW The role of the ballot is to reject unequal power structures – this is the only way to make educational spaces truly fairTrifonas 03 ~PETER PERICLES TRIFONAS. PEDAGOGIES OF DIFFERENCE: RETHINKING EDUCATION FOR SOCIAL CHANGE/ RoutledgeFalmer. New York, London. 2003. Questia~
2-offHate speech is permissible under the first amendment despite the exceptionsVolokh 15 ~Eugene Volokh, Law Professor at UCLA, "No, there's no "hate speech" exception to the First Amendment," The Washington Post, May 7, 2015, https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/07/no-theres-no-hate-speech-exception-to-the-first-amendment/?utm_term=.9e1ed85e9262~~ JW Free speech used as a cover to justify hate speech like anti-semitic speechMarcus 08 ~Kenneth L. Marcus, Lillie and Nathan Ackerman Chair in Equality and Justice in America, Baruch College School of Public Affairs, "Higher Education, Harassment, and First Amendment Opportunism," 16 Wm. and Mary Bill Rts. J. 1025 (2008), http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol16/iss4/5~~ JW Empirics prove that hate speech leads to hate crimesSingh 12 ~Hansdeep Singh, Co-Founder and Director of Legal Programs for the International Center for Advocates Against Discrimination, Simran Jeet Singh, a scholar and activist who writes primarily on culture and religion "The Rise of Hate Crimes Can Be Tied Directly to Hateful Speech," The Daily Beast, Sept. 6, 2012, http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/09/06/the-rise-of-hate-crimes-can-be-tied-directly-to-hateful-speech.html~~ JW Turn: silencing people is inevitable but harassment creates an even greater chilling effect in both students and facultyMarcus 2 ~Kenneth L. Marcus, Lillie and Nathan Ackerman Chair in Equality and Justice in America, Baruch College School of Public Affairs, "Higher Education, Harassment, and First Amendment Opportunism," 16 Wm. and Mary Bill Rts. J. 1025 (2008), http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol16/iss4/5~~ JW | 12/18/16 |
JANFEB - CPS R6 NCTournament: CPS | Round: 6 | Opponent: Ashland GD | Judge: Sheelah Bearfoot 1-offFree Speech Link: Free speech protections are not neutral. They're what conservatives and large corporations use to cover their actionsBalkin 90 ~J.M. BALKIN, Professor of Law and Graves, Dougherty, Hearon, and Moody Centennial Faculty Fellow, University of Texas, "SOME REALISM ABOUT PLURALISM: LEGAL REALIST APPROACHES TO THE FIRST AMENDMENT," Duke Law Journal, June 1990~ JW The First Amendment is seen as a neutral mechanism to produce a free marketplace of ideas when in actuality it favors a status quo that maintains oppressive power structuresDelgado 94 ~Delgado, Richard. Charles Inglis Thomson Professor of Law, University of Colorado, "First Amendment formalism is giving way to First Amendment legal realism." Harv CR-CLL Rev. 29 (1994): 169~ Protests at the University of Missouri prove this true. Unhindered exercise of the First Amendment structurally antagonizes black studentsTyler Kingkade Lilly Workneh Ryan Grenoble Nov 16th, 2015 Campus Racism Protests Didn't Come Out Of Nowhere, And They Aren't Going Away Quickly Mizzou seems to have catalyzed years of tension over inequality and race. Senior Editor/Reporter, The Huffington Post, Senior Black Voices Editor, The Huffington Post News Editor, The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/campus-racism-protests-didnt-come-out-of-nowhere_us_56464a87e4b08cda3488bfb Ignoring the rule of law's hidden violence fuels euro-centric imperialismDossa 99 ~Shiraz, Department of Political Science, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, "Liberal Legalism: Law, Culture and Identity," The European Legacy, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 73-87,1~ The alternative is to embrace the indeterminacy of the law. The rule of law only has power when people believe in its objective powerHasnas 95 ~John Hasnas, Associate Professor McDonough School of Business Georgetown University, "The Myth of the Rule of Law," Wisconsin Law Review 199 (1995) http://faculty.msb.edu/hasnasj/GTWebSite/MythWeb.htm~~ JW The Role of the Judge is to be a critical legal educator that tests the underlying assumptions of the aff. Engaging in critical examination of the law enables us to challenge its imperialistic violence. Omitting this analysis is to be complicit with the violence the law createsValdes 03 ~Francisco Valdes, Professor of Law and Co-Director, Center for Hispanic and Caribbean Legal Studies, University of Miami, "Outsider Jurisprudence, Critical Pedogogy and Social Justice Activism: Marking the Stirrings of Critical Legal Education," Asian American Law Journal Vol 10 Issue 1, January 2003~ JW The role of the ballot is to reject unequal power structures – this is the only way to make educational spaces truly fairTrifonas 03 ~PETER PERICLES TRIFONAS. PEDAGOGIES OF DIFFERENCE: RETHINKING EDUCATION FOR SOCIAL CHANGE/ RoutledgeFalmer. New York, London. 2003. Questia~
2-offCurrent protections against hate speech are working – on campus harrassment is decreasing nationally now. Sutton 16Sutton 16 Halley Sutton, Report shows crime on campus down across the country, Campus Security Report 13.4 (2016), 9/9/16,http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/casr.30185/full Hate speech is permissible under the first amendment despite the exceptionsVolokh 15 ~Eugene Volokh, Law Professor at UCLA, "No, there's no "hate speech" exception to the First Amendment," The Washington Post, May 7, 2015, https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/07/no-theres-no-hate-speech-exception-to-the-first-amendment/?utm_term=.9e1ed85e9262~~ JW Free speech used as a cover to justify hate speech like anti-semitic speechMarcus 08 ~Kenneth L. Marcus, Lillie and Nathan Ackerman Chair in Equality and Justice in America, Baruch College School of Public Affairs, "Higher Education, Harassment, and First Amendment Opportunism," 16 Wm. and Mary Bill Rts. J. 1025 (2008), http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol16/iss4/5~~ JW Empirics prove that hate speech leads to hate crimesSingh 12 ~Hansdeep Singh, Co-Founder and Director of Legal Programs for the International Center for Advocates Against Discrimination, Simran Jeet Singh, a scholar and activist who writes primarily on culture and religion "The Rise of Hate Crimes Can Be Tied Directly to Hateful Speech," The Daily Beast, Sept. 6, 2012, http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/09/06/the-rise-of-hate-crimes-can-be-tied-directly-to-hateful-speech.html~~ JW Turn: silencing people is inevitable but harassment creates an even greater chilling effect in both students and facultyMarcus 2 ~Kenneth L. Marcus, Lillie and Nathan Ackerman Chair in Equality and Justice in America, Baruch College School of Public Affairs, "Higher Education, Harassment, and First Amendment Opportunism," 16 Wm. and Mary Bill Rts. J. 1025 (2008), http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol16/iss4/5~~ JW cP Text: public colleges and universities shall not restrict free speech except in instances of hate speech.3-offDebate should deal with the real-world consequences of oppression.Curry 14, Tommy, The Cost of a Thing: A Kingian Reformulation of a Living Wage Argument in the 21st Century, Victory Briefs, 2014, Ethics is divided between ideal and non-ideal theory. Ideal theory ask what justice demands in a perfect world while non-ideal theory ask what justice demands in a world that is already unjust. Prefer non-ideal theory as a meta-ethical starting point:1. Motivation: Ideal theory cannot guide action since its starting point has diverged from the descriptive model of the real world. Non-ideal theory is key for ethical motivation. MILLS: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"A first possible argument might be the simple denial that moral theory should have any concern with making realistic assumptions about human beings, their capacities, and their behavior. Ethics is concerned with the ideal, so it doesn't have to worry about the actual. But even for mainstream ethics this wouldn't work, since, of course, ought is supposed to impl~ies~ can the ideal has to be achievable by humans. Nor could it seriously be cal imed that moral theory is concerned only with mapping beautiful ideals, not their actual implementation. If any ethicist actually said this, it would be an astonishing abdication of the classic goal of ethics, and its link with practical reason. The normative here would then be weirdly detached from the prescriptive: this is the good and the right—but we are not concerned with their actual realization. Even for Plato, a classic example in at least one sense of an ideal theorist, this was not the case: the Form of the Good was supposed to motivate us, and help philosophers transform society. Nor could anyone seriously say that ideal theory is a good way to approach ethics because as a matter of fact (not as a conceptual necessity following from what "model" or "ideal" means), the normative here has come ~is~ close to converging with the descriptive: ideal- as-descriptive-model has approximated to ideal-as-idealized-model. Obviously, the dreadful and dismaying course of human history has not remotely been a record of close-to-ideal behavior, but rather of behavior that has usually been quite the polar opposite of the ideal, with oppression and inequitable treatment of the majority of humanity (whether on grounds of gender, or nationality, or class, or religion, or race) being the norm. So the argument cannot be that as a matter of definitional truth, or factual irrelevance, or factual convergence, ideal theory is required. The argument has to be, as in the quote from Rawls above, that this is the best way of doing normative theory, better than all the other contenders. But why on earth should anyone think this? Why should anyone think that abstaining from theorizing about oppression and its consequences is the best way to bring about an end to oppression? Isn't this, on the face of it, just completely implausible?" | 12/18/16 |
JANFEB - Cal RR R1 NCTournament: Cal RR | Round: 1 | Opponent: Success Academy SC | Judge: Wheeler, Merrill 1-offK – Black Safe Spaces (2:50)The politics of the 1AC removes safe spaces on college campuses – this impact turns and outweighs the case – safe spaces are uniquely key for marginalized communities to come together and actually engage in conversations about identityPickett 16 RaeAnn Pickett. August 31st 2016. Pickett is senior director of communications and public Affairs at the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health and a Ms. Foundation Public Voices Fellows. Trigger Warnings and Safe Spaces Are Necessary. Published by TIME. Imagine being stuck in a sort of vertigo that seems as if you have no where to go, no where to hide, no where to just be with people who understand your struggle – this is the analysis the 1AC fundamentally misses and affirms for more free speech – safe spaces on college campuses are necessary and needed to help black students deal with being black.Tyler Kingkade Lilly Workneh Ryan Grenoble Nov 16th, 2015 Campus Racism Protests Didn't Come Out Of Nowhere, And They Aren't Going Away Quickly Mizzou seems to have catalyzed years of tension over inequality and race. Senior Editor/Reporter, The Huffington Post, Senior Black Voices Editor, The Huffington Post News Editor, The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/campus-racism-protests-didnt-come-out-of-nowhere_us_56464a87e4b08cda3488bfb Forcing minorities to confront racial microaggressions without any other form of recourse or retreat induces racial "battle fatigue" that translates into actual material harmsSmith et al 07 ~William A. Smith University of Utah Walter R. Allen University of California, Los Angeles Lynette L. Danley University of Utah, ""Assume the Position . . . You Fit the Description" Psychosocial Experiences and Racial Battle Fatigue Among African American Male College Students," American Behavioral Scientist, 2007~ JW Hate speech is permissible under the first amendment despite the exceptionsVolokh 15 ~Eugene Volokh, Law Professor at UCLA, "No, there's no "hate speech" exception to the First Amendment," The Washington Post, May 7, 2015, https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/07/no-theres-no-hate-speech-exception-to-the-first-amendment/?utm_term=.9e1ed85e9262~~ JW The roll of the ballot is to endorse the debater with the best methodology to liberate the oppressedThe roll of the judge is to be a critical educatorThus, the alternative – safe spaces that are currently in the status quo should remain where they are. The negative cannot fiat more safe spaces will occur – but our method in the kritik is affirming the tangibility and productivity that safe spaces provide to black students on colleges campuses.Okeke 16 2-offA. Uniqueness: Federal funding for colleges and universities is growing now and has been increasing for several yearsCamera 16 ~Lauren Camera, education reporter at US News, "Federal Education Funding: Where Does the Money Go?" US News, Jan. 14, 2016, http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/data-mine/2016/01/14/federal-education-funding-where-does-the-money-go~~ JW B. Title IX requires colleges to restrict constitutionally protected speech or lose federal funding.Fire 16, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Department of Justice: Title IX Requires Violating First Amendment, 2016, https://www.thefire.org/department-of-justice-title-ix-requires-violating-first-amendment/ Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** C. Benefactors will quit funding colleges if all speech is protectedMacDonald 05, G. Jeffrey MacDonald Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor. Donors: too much say on campus speech? ; Colleges feel more pressure from givers who want to help determine who'll be speaking on campus. The Christian Science Monitor ~Boston, Mass~ 10 Feb 2005: 11. ~Premier~ D. ImpactCuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, o/w | 2/17/17 |
JANFEB - Cal RR R3 NCTournament: Cal RR | Round: 3 | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Phillips, Dosch 1-offA. Interpretation: the affirmative may not defend the resolution in one specific public college or university or set of public colleges and universities 3-offCounterplan text: The United States federal government should establish congressional oversight over the National Insider Threat Policy. Status is unconditional.The CP's oversight is key to allowing whistleblowers to criticize the military and resolves the chilling effect that stops them from coming outCanterbury 14 (Angela, Director of Public Policy, "POGO's Angela Canterbury testifies on "Limitless Surveillance at the FDA: Protecting the Rights of Federal Whistleblowers" February 26, 2014, pg online @ http://www.pogo.org/our-work/testimony/2014/pogos-angela-canterbury-testifies.html um-ef) The Insiders Threat program affects thousands of military personnel preventing an effective check of military policiesGoztola 16 ~Kevin Goztola, managing editor of Shadowproof Press, "'Insider Threat' Program: Hundred Thousand Pentagon Personnel Under Total Surveillance," Common Dreams, January 8, 2016, http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/01/08/insider-threat-program-hundred-thousand-pentagon-personnel-under-total-surveillance~~ JW Solves the case – creates Congressional oversight that prevents militaristic overreach of powerGoodman 13 4-offBrackets are for offensive language Currently military academies are successfully implementing policies that combat sexual assault and stigma. Increased reporting indicates they are working.Baldor and Elliot 16 ~LOLITA C. BALDOR and DAN ELLIOTT, Associated Press, "Pentagon: Reports of sexual assaults at major military academies surged in 2014-15 school year," US News, Jan. 8, 2016, http://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2016-01-08/reports-of-sexual-assaults-spike-at-military-academies~~ JW Permitting free speech on military academies opens the flood gate for toxic militaristic discourse about sexual assaultWitte 15 ~Brian Witte, writer at the Baltimore Sun, "Civilian Naval Academy professor sues Navy over free speech," the Baltimore Sun, November 5, 2015, http://www.baltimoresun.com/g00/news/maryland/bs-md-bruce-fleming-naval-academy-lawsuit-20151105-story.html?i10c.referrer=~~ JW This kind of discourse is exactly what justifies a culture of rape in militaries that affirms a violent misogynist power structureLucero 15 ~Gabriel Lucero, Master of Public Policy and Juris Doctor candidate at Duke University Sanford School of Public Policy and School of Law, "Military Sexual Assault: Reporting and Rape Culture," Sanford Journal of Public Policy, Vol. 6 No. 1 (Winter 2015), 1–32~ JW Turns the affNeg advocacy text: I defend a world where we maintain status quo restrictions on constitutionally protected speech on military colleges and where we implement the CP. | 2/17/17 |
JANFEB - DebateLA R2 NCTournament: DebateLA | Round: 2 | Opponent: Rowland Hall KO | Judge: Louisa Melcher, Nadia Hussein 1-offA. Interp: if the aff disclosed their advocacy text before round, they must read that advocacy text in round in the 1AC
2-offRegardless of constitutionality, Title IX requires colleges to restrict hostile speech or lose federal funding.Bernstein 3 (David E. Bernstein – George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law with a focus on constitutional history, "You Can't Say That: The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties From Antidiscrimination Laws", "Censoring Campus Speech", pg. 60-61,) Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** Cuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, 3-offCP Text: The United States federal government shall pass the Anti-Harassment Act which legally defines and punishes harassment.CP solves the aff by eliminating the need for free speech codes on campuses to prevent harassmentEdelman 15 ~Robert Davis Edelman, "Experts Urge Congress to Protect Free Speech on Campus," Free Beacon, June 3, 2015, http://freebeacon.com/politics/experts-urge-congress-to-protect-free-speech-on-campus/~~ JW The Act solves the need for any speech codesLukianoff 6/1 ~Greg Lukianoff, President and CEO, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, "My Testimony in Front of Congress About Free Speech on Campus (LIVE STREAM)," Huffington Post, June 1, 2016, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/greg-lukianoff/my-testimony-in-front-of_b_7494280.html~~ JW
4-offOppression NC (Long)Debate should deal with the real-world consequences of oppression.Curry 14, Tommy, The Cost of a Thing: A Kingian Reformulation of a Living Wage Argument in the 21st Century, Victory Briefs, 2014, Ethics is divided between ideal and non-ideal theory. Ideal theory ask what justice demands in a perfect world while non-ideal theory ask what justice demands in a world that is already unjust. Prefer non-ideal theory as a meta-ethical starting point:1. Motivation: Ideal theory cannot guide action since its starting point has diverged from the descriptive model of the real world. Non-ideal theory is key for ethical motivation. MILLS: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"A first possible argument might be the simple denial that moral theory should have any concern with making realistic assumptions about human beings, their capacities, and their behavior. Ethics is concerned with the ideal, so it doesn't have to worry about the actual. But even for mainstream ethics this wouldn't work, since, of course, ought is supposed to impl~ies~ can the ideal has to be achievable by humans. Nor could it seriously be cal imed that moral theory is concerned only with mapping beautiful ideals, not their actual implementation. If any ethicist actually said this, it would be an astonishing abdication of the classic goal of ethics, and its link with practical reason. The normative here would then be weirdly detached from the prescriptive: this is the good and the right—but we are not concerned with their actual realization. Even for Plato, a classic example in at least one sense of an ideal theorist, this was not the case: the Form of the Good was supposed to motivate us, and help philosophers transform society. Nor could anyone seriously say that ideal theory is a good way to approach ethics because as a matter of fact (not as a conceptual necessity following from what "model" or "ideal" means), the normative here has come ~is~ close to converging with the descriptive: ideal- as-descriptive-model has approximated to ideal-as-idealized-model. Obviously, the dreadful and dismaying course of human history has not remotely been a record of close-to-ideal behavior, but rather of behavior that has usually been quite the polar opposite of the ideal, with oppression and inequitable treatment of the majority of humanity (whether on grounds of gender, or nationality, or class, or religion, or race) being the norm. So the argument cannot be that as a matter of definitional truth, or factual irrelevance, or factual convergence, ideal theory is required. The argument has to be, as in the quote from Rawls above, that this is the best way of doing normative theory, better than all the other contenders. But why on earth should anyone think this? Why should anyone think that abstaining from theorizing about oppression and its consequences is the best way to bring about an end to oppression? Isn't this, on the face of it, just completely implausible?" 2. Descriptive Ideality: ideal theory ignores social realities, which in turn contradicts ideals. Normative ideals aren't created separately from the social norms that govern us because those influence what we can count as an ideal in the first place. MILLS 2: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"I suggest that this spontaneous reaction, far from being philosophically naïve or jejune, is in fact the correct one. If we start from what is presumably the uncontroversial premise that the ultimate point of ethics is to guide our actions and make ourselves better people and the world a better place, then the framework above will not only be unhelpful, but will in certain respects be deeply antithetical to the proper goal of theoretical ethics as an enterprise. In modeling humans, human capacities, human interaction, human institutions, and human society on ideal-as-idealized-models, in never exploring how deeply different this is from ideal-as-descriptive-models, we are abstracting away from realities crucial to our comprehension of the actual workings of injustice in human interactions and social institutions, and thereby guaranteeing that the ideal-as-idealized-model will never be achieved." (170) | 1/13/17 |
JANFEB - DebateLA R4 NCTournament: DebateLA | Round: 4 | Opponent: Greenhill SK | Judge: Elijah Smith, David Dosch 1-offBrackets are for offensive language First Amendment protections extend to non consensual image distributionLarkin 14 ~Paul J. Larkin Jr., Senior Legal Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation, "Revenge Porn, State Law, and Free Speech," Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, Oct. 1, 2014~ JW The chance for non-consensual image distribution is extraordinarily high given the amount of sexting on campusReid 14 ~Samantha Reid, reporter at USA Today, "Study says 70 of students have sexted, so how do they feel about revenge porn?" USA Today, May 15, 2014, http://college.usatoday.com/2014/05/15/study-says-70-of-students-have-sexted-so-how-do-they-feel-about-revenge-porn/~~ JW This turns case – non-consensual image distribution causes chilling effect for victims who are afraid to speak out and are silenced.Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs This is a form of misogynist psychological violence that causes irreversible damage to victims.Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs 2-offRegardless of constitutionality, Title IX requires colleges to restrict hostile speech or lose federal funding.Bernstein 3 (David E. Bernstein – George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law with a focus on constitutional history, "You Can't Say That: The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties From Antidiscrimination Laws", "Censoring Campus Speech", pg. 60-61,) Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** Cuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, | 1/13/17 |
JANFEB - DebateLA R6 NCTournament: DebateLA | Round: 6 | Opponent: Harrison RP | Judge: Jordan Durrani, Chris Castillo 1-offRegardless of constitutionality, Title IX requires colleges to restrict hostile speech or lose federal funding.Bernstein 3 (David E. Bernstein – George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law with a focus on constitutional history, "You Can't Say That: The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties From Antidiscrimination Laws", "Censoring Campus Speech", pg. 60-61,) Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** Cuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, 2-offBrackets are for offensive language First Amendment protections extend to non consensual image distributionLarkin 14 ~Paul J. Larkin Jr., Senior Legal Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation, "Revenge Porn, State Law, and Free Speech," Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, Oct. 1, 2014~ JW The chance for non-consensual image distribution is extraordinarily high given the amount of sexting on campusReid 14 ~Samantha Reid, reporter at USA Today, "Study says 70 of students have sexted, so how do they feel about revenge porn?" USA Today, May 15, 2014, http://college.usatoday.com/2014/05/15/study-says-70-of-students-have-sexted-so-how-do-they-feel-about-revenge-porn/~~ JW This turns case – non-consensual image distribution causes chilling effect for survivors who are afraid to speak out and are silenced.Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs This is a form of misogynist psychological violence that causes irreversible damage to survivors.Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs | 1/14/17 |
JANFEB - Emory Doubles NCTournament: Emory | Round: Doubles | Opponent: Newark Science DA | Judge: Wiora, Kuang, Fee 1-offA. Uniqueness: Federal funding for colleges and universities is growing now and has been increasing for several yearsCamera 16 ~Lauren Camera, education reporter at US News, "Federal Education Funding: Where Does the Money Go?" US News, Jan. 14, 2016, http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/data-mine/2016/01/14/federal-education-funding-where-does-the-money-go~~ JW B. Title IX requires colleges to restrict constitutionally protected speech or lose federal funding.Fire 16, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Department of Justice: Title IX Requires Violating First Amendment, 2016, https://www.thefire.org/department-of-justice-title-ix-requires-violating-first-amendment/ Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** C. Benefactors will quit funding colleges if all speech is protectedMacDonald 05, G. Jeffrey MacDonald Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor. Donors: too much say on campus speech? ; Colleges feel more pressure from givers who want to help determine who'll be speaking on campus. The Christian Science Monitor ~Boston, Mass~ 10 Feb 2005: 11. ~Premier~ D. ImpactCuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, o/w 2-offBrackets are for offensive language First Amendment protections extend to non consensual image distributionLarkin 14 ~Paul J. Larkin Jr., Senior Legal Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation, "Revenge Porn, State Law, and Free Speech," Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, Oct. 1, 2014~ JW The chance for non-consensual image distribution is extraordinarily high given the amount of sexting on campusReid 14 ~Samantha Reid, reporter at USA Today, "Study says 70 of students have sexted, so how do they feel about revenge porn?" USA Today, May 15, 2014, http://college.usatoday.com/2014/05/15/study-says-70-of-students-have-sexted-so-how-do-they-feel-about-revenge-porn/~~ JW This is a form of misogynist psychological violence that causes irreversible damage to survivors .Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs | 1/29/17 |
JANFEB - Emory R2 NCTournament: Emory | Round: 2 | Opponent: Greenhill BZ | Judge: Akhil Gandra 1-offA. Title IX requires colleges to restrict constitutionally protected speech or lose federal funding.Fire 16, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Department of Justice: Title IX Requires Violating First Amendment, 2016, https://www.thefire.org/department-of-justice-title-ix-requires-violating-first-amendment/ Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** B. Benefactors will quit funding colleges if all speech is protectedMacDonald 05, G. Jeffrey MacDonald Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor. Donors: too much say on campus speech? ; Colleges feel more pressure from givers who want to help determine who'll be speaking on campus. The Christian Science Monitor ~Boston, Mass~ 10 Feb 2005: 11. ~Premier~ C. ImpactCuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, o/w | 1/28/17 |
JANFEB - Emory R3 NCTournament: Emory | Round: 3 | Opponent: Christopher Colombus AT | Judge: Chris Castillo OffInterpretation: The affirmative must defend that a hypothetical world where public colleges and universities implement the resolution. 2-off. The Neg asks us to simply trust narratives. Such moves discount evidence and reduce epistemology to the value we are demanded to place in our sympathies with the authority of the person. When "performing evidence" substitutes for evidence, the appearance of legitimacy dooms the pursuit of knowledge and propagates decadence. I'm not saying that the narrative is false but I'm indicting their epistemological viewpoint.Lewis Gordon 06—professor at philosophy, African and Judiac Studies at University of Connecticut Storrs—2006 (Disciplinary Decadence: Living Thought in Trying Times, p 28-29) II. Their s ontologization of the constitutive foundation of the world is decadent. they exclude the possibility of meanings and concepts outside of their disciplinary boundaries,Lewis Gordon 14—professor of philosophy, African and Judiac Studies at the University of Connecticut—2014 ("Disciplinary Decadence and the Decolonization of Knowledge," Africa Development 39.1: 81-92, 86-88). III. Decadence allows the colonization of methods, thinking, and destroys the possibility of a decolonized ethics of the oppressed to overturn.Lewis Gordon 14—professor of philosophy, African and Judiac Studies at the University of Connecticut—2014 ("Disciplinary Decadence and the Decolonization of Knowledge," Africa Development 39.1: 81-92, 88). | 1/29/17 |
JANFEB - Emory R6 NCTournament: Emory | Round: 6 | Opponent: Greenhill SK | Judge: Scott Phillips 1-offA. Uniqueness: Federal funding for colleges and universities is growing now and has been increasing for several yearsCamera 16 ~Lauren Camera, education reporter at US News, "Federal Education Funding: Where Does the Money Go?" US News, Jan. 14, 2016, http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/data-mine/2016/01/14/federal-education-funding-where-does-the-money-go~~ JW B. Title IX requires colleges to restrict constitutionally protected speech or lose federal funding.Fire 16, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Department of Justice: Title IX Requires Violating First Amendment, 2016, https://www.thefire.org/department-of-justice-title-ix-requires-violating-first-amendment/ Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** C. Benefactors will quit funding colleges if all speech is protectedMacDonald 05, G. Jeffrey MacDonald Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor. Donors: too much say on campus speech? ; Colleges feel more pressure from givers who want to help determine who'll be speaking on campus. The Christian Science Monitor ~Boston, Mass~ 10 Feb 2005: 11. ~Premier~ D. ImpactCuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, | 1/29/17 |
JANFEB - Harvard Westlake Doubles NCTournament: Harvard Westlake | Round: Doubles | Opponent: Brentwood JD | Judge: Kuang, Gandra, Chapman 1-offRegardless of constitutionality, Title IX requires colleges to restrict hostile speech or lose federal funding.Bernstein 3 (David E. Bernstein – George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law with a focus on constitutional history, "You Can't Say That: The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties From Antidiscrimination Laws", "Censoring Campus Speech", pg. 60-61,) Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** Cuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, 2-offPromoting free speech on colleges would entail rejecting endowments from partisan donorsKurtz 15 ~Stanley Kurtz, senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and a former adjunct fellow with Hudson Institute,"A Plan to Restore Free Speech on Campus," The National Review, December 7, 2015, http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/428122/plan-restore-free-speech-campus-stanley-kurtz~~ JW College endowments are high now but college protests discourage endowmentsHartocollis 8/4 – Anemona Hartocollis, writer for NYT: August 4, 2016("College Students Protest, Alumni's Fondness Fades and Checks Shrink" New York Times Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/05/us/college-protests-alumni-donations.html?_r=0) Endowments are key to college qualityLeigh 14 ~Steven R. Leigh, dean of CU-Boulder's College of Arts and Sciences, "Endowments and the future of higher education," University of Colorado, Boulder College of Arts and Sciences, March 4, 2014, http://www.colorado.edu/artsandsciences/news-events/message-dean/endowments-and-future-higher-education~~ JW Schools with large endowments are able to recruit more low-income studentsFreedman 13 ~Josh Freedman, policy analyst in the Economic Growth Program at the New America Foundation, "Why American Colleges Are Becoming a Force for Inequality," The Atlantic, May 16, 2013, http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/05/why-american-colleges-are-becoming-a-force-for-inequality/275923/~~ JW | 1/27/17 |
JANFEB - Harvard Westlake R2 NCTournament: Harvard-Westlake | Round: 2 | Opponent: Harker KS | Judge: Erik Legried 1-offRegardless of constitutionality, Title IX requires colleges to restrict hostile speech or lose federal funding.Bernstein 3 (David E. Bernstein – George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law with a focus on constitutional history, "You Can't Say That: The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties From Antidiscrimination Laws", "Censoring Campus Speech", pg. 60-61,) Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** Cuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, 2-offFirst Amendment protections extend to non consensual image distributionLarkin 14 ~Paul J. Larkin Jr., Senior Legal Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation, "Revenge Porn, State Law, and Free Speech," Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, Oct. 1, 2014~ JW The chance for non-consensual image distribution is extraordinarily high given the amount of sexting on campusReid 14 ~Samantha Reid, reporter at USA Today, "Study says 70 of students have sexted, so how do they feel about revenge porn?" USA Today, May 15, 2014, http://college.usatoday.com/2014/05/15/study-says-70-of-students-have-sexted-so-how-do-they-feel-about-revenge-porn/~~ JW This turns case – non-consensual image distribution causes chilling effect for survivors who are afraid to speak out and are silenced.Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs This is a form of misogynist psychological violence that causes irreversible damage to survivors .Citron 14 Danielle Keats Citron Mary Anne Franks 2014 "CRIMINALIZING REVENGE PORN" Wake Forest Law Review digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2424andcontext=fac_pubs 3-off1NCCP Text: The United States federal government shall repeal the Patriot Act.That's key to increase free speech and foster progressive criticism of the status quo on campuses.Macdonald 03 Morgan MacDonald, Patriot Act stifles dissent on campus, Baltimore Sun, 11/24/03, http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2003-11-24/news/0311240117_1_student-groups-student-information-college-campuses LADI | 1/15/17 |
JANFEB - Harvard Westlake R4 NCTournament: Harvard-Westlake | Round: 4 | Opponent: Palo Alto CF | Judge: Michael OKrent 1-offInterpretation: The affirmative must defend (resolution). You can discuss non-topical issues under the world of my interp, you just cannot claim that your advocacy is to fight them and that you should win for that.2-off1. They use a system of identifying disability that privileges a social model of conceptualizing impairment that marginalizes those with non-apparent impairments. This leads to a system where either disabled individuals have to self-identify with disability that stigmatizes those that don't appear "disabled enough" or it outright excludes them from their alternative. The question of who "counts" as disabled is the key question to resolve the efficacy of the aff.Jill C.HUMPHREY, (Faculty of applied social science, the Open University, Researching disability politics, or, some problems with the social model in practice, Disability and Society 15.1)2000 The danger here is that the political principles of more powerful disabled actors can be prioritised over the personal perceptions of less powerful disabled actors until the principle of self-definition lapses into self-contradiction: DW ~W~e work with a lot of disabled people who are not interested in the social model or anything like that. What we've said is we won't use the language they've asked us to use about them—we'll just call them their name—it's not that difficult—you don't have to refer to that language necessarily, because you have to hold on to your principles as well. Second, we can witness the silencing of impairments, as impairment is relegated to a clandestine and privatised space, an effectwhich Hughes and Paterson (1997) have attributed to the social model, and its dualism between impairment and disability. Whilst some interviewees were explicit about their impairments, these were people with apparent impairments in any event. One interlocutor enshrouded her impair¬ments in layers of secrecy so that after 2 hours of otherwise frank and detailed dialogues I was still bemused as to which impairments she had experienced. Whilst I was led to believe that different impairments had impacted differently upon her career in workplaces, trade unions and civil rights politics, the discursive absence around impairments in their specificity prevented me from developing an accurate or adequate understanding of her narrative: JCH: I find it interesting that you had, like, an invisible impairment that became, kind of, visible— DW: No, that was a different thing. JCH: Oh, that was a different thing—right. W: So then I was diagnosed as having something completely different. I've still got this other things but at the moment it's not so visible. (Emphases added.) At the time, my concerns that explicit interrogations could become oppressive intrusions meant that I accepted the veil of ignorance and castigated myself for my curiosity. Subsequently, I discovered that it was not just 'outsiders' who could be perplexed by these 'impairments with no name'. A blind man discussed his frus¬tration with other disability activists who challenged his inquiries as to the nature of their impairments—his standard reply was that it was an access issue not only for him, in virtue of his blindness, but also for them, in virtue of his role as a service-provider and access advisor. At the same time, this interviewee exhibited a more general awareness that both disability politics and disability theory had been dominated by people with particular disability identities like his own: DM: It's very convenient for people with apparent disabilities or impair¬ments to operate a social model which says. 'We don't want to discuss things in terms of 'impairments'. Because these people have got priority anyway, and impairment-related provision~in UNISONJ ... The trouble with it ~thesocial model~ is that it's very difficult ... for people with learning difficulties or other conditions ... which are not catered for ... to raise their concerns as things which need dealing with on a service level, without feeling that they're breaking the law and talking about impairments.Third, the right to self-define as disabled has as its logical corollary the duty to accept others' self-definitions, but suspicions that people are not who they claim to be circulate around the disabled communityin UNISON. Casting aspersions upon the purported disability of other group members in veiled or outright manners, with or without names attached, arose spontaneously during interviews. In my naivete, I neither comprehended nor challenged this at the time, but from re-reading and de-coding interview transcripts, I can discern three themes as follows: a self-defined disabled person may be suspected of not being disabled when they harbour a non-apparent impairment, and/or express views which diverge from the prevailing consensus, and/or simultaneously belong to one of the other self-organised groups. These themes, in turn, suggest the operation of hierarchies of impairments, ortho¬doxies and oppressions,respectively. This is a strange juncture, where the propensity to treat only tangible impairments as evidence of a bona fide disability identity clearly marginalises those with non-apparent impairments, such as learning or mental health ones, whilst the reluctance or refusal to differentiate between impairments by identifying them bolsters up the claims by people with apparent impairments that they represent all disabled people.The twist in the tale is that when other disabled people do become visible and audible in interrogating the hierarchy of impairments. they may find themselves once again marginalised as the other hierarchies of orthodoxies and oppressions come into play. For one thing, people with learning or mental health difficulties may speak with a different voice, given the qualitatively different stigmata attached to different impairments and given the fact that the social model has been developed by those with physical impairments, so that their contributions may be interpreted as deviating from prevailing orthodoxies. For another, people who belong to another oppressed group may be all too visible in their difference, but their blackness or gayness may be construed as detracting from their contributions as disability activists, given the propensities of each group to prioritise its own specific identification-discrimination nexus. The following intervie¬wee testifies to some of these dynamics: DM: People have the right to self-define. But what we've never said is who has got the right to challenge. So if somebody says 'I'm a disabled person; I've come to this disability group' I don't know how you can deal with your suspicion that they're not. In fact you can't deal with it. And you have to ask yourself why you want to deal with it ... ~names mentionedj ... But I'm absolutely convinced that there are lots of people who don't come to groups because they're frightened that they don't look disabled enough.Indeed, this hierarchy of impairments and this 'policing' of the disability identity does act to excludeUNISON members who believe that they experience the disabling effects of an impairment, but who suspect that they would not 'count' as disabled people according to the prevailing criteria in the disabled members' group. Evidence for this emerged during a detailed case-study of the lesbian and gay group, and two examples should suffice. The first example is of a lesbian who had been dyslexic since childhood, who had experienced a range of discriminations in edu¬cation, employment and everyday life, and who was registered as disabled with the Department of Employment. She sought to engage in her local disabled members' group, but disengaged after the first meeting: DL: I'm also disabled with an invisible disability, dyslexia ... I have to educate people about dyslexia as well ... An invisible disability is very difficult for people to cope with—you have to tell each new person, and then they each interpret it differently, and then they can forget ... And it's a fluid disability as well—it's manageable sometimes and unmanageable other times ... and people can't deal with that either ...' JCH: Did you ever go to the disabled members' group? DL: I did. And I got stared at when I walked in. By people who really should know better. JCH: Sorry. Why did you get stared at? This is not obvious to me! DL: Because I didn't look like I was disabled. The second example is, perhaps paradoxically, someone whose impairment was visible, but who dared not join the disabled members' group on the grounds that it was not 'severe' enough to be taken seriously by other group members. The impairment in question was skin allergies over her entire body, including facial disfigurement which is recognised under the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, as one of its few token gestures towards the social model of disability (Hqual Opportu¬nities Review, 1996). Nevertheless, this interviewee's self-definition as disabled was confounded and then crushed by her convictions that disability activists would define her as non-disabled: DL: 'I get quite bitter sometimes. I don't think I'm disabled, because I don't think that what I've got prevents me from functioning, or society doesn't prevent me from functioning. But it probably does ... And my skin tissue scars very easily, and I've got visible marks on my face, and people do look, and I do feel conscious of it, and I'm made to feel conscious of it. But I would feel like I was—what's the word?—an impostor if I attended a disability caucus for those reasons. I feel that the disability caucus excludes people like that ... Nobody takes things like that into account. JCH: The crazy thing is, that until people like you get involved in the disability movement in the union, then they won't take things like that into account! But that does put a big burden on you—or on people in your position—to come out and say 'Hey! We're here too! What about us?' DL: But I feel like mine is a minimal complication. Or whether I'm made to feel that way ...? The argument here is that the social model as operationalised within the UNISON group has both reified the disability identity and reduced it to particular kinds of impairments—physical, immutable, tangible and 'severe' ones—in a way which can deter many people from adopting a disabled identity and participating in a disability community.Whilst this indicates that the social model may harbour its own set of indigenous essentialisms and exclusions, the solution is not to capitulate to the other-imposed essentialisms and exclusions of the medical model, but rather to work towards a more inclusive model. This will entail a more welcoming stance towards all those who self-define as disabled whatever their impairment might be and towards those who experience impairments and who want to combat discrimina¬tions, but who do not choose to identify as 'disabled' for whatever reason. It is time for people to ask 'What do we mean by "our" community? Are its building-blocks safe or its boundaries sensible?' There may be merit in reflecting upon Young's (1990a) warning that communities are often fabricated out of the yearning to be among similar-and-symmetrical selves, to the point where members respond to alterity by expelling it beyond their border. Clearly, a self-perpetuating spiral can be set in motion, whereby the tighter the boundaries are drawn, the more those included will normalise their sameness and exclude others, the more the excluded will become estranged others, and the less the community will be informed by experiences of and reflection upon diversity, etc. This should not be misread—the UNISON group, like many other disabled people's organisations, is at least as democratic as any other social or political group in its constitution, and it is at least as diverse as any other in respecting multiple identities. Paradoxically, some disabled people's organisations may have expended more energies in reaching out to black and gay people who harbour specific impairments than in reaching out to differently disabled people whatever their other oppressions. Of course, we must do both. But the question 'Who is to "count" as a member of the disability community?' is not as strange as it may sound and may even be the Achilles heel of disability politics to date.==== 2. And Turn. Views on disabilities in regards to "disabled" and "abled" bodies are rooted in European concepts of the normal and abnormal. Your criticism functions within Eurocentric ideologies routed in whiteness and will never be able to solve for oppression because it's only defined under the traditional sense of Western Man. It excludes all bodies whether they are black, brown, poor, or have disabilities, etc. We are all excluded by your rhetoric. Wynter 3 (Sylvia Wynter, "Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation—An Argument," CR: The New Centennial Review, Volume 3, Number 3,257-337)The argument proposes that the struggle of our new millennium will be one between the ongoing imperative of securing the well-being of our present ethnoclass (i.e., Western bourgeois) conception of the human, Man, which overrepresents itself as if it were the human itself, and that of securing the well-being, and therefore the full cognitive and behavioral autonomy of the human species itself/ourselves. Because of this overrepresentation, which is defined in the first part of the title as the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom, any attempt to unsettle the coloniality of power will call for the unsettling of this overrepresentation as the second and now purely secular form of what Aníbal Quijano identifies as the "Racism/ Ethnicism complex," on whose basis the world of modernity was brought into existence from the fifteenth/sixteenth centuries onwards (Quijano 1999,2000), and of what Walter Mignolo identifies as the foundational "colonial difference" on which the world of modernity was to institute itself (Mignolo 1999, 2000). The correlated hypothesis here is that all our present struggles with respect to race, class, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, struggles over the environment, global warming, severe climate change, the sharply unequal distribution of the earth resources (20 percent of the world's peoples own 80 percent of its resources, consume two-thirds of its food, and are responsible for 75 percent of its ongoing pollution, with this leading to two billion of earth's peoples living relatively affluent lives while four billion still live on the edge of hunger and immiseration, to the dynamic of overconsumption on the part of the rich techno-industrial North paralleled by that of overpopulation on the part of the dispossessed poor, still partly agrarian worlds of the South4)—these are all differing facets of the central ethnoclass Man vs. Human struggle. Central to this struggle also is the usually excluded and invisibilized situation of the category identified by Zygmunt Bauman as the "New Poor" (Bauman 1987). That is, as a category defined at the global level by refugee/economic migrants stranded outside the gates of the rich countries, as the postcolonial variant of Fanon's category of les damnés (Fanon 1963)—with this category in the United States coming to comprise the criminalized majority Black and dark-skinned Latino inner-city males now made to man the rapidly expanding prison-industrial complex, together with their female peers—the kicked-about Welfare Moms—with both being part of the ever-expanding global, transracial category of the homeless/the jobless, the semi-jobless, the criminalized drug-offending prison population. So that if we see this category of the damnés that is internal to (and interned within) the prison system of the United States as the analog form of a global archipelago, constituted by the Third- and Fourth-World peoples of the so-called "underdeveloped" areas of the world—most totally of all by the peoples of the continent of Africa (now stricken with AIDS, drought, and ongoing civil wars, and whose bottommost place as the most impoverished of all the earth's continents is directly paralleled by the situation of its Black Diaspora peoples, with Haiti being produced and reproduced as the most impoverished nation of the Americas)—a systemic pattern emerges. This pattern is linked to the fact that while in the post-sixties United States, as Herbert Gans noted recently, the Black population group, of all the multiple groups comprising the post-sixties social hierarchy, has once again come to be placed at the bottommost place of that hierarchy (Gans, 1999), with all incoming new nonwhite/non-Black groups, as Gans's fellow sociologist Andrew Hacker (1992) earlier pointed out, coming to claim "normal" North American identity by the putting of visible distance between themselves and the Black population group (in effect, claiming "normal" human status by distancing themselves from the group that is still made to occupy the nadir, "nigger" rung of being human within the terms of our present ethnoclass Man's overrepresentation of its "descriptive statement" ~Bateson 1969~ as if it were that of the human itself), then the struggle of our times, one that has hitherto had no name, is the struggle against this overrepresentation. As a struggle whose first phase, the Argument proposes, was first put in place (if only for a brief hiatus before being coopted, reterritorialized ~Godzich 1986~) by the multiple anticolonial social-protest movements and intellectual challenges of the period to which we give the name, "The Sixties." The further proposal here is that, although the brief hiatus during which the sixties' large-scale challenge based on multiple issues, multiple local terrains of struggles (local struggles against, to use Mignolo's felicitous phrase, a "global design" ~Mignolo 2000~) erupted was soon to be erased, several of the issues raised then would continue to be articulated, some in sanitized forms (those pertaining to the category defined by Bauman as "the seduced"), others in more harshly intensified forms (those pertaining to Bauman's category of the "repressed" ~Bauman 1987~). Both forms of "sanitization" would, however, function in the same manner as the lawlike effects of the post-sixties'vigorous discursive and institutional re-elaboration of the central overrepresentation, which enables the interests, reality, and well-being of the empirical human world to continue to be imperatively subordinated to those of the now globally hegemonic ethnoclass world of "Man." This, in the same way as in an earlier epoch and before what Howard Winant identifies as the "immense historical rupture" of the "Big Bang" processes that were to lead to a contemporary modernity defined by the "rise of the West" and the "subjugation of the rest of us" (Winant 1994)—before, therefore, the secularizing intellectual revolution of Renaissance humanism, followed by the decentralizing religious heresy of the Protestant Reformation and the rise of the modern state—the then world of laymen and laywomen, including the institution of the political state, as well as those of commerce and of economic production, had remained subordinated to that of the post-Gregorian Reform Church of Latin-Christian Europe (Le Goff 1983), and therefore to the "rules of the social order" and the theories "which gave them sanction" (See Konrad and Szelenyi guide-quote), as these rules were articulated by its theologians and implemented by its celibate clergy (See Le Goff guide-quote). | 1/15/17 |
JANFEB - Harvard Westlake R6 NCTournament: Harvard Westlake | Round: 6 | Opponent: Meadows ER | Judge: David Dosch 1-offInterp: The aff must defend that all constitutionally protected speech in all venues ought not be restricted by public colleges or universities. To clarify, they can't defend removing a specific restriction on speech. 2-offCP Text:
| 1/16/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford Octas NCTournament: Stanford | Round: Octas | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Kadie, Hunt, Haas 1-offA. Interpretation: the affirmative may not defend the resolution in one specific public college or university or set of public colleges and universities 3-offCounterplan text: The United States federal government should establish congressional oversight over the National Insider Threat Policy. Status is unconditional.The CP's oversight is key to allowing whistleblowers to criticize the military and resolves the chilling effect that stops them from coming outCanterbury 14 (Angela, Director of Public Policy, "POGO's Angela Canterbury testifies on "Limitless Surveillance at the FDA: Protecting the Rights of Federal Whistleblowers" February 26, 2014, pg online @ http://www.pogo.org/our-work/testimony/2014/pogos-angela-canterbury-testifies.html um-ef) The Insiders Threat program affects thousands of military personnel preventing an effective check of military policiesGoztola 16 ~Kevin Goztola, managing editor of Shadowproof Press, "'Insider Threat' Program: Hundred Thousand Pentagon Personnel Under Total Surveillance," Common Dreams, January 8, 2016, http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/01/08/insider-threat-program-hundred-thousand-pentagon-personnel-under-total-surveillance~~ JW Solves the case – creates Congressional oversight that prevents militaristic overreach of powerGoodman 13 4-offBrackets are for offensive language Currently military academies are successfully implementing policies that combat sexual assault and stigma. Increased reporting indicates they are working.Baldor and Elliot 16 ~LOLITA C. BALDOR and DAN ELLIOTT, Associated Press, "Pentagon: Reports of sexual assaults at major military academies surged in 2014-15 school year," US News, Jan. 8, 2016, http://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2016-01-08/reports-of-sexual-assaults-spike-at-military-academies~~ JW Permitting free speech on military academies opens the flood gate for toxic militaristic discourse about sexual assaultWitte 15 ~Brian Witte, writer at the Baltimore Sun, "Civilian Naval Academy professor sues Navy over free speech," the Baltimore Sun, November 5, 2015, http://www.baltimoresun.com/g00/news/maryland/bs-md-bruce-fleming-naval-academy-lawsuit-20151105-story.html?i10c.referrer=~~ JW This kind of discourse is exactly what justifies a culture of rape in militaries that affirms a violent misogynist power structureLucero 15 ~Gabriel Lucero, Master of Public Policy and Juris Doctor candidate at Duke University Sanford School of Public Policy and School of Law, "Military Sexual Assault: Reporting and Rape Culture," Sanford Journal of Public Policy, Vol. 6 No. 1 (Winter 2015), 1–32~ JW Turns the affNeg advocacy text: I defend a world where we maintain status quo restrictions on constitutionally protected speech on military colleges and where we implement the CP. | 2/13/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford Quarters NCTournament: Stanford | Round: Quarters | Opponent: Sunset AB | Judge: Tambe, Kadie, Dadah 1-offA. Interpretation: The affirmative must defend that a hypothetical world where public colleges and universities implement the resolution.CaseO/V —- The 1a premise of rupturing the state/subject distinction is uniquely problematic in the context of individuals who NEED the state in order for their lives to be effective and for in order fairness – if we show why their method is problematic for those that need the government who are oppressed and why their method harms fairness – either of these reasons means you negate Racism ShellTURN — Debate is counterproductive without policies – the entire premise of the 1ac is based upon separating the subject from the state – our argument is that subjects are inherently tied to the state - Two impacts:1. The aff gives bigots free reign to say whatever hateful thing they want to minorities. Affirming definitionally increases the number of times minorities hear hate speech, which causes minorities to internalize hate. The impact is disasterous:Delgado and Stefacic 09, Richard Delgado - University Professor, Seattle University School of Law; J.D., 1974, University of California, Berkeley. Jean Stefancic – Research Professor, Seattle University School of Law; M.A., 1989, University of San Francisco. "FOUR OBSERVATIONS ABOUT HATE SPEECH." WAKE FOREST LAW REVIEW. 2009. http://wakeforestlawreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Delgado_LawReview_01.09.pdf, Turns the aff2. their method fundamentally excluded black people who cannot "become" in a world marked by structural violence.Decadence Shell:I. The 1ac cannot just say vote aff as a thought experiment – this is fundamentally subjective and destroys the ability for us to engage an actual world of the 1ac – turns their subjectivity arguments since we are showing why subjectivity in the context of vote aff for pre fiat reasons is badLewis Gordon 06—professor at philosophy, African and Judiac Studies at University of Connecticut Storrs—2006 (Disciplinary Decadence: Living Thought in Trying Times, p 28-29) II. Decadence allows the colonization of methods – turns the caseLewis Gordon 14—professor of philosophy, African and Judiac Studies at the University of Connecticut—2014 ("Disciplinary Decadence and the Decolonization of Knowledge," Africa Development 39.1: 81-92, 88). | 2/16/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford R2 NCTournament: Stanford | Round: 2 | Opponent: Oakwood SM | Judge: Inbar Grava 1-offA. Uniqueness: Federal funding for colleges and universities is growing now and has been increasing for several yearsCamera 16 ~Lauren Camera, education reporter at US News, "Federal Education Funding: Where Does the Money Go?" US News, Jan. 14, 2016, http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/data-mine/2016/01/14/federal-education-funding-where-does-the-money-go~~ JW B. Title IX requires colleges to restrict constitutionally protected speech or lose federal funding.Fire 16, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Department of Justice: Title IX Requires Violating First Amendment, 2016, https://www.thefire.org/department-of-justice-title-ix-requires-violating-first-amendment/ Federal funding is critical for college operations, especially financial aidPew 15 (The Pew Charitable Trusts – compiles evidence and non-partisan analysis to inform the public and create better public policy, "Federal and State Funding of Higher Education: A Changing Landscape", http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2015/06/federal-and-state-funding-of-higher-education)** C. Benefactors will quit funding colleges if all speech is protectedMacDonald 05, G. Jeffrey MacDonald Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor. Donors: too much say on campus speech? ; Colleges feel more pressure from givers who want to help determine who'll be speaking on campus. The Christian Science Monitor ~Boston, Mass~ 10 Feb 2005: 11. ~Premier~ D. ImpactCuts to funding for higher ed and financial aid hampers college access, especially for students from low-income or minority backgrounds. This is a huge economic blow because college degrees reduce poverty, crime and a laundry list of impacts.Mitchell et al 16 (Report published by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; authors were Michael Mitchell (State Budget and Tax), Michael Leachman (State Budget and Tax), and Kathleen Masterson, "Funding Down, Tuition Up: State Cuts to Higher Education Threaten Quality and Affordability at Public Colleges", http://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/funding-down-tuition-up, o/w | 2/12/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford R4 NCTournament: Stanford | Round: 4 | Opponent: Lake Highland SS | Judge: Jackson Lallas 1A) Interp—all debaters with minimally 1 bid round must disclose at least the following from all AC's and NC's read at TOC bid distributing tournaments: first, complete tag lines to all cards; second, first 3 words and last 3 words of all cards; third, the standard used to delineate what counts as offense and not offense with the claims to the warrants for that standard and fourth, taglines to all evidence read.B) Violation- You don't have a wiki. You also got to the bid round of strake.2The politics of the 1AC removes safe spaces on college campuses – this impact turns and outweighs the case – safe spaces are uniquely key for marginalized communities to come together and actually engage in conversations about identityPickett 16 RaeAnn Pickett. August 31st 2016. Pickett is senior director of communications and public Affairs at the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health and a Ms. Foundation Public Voices Fellows. Trigger Warnings and Safe Spaces Are Necessary. Published by TIME. Forcing minorities to confront racial microaggressions without any other form of recourse or retreat induces racial "battle fatigue" that translates into actual material harmsSmith et al 07 ~William A. Smith University of Utah Walter R. Allen University of California, Los Angeles Lynette L. Danley University of Utah, ""Assume the Position . . . You Fit the Description" Psychosocial Experiences and Racial Battle Fatigue Among African American Male College Students," American Behavioral Scientist, 2007~ JW Racial battle fatigue turns the case: minorities are shut out of conversations and are never treated as an equal participant in the discussionSmith et al 07 ~William A. Smith University of Utah Walter R. Allen University of California, Los Angeles Lynette L. Danley University of Utah, ""Assume the Position . . . You Fit the Description" Psychosocial Experiences and Racial Battle Fatigue Among African American Male College Students," American Behavioral Scientist, 2007~ JW The roll of the ballot is to endorse the debater with the best methodology to liberate the oppressed. The necessity to make debate safe and liberating for all is a precondition to substance.Teehan 14 Ryan Teehan (qualified to 2014 TOC) Comment on "2014 Tournament of Champions Student Protest" NSD Update April 26th 2014 http://nsdupdate.com/2014/04/26/nsd-update-coverage-toc-2014/ Thus, the alternative – safe spaces that are currently in the status quo should remain where they are. The negative cannot fiat more safe spaces will occur – but our method in the kritik is affirming the tangibility and productivity that safe spaces provide to black students on colleges campuses.Okeke 16 narrates her experience Okeke ,Cameron .I'm a black UChicago graduate. Safe spaces got me through college. Cameron Okeke is currently earning a master's in bioethics at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Berman Institute of Bioethics in Baltimore, Maryland. His views are his own and do not represent those of the institution he currently attends. Aug 29, 2016 http://www.vox.com/2016/8/29/12692376/university-chicago-safe-spaces-defense | 2/12/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford R5 NCTournament: Stanford | Round: 5 | Opponent: Harvard Westlake JN | Judge: Scott Nielson 1-offInterp: The aff must defend that all constitutionally protected speech in all venues ought not be restricted by public colleges or universities. To clarify, they can't defend removing a specific restriction on speech. 2-offInterp: Debaters must read an explicitly labeled standard or role of the ballot text in the 1AC, specify whether it's ends or means based, and link their offense to it. 3-offCP Text: Public colleges and universities in the United States ought not restrict any constitutionally protected journalistic speech except in instances of plagiarismSPLC 15 ~Student Press Law Center, advocate for student First Amendment rights, for freedom of online speech, and for open government on campus, "Avoiding plagiarism in the student media," August 31, 2015, http://www.splc.org/article/2015/08/avoiding-plagiarism-in-the-student-media~~ JW Some university publications don't have external accountability which leads to educationally bankrupt journalism and an inability to check journalismWSN 16, WSN Editorial Board, 2016, Fake News Problem Includes Quack Journalism, http://www.nyunews.com/2016/12/01/fake-news-problem-includes-quack-journalism/ The sale of academic writing, although blatant plagiarism, is speech protected by the first amendmentDuke Law Journal 73, Term Paper Companies and the Constitution, 1973, 1275-1317 (1974) Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dlj/vol22/iss6/3 Plagiarism harms the academic environment in universitiesColantuono ~Florence Colantuono, "Academic Plagiarism." Explorable.~ | 2/12/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford Semis NCTournament: Stanford | Round: Semis | Opponent: North Hollywood JS | Judge: Tambe, Hunt, Fife 1-offA. Interp: The affirmative may not defend another country in which to implement the resolution besides the United States of America. To clarify, all actions must occur within the United States of America and not another country. 2-offPart 1 is Links
Part 2 is Impacts
Part 3 is the altThe alternative is to reject the 1AC's representations and to entirely withdraw from the logic of capital—individual criticism is key to solve. The AFF uniquely coopts the movement. Part 4 is FrameworkThe role of the judge is to resist capitalism. Question their scholarship prior to the consequences of the plan.
| 2/16/17 |
JANFEB - Stanford Triples NCTournament: Stanford | Round: Triples | Opponent: University HS JC | Judge: Kaya, Gray, Pothamsetty 1-offK – Black Safe Spaces (2:50)Imagine being stuck in a sort of vertigo that seems as if you have no where to go, no where to hide, no where to just be with people who understand your struggle – this is the analysis the 1AC fundamentally misses and affirms for more free speech – safe spaces on college campuses are necessary and needed to help black students deal with being black.Tyler Kingkade Lilly Workneh Ryan Grenoble Nov 16th, 2015 Campus Racism Protests Didn't Come Out Of Nowhere, And They Aren't Going Away Quickly Mizzou seems to have catalyzed years of tension over inequality and race. Senior Editor/Reporter, The Huffington Post, Senior Black Voices Editor, The Huffington Post News Editor, The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/campus-racism-protests-didnt-come-out-of-nowhere_us_56464a87e4b08cda3488bfb Forcing minorities to confront racial microaggressions without any other form of recourse or retreat induces racial "battle fatigue" that translates into actual material harmsSmith et al 07 ~William A. Smith University of Utah Walter R. Allen University of California, Los Angeles Lynette L. Danley University of Utah, ""Assume the Position . . . You Fit the Description" Psychosocial Experiences and Racial Battle Fatigue Among African American Male College Students," American Behavioral Scientist, 2007~ JW Racial battle fatigue turns the case:The politics of the 1AC removes safe spaces on college campuses – this impact turns and outweighs the case – safe spaces are uniquely key for marginalized communities to come together and actually engage in conversations about identityPickett 16 RaeAnn Pickett. August 31st 2016. Pickett is senior director of communications and public Affairs at the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health and a Ms. Foundation Public Voices Fellows. Trigger Warnings and Safe Spaces Are Necessary. Published by TIME. The roll of the ballot is to endorse the debater with the best methodology to liberate the oppressed. Debate should deal with the real-world consequences of oppression.Curry 14, Tommy, The Cost of a Thing: A Kingian Reformulation of a Living Wage Argument in the 21st Century, Victory Briefs, 2014, Class-analysis that attempts to eschew identity politics is just a ruse for white middle class males to paternalistically lead non-white people in the glory of the revolution. It is an invisible form of white messianism that slips identity through the back door or anti-capitalist movements. Ross 2kRoss 2000 ~Marlon B., Professor, Department of English and Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies, "Commentary: Pleasuring Identity, or the Delicious Politics of Belonging," New Literary History, Vol. 31, No. 4, pages 840-841~ The roll of the judge is to be a critical educatorThus, the alternative – safe spaces that are currently in the status quo should remain where they are. The negative cannot fiat more safe spaces will occur – but our method in the kritik is affirming the tangibility and productivity that safe spaces provide to black students on colleges campuses.Okeke 16 | 2/13/17 |
NOVDEC - Damus R1 NCTournament: Damus | Round: 1 | Opponent: Harker AC | Judge: Michael OKrent 1-offJudges usually wouldn't rule on the cases prevented by qualified immunity, since there's no stated compensable claim for relief, but ending qualified immunity would force defendents to go to trial—the aff world sees the same net effect after a protracted legal battle, so it clogs the courts for no reason at all.Putnam and Ferris 92 ~Charles T. Putnam ~Senior Assistant Attorney General, New Hampshire~ and Charles T. Ferris ~JD, Franklin Pierce Law Center~, "Defending a Maligned Defense: The Policy Bases of the Qual- ified Immunity Defense in Actions Under 42 USC 1983," Bridgeport Law Review, Vol. 12, 1992~ Limiting QI clogs the courts – empirically confirmed – best study., Noll 8'Noll, David L. "Qualified Immunity in Limbo: Rights, Procedure, and the Social Costs of Damages Litigation Against Public Officials." NYUL Rev. 83 (2008): 911 All of these impacts are supercharged by the fact that police don't pay legal fees, are unaware of complains and potential liability doesn't alter actions.De Stefan 16 ~Lindsey de Stefan, ~JD Candidate, Seton Hall University School of Law~, "No Man is Above the Law and No Man is Below It: How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct," Seton Hall Law Student Scholarship, July 26, 2016 (2017 Academic Year)~ This means the aff needlessly clogs the courts without accessing the net beenfits of the aff. Court clog undermines just enforcement of laws—turns the case by encouraging subjective applicationBannon 13 ~Alicia Bannon (serves as counsel for the Brennan Center's Democracy Program, where her work focuses on judicial selection and promoting fair and impartial courts. Ms. Bannon also previously served as a Liman Fellow and Counsel in the Brennan Center's Justice Program. J.D. from Yale Law School in 2007, where she was a Comments Editor of the Yale Law Journal). "Testimony: More Judges Needed in Federal Courts." Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law. September 10, 2013~ 2-offCP Text: The United States Federal Government should mandate that all police officers wear body cameras. Status is .CP solves material impacts of case—empirics prove body cameras massively reduce violence.Feige 15 ~David Feige, television writer and the author of Indefensible and spent 15 years as a public defender "Brutal Reality: When police wear body cameras, citizens are much safer," Slate, April 10, 2015, http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2015/04/police_body_cameras_cops_commit_less_violence_and_complaints_are_real.html~~ JW 3-offIf the resolution is permissible but not obligatory, you negate because ought implies a moral obligation, and obligations are disproven when the action is simply permissible because if not taking the action is also permissible, the action itself can't be obligatory. Substantive reasons for presumption come first because any little bit of offense on the flow means I'm a little bit ahead Next, the moral judgment of any action requires an assessment of capacity—agents can only be deemed culpable for failing to do something they could have done otherwise .Streumer ~Bart. Reasons and Impossibility, 2004~ A. Officer conduct in high-stress situations is instinctive, not based on free will- empirics proveRoss 13 ~Assessing Lethal Force Liability Decisions and Human Factors Research Darrell L. Ross, PhD, Professor and Department Head, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice, and Director of The Center of Applied Social Sciences, Valdosta State University~ C. Bad decisions result from inadequate training—departments, not officers, are at fault.Holland 15 ~Joshua Holland, Are We Training Cops to be Hyper-Aggressive Warriors, 2015~ Case1. Terminal defense on solvency- police don't pay legal fees, are unaware of complains and potential liability doesn't alter actions.De Stefan 16 ~Lindsey de Stefan, ~JD Candidate, Seton Hall University School of Law~, "No Man is Above the Law and No Man is Below It: How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct," Seton Hall Law Student Scholarship, July 26, 2016 (2017 Academic Year)~ 2. Terminal Defense- The Supreme Court will limit constitutional rights to compensate for removing Qualified ImmunityFallon 11 ~Richard H. Fallon, Jr., (The Ralph S. Tyler, Jr. Professor of Law, Harvard Law School). "Asking the Right Questions About Officer Immunity." 80 Fordham L. Rev. 479 (2011). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr/vol80/iss2/3~~ | 11/6/16 |
NOVDEC - Damus R3 NCTournament: Damus | Round: 3 | Opponent: Marlborough MC | Judge: Panny Shan 1-off====Litigation is high now- limiting qualified immunity explodes the amount of cases, chilling police officers and increasing crime. ==== Second, increasing liability decreases police morale and makes them less likely to police actively.Leeuwen 16: ~Sean Van Leeuwen, Post June 23,2016, "Political rushes to judgement hurt public safety," Sean Van Leeuwen is Vice President of Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs~ Most black homicide victims are killed by criminals, not police.MacDonald 16 ~Heather MacDonald (writer of The War on Cops, drawing from Washington Post statistics on police killings from 2015), "Black and Unarmed: Behind the Numbers," the Marshall Project (a non-partisan, non-profit group dedicated to criminal justice reform), February 8, 2016~ 2-offJudges usually wouldn't rule on the cases prevented by qualified immunity, since there's no stated compensable claim for relief, but ending qualified immunity would force defendents to go to trial—the aff world sees the same net effect after a protracted legal battle, so it clogs the courts for no reason at all.Putnam and Ferris 92 ~Charles T. Putnam ~Senior Assistant Attorney General, New Hampshire~ and Charles T. Ferris ~JD, Franklin Pierce Law Center~, "Defending a Maligned Defense: The Policy Bases of the Qual- ified Immunity Defense in Actions Under 42 USC 1983," Bridgeport Law Review, Vol. 12, 1992~ Limiting QI clogs the courts – empirically confirmed – best study., Noll 8'Noll, David L. "Qualified Immunity in Limbo: Rights, Procedure, and the Social Costs of Damages Litigation Against Public Officials." NYUL Rev. 83 (2008): 911 Court clog turns case- Overburdened courts hamper effective representation—longer jail times, conviction of innocents, and racial biases means worse injustice. | 11/7/16 |
NOVDEC - Damus R6 NCTournament: Damus | Round: 6 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake JaNa | Judge: Dan Miyamoto 1-offPLAN FLAW - The use of the word will in the plan causes uncertainty—we don't know when the aff happens, if it happens at allBishop 11 ~Keith R. Bishop - California Commissioner of Corporations and Interim Savings and Loan Commissioner, currently partner at Allen Matkins' Corporate Law Group: "When Shall/Will/Must/May We Meet Again?" California Corporate Law 11/29/11; http://calcorporatelaw.com/2011/11/when-shallwillmustmay-we-meet-again/~~** 2. Empirically proven- small mistakes have huge legislative consequences.Heath 06 ~Brad, USA Today, 11-21-06, http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-11-20-typo-problems_x.htm~~** 3. Language norms matter—they affect portability of education and the advocacy skills we develop, and the impact is magnified in legal settingsMiller no date ~Maureen Miller (South African Freelancers' Association and the Professional Editors' Group. Maureen is currently freelance sub-editor of South African Airways' in-flight magazine, Sawubona, and has sub-edited the Johannesburg Tourism Company magazine, SoJoburg). "The Importance of Grammar."~ 2-offFirst link- Limiting qualified immunity harms police effectiveness—they have to spend additional time in courtRosen 05 ~Michael, Attorney in San Diego, JD Harvard Law, A Qualified Defense: In Support of the Doctrine of Qualified Immunity in Excessive Force Cases, With Some Suggestions for its Improvement.~ Second, increasing liability decreases police morale and makes them less likely to police actively.Leeuwen 16: ~Sean Van Leeuwen, Post June 23,2016, "Political rushes to judgement hurt public safety," Sean Van Leeuwen is Vice President of Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs~ Chilling police action causes a homicide spike—empirically provenFelton et al 16 ~Ryan, Lois Beckett, Jamiles Lartey, 'Ferguson Effect' is a plausible reason for spike in violent US crime, study says, 2016~ Most black homicide victims are killed by criminals, not police.MacDonald 16 ~Heather MacDonald (writer of The War on Cops, drawing from Washington Post statistics on police killings from 2015), "Black and Unarmed: Behind the Numbers," the Marshall Project (a non-partisan, non-profit group dedicated to criminal justice reform), February 8, 2016~ 3-offPolice reform solves the aff and it's happening right now—maintaining the squo is key to improvementsKaste 9/22 ~Martin Kaste, 9-22-2016, "Police Reform Is Happening, But It's Hard To Track," NPR.org~ Limiting qualified immunity is counterproductive—it paints all officers with the same brush, decreasing internal motivation within police departments by making reform seem impossible.Leeuwen 16: ~Sean Van Leeuwen, Post June 23,2016, "Political rushes to judgement hurt public safety," Sean Van Leeuwen is Vice President of Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs~ 4-offThe moral judgment of any action requires an assessment of capacity—agents can only be deemed culpable for failing to do something they could have done otherwise .Streumer ~Bart. Reasons and Impossibility, 2004~ A. Officer conduct in high-stress situations is instinctive, not based on free will- empirics proveRoss 13 ~Assessing Lethal Force Liability Decisions and Human Factors Research Darrell L. Ross, PhD, Professor and Department Head, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice, and Director of The Center of Applied Social Sciences, Valdosta State University~ C. Bad decisions result from inadequate training—departments, not officers, are at fault.Holland 15 ~Joshua Holland, Are We Training Cops to be Hyper-Aggressive Warriors, 2015~ 5-offCounterplan text: The United States Federal government should introduce CompStat technology into departments and use it to track police misconduct. The counterplan holds police accountable with a centralized police process that ensures individual decision making play less of a role. Takes the perm because qualified immunity because that holds individual police officers accountable, which tanks the counterplan. CaseSolvencyLiability doesn't affect police conduct- empirically provenSchwartz 14 ~Joanna C. Schwartz, ~Assistant Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law~, "Police Indemnification," New York University Law Review, Vol. 89, 2014~ Indemnification is the root cause— even if police weren't immune, they still wouldn't have to pay legal fees.De Stefan 16 ~Lindsey de Stefan, ~JD Candidate, Seton Hall University School of Law~, "No Man is Above the Law and No Man is Below It: How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct," Seton Hall Law Student Scholarship, July 26, 2016 (2017 Academic Year)~ Most section 1983 claims get thrown out of court anyway—there's no stated compensable claim for relief in the majority of cases.Putnam and Ferris 92 ~Charles T. Putnam ~Senior Assistant Attorney General, New Hampshire~ and Charles T. Ferris ~JD, Franklin Pierce Law Center~, "Defending a Maligned Defense: The Policy Bases of the Qual- ified Immunity Defense in Actions Under 42 USC 1983," Bridgeport Law Review, Vol. 12, 1992~ Police departments rarely look into info surrounding suits. No solvencySchwartz Juries love cops, so it's more likely that they won't deliver a guilty verdict. Ruse of solvency. Patton 92Patton, Alison "Endless Cycle of Abuse: Why 42 USC 1983 Is Ineffective in Deterring Police Brutality, The." (1992): Police departments rarely look into info surrounding suits. No solvencySchwartz AT De Stefan 16Most Americans are already confident in the police system despite events like Ferguson. The African-Americans who don't trust the system have already been so long disenfranchised that the aff is too little too late.Jones 15 ~ Jeffrey M. Jones, "In U.S., Confidence in Police Lowest in 22 Years," Gallup, June 19, 2015, http://www.gallup.com/poll/183704/confidence-police-lowest-years.aspx~~ JW | 11/9/16 |
NOVDEC - Glenbrooks R2 NCTournament: Glenbrooks | Round: 2 | Opponent: Apple Valley CR | Judge: Bennett Eckert 1-offInterpretation: The affirmative may only fiat limiting qualified immunity for police officers; it may not also fiat overturning Sheehan and allowing the police to be sued under the ADA. To clarify, the plan text, i.e. the policy the aff proposes, can only be to limit qualified immunity, not to limit QI AND overturning Sheehan and allowing the police to be sued under the ADA The affirmative is extra-topical. Two warrants:1. PART OF THE SOLVENCY COMES FROM CREATING THE ABILITY TO SUE POLICE UNDER THE ADA. AFFIRMING REQUIRES APPLYING THE ADA TO ARRESTS, AN APPROACH THAT NOT ALL COURTS SUPPORT. Auner 16Thomas J. Auner (JD at Loyola Law), For the Protection of Society's Most Vulnerable, the ADA Should Apply to Arrests, 49 Loy. L.A. L. Rev. 335 (2016) 2. OVERRULING THE SHEEHAN DECISION IS EXTRA TOPICAL. IT INVOLVES MORE THAN THE QUESTION OF QI. THE QUESTION IS ABOUT WHETHER POLICE HAVE TO MODIFY PROCEDURES FOR THOSE WITH DISABILITIES. ACLU 15ACLU, 2/13/15, https://www.aclu.org/cases/city-and-county-san-francisco-v-sheehan, City and County San Francisco vs. Sheehan. Standards:1. Ground. Explodes ground because the aff will get infinite arguments they can add with extra-T. This means the neg can never prepare a coherent strategy since a)they don't know what the aff will read and b) the neg doesn't know what the aff can access and perm. A bad division of ground steals our fairness because it gives one side more argumentative options.2. Limits. Extra topicality kills limits because the aff can just arbitrarily add stuff onto the resolution, justifying infinite possible affs. You can literally get rid of any bad law under their interp, which also proves quality of ground since they always pick something that clearly affirms. This means the aff can just read anything that doesn't affirm. Limits key to fairness because without limits the aff could just be infinitely abusive. Also key to jurisdiction because it sets up what the judge can vote on.3. Jurisdiction. If you are defending something that is outside the scope of the topic, then the judge is not voting on the resolution, rather something else that is different. So they cannot actually affirm.4. Topical version of the aff solves all your discussion offense:a) either defend whole res and make arguments about why limiting QI gives disabled people more recourse or chills violence against themb) Defend adhering to certain restrictions of ADA but don't defend the 2 planks that are extra-T isolated above.
3. Jurisdiction is a constraint on fairness and education—absent a topical advocacy, it becomes impossible to affirm the resolution since you are endorsing something else which is a reason to negate since it means that something that isn't the resolution is good.4. Drop the debater 2-offA. Link—aff solvency is reliant on more litigation against police officers. Either the aff has no solvency or they link to this DA. Increased litigation concerning police misconduct drains city budgets.Elinson and Frosch 15 ~Zusha Elinson and Dan Frosch, Cost of Police-Misconduct Cases Soars in Big U.S. Cities, WSJ, 7-15-2015~ B. Impact: Municipal financial struggles are the root cause of overpolicingGraeber 15 ~David Graeber (London School of Economics, the author of Debt: The First 5,000 Years, Towards an Anthropological Theory of Value, Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion, and Desire, and Direct Action: An Ethnography, "Ferguson and the Criminalization of American Life," Gawker 3/19/2015~ This overpolicing disproportionately harms African-AmericansNatapoff 15 ~Alexandra Natapoff, PhD, "The Cost of "Quality of Life" Policing," Washington Post, November 11, 2015~ 3-offCP Text: The United States Federal Government should mandate that all police officers wear body cameras. Status is .CP solves material impacts of case—empirics prove body cameras massively reduce violence.Feige 15 ~David Feige, television writer and the author of Indefensible and spent 15 years as a public defender "Brutal Reality: When police wear body cameras, citizens are much safer," Slate, April 10, 2015, http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2015/04/police_body_cameras_cops_commit_less_violence_and_complaints_are_real.html~~ JW CaseFWSolvency1. Terminal defense on solvency- police don't pay legal fees, are unaware of complains and potential liability doesn't alter actions.De Stefan 16 ~Lindsey de Stefan, ~JD Candidate, Seton Hall University School of Law~, "No Man is Above the Law and No Man is Below It: How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct," Seton Hall Law Student Scholarship, July 26, 2016 (2017 Academic Year)~ 2. Turn- The Supreme Court will limit constitutional rights to compensate for removing Qualified Immunity, empirics prove.Fallon 11 ~Richard H. Fallon, Jr., (The Ralph S. Tyler, Jr. Professor of Law, Harvard Law School). "Asking the Right Questions About Officer Immunity." 80 Fordham L. Rev. 479 (2011). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr/vol80/iss2/3~~ 3. TURN- The aff obscures the root cause of violence—punishing individual officers can't solveCarbado 16 ~Carbado, Devon and Patrick Rock. "What exposes African Americans to police violence?" Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, vol. 51, 2016~ 4. Terminal defense—liability doesn't affect police conduct- empirically provenSchwartz 14 ~Joanna C. Schwartz, ~Assistant Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law~, "Police Indemnification," New York University Law Review, Vol. 89, 2014~ TURN- The aff expands the power of the state, they can claim the courts are flooded and dismiss the cases they know they'll lose, this effectively makes every officer immune. Empirically proven in prisons.Dunn 16 ~DUNN, ASHLEY. "Flood Of Prisoner Rights Suits Brings Effort To Limit Filings". Nytimes.com. N. p., 2016. Web. 20 Oct. 2016~ | 11/20/16 |
NOVDEC - Glenbrooks R3 NCTournament: Glenbrooks | Round: 3 | Opponent: Scarsdale GZ | Judge: Alex Tisher 1-off – theoryUncondo route badInterpretation: Aff cannot read a theory spike in the AC that says "neg must have only one unconditional route to the ballot," if they are willing to defend their advocacy 2-off DAA. Link—aff solvency is reliant on more litigation against police officers. Either the aff has no solvency or they link to this DA. Increased litigation concerning police misconduct drains city budgets.Elinson and Frosch 15 ~Zusha Elinson and Dan Frosch, Cost of Police-Misconduct Cases Soars in Big U.S. Cities, WSJ, 7-15-2015~ B. Impact: Municipal financial struggles are the root cause of overpolicingGraeber 15 ~David Graeber (London School of Economics, the author of Debt: The First 5,000 Years, Towards an Anthropological Theory of Value, Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion, and Desire, and Direct Action: An Ethnography, "Ferguson and the Criminalization of American Life," Gawker 3/19/2015~ This overpolicing disproportionately harms African-AmericansNatapoff 15 ~Alexandra Natapoff, PhD, "The Cost of "Quality of Life" Policing," Washington Post, November 11, 2015~ Overcriminalization disproportionately criminalizes the queer bodyLeavitt 12 ~Adrien Leavitt, JD- Magna Cum Laude, Seattle University 2011, BA- Smith College 2004, "Queering Jury Nullification: Using Jury Nullification as a Tool to Fight Against the Criminalization of Queer and Transgender People," Seattle Journal For Social Justice, Volume 10, Issue 2, April 2012~ 3-off NCOverview to your framework: prefer ideal theory—1. Motivation: Ideal theory cannot guide action since its starting point has diverged from the descriptive model of the real world. Non-ideal theory is key for ethical motivation. MILLS: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"A first possible argument might be the simple denial that moral theory should have any concern with making realistic assumptions about human beings, their capacities, and their behavior. Ethics is concerned with the ideal, so it doesn't have to worry about the actual. But even for mainstream ethics this wouldn't work, since, of course, ought is supposed to impl~ies~ can the ideal has to be achievable by humans. Nor could it seriously be cal imed that moral theory is concerned only with mapping beautiful ideals, not their actual implementation. If any ethicist actually said this, it would be an astonishing abdication of the classic goal of ethics, and its link with practical reason. The normative here would then be weirdly detached from the prescriptive: this is the good and the right—but we are not concerned with their actual realization. Even for Plato, a classic example in at least one sense of an ideal theorist, this was not the case: the Form of the Good was supposed to motivate us, and help philosophers transform society. Nor could anyone seriously say that ideal theory is a good way to approach ethics because as a matter of fact (not as a conceptual necessity following from what "model" or "ideal" means), the normative here has come ~is~ close to converging with the descriptive: ideal- as-descriptive-model has approximated to ideal-as-idealized-model. Obviously, the dreadful and dismaying course of human history has not remotely been a record of close-to-ideal behavior, but rather of behavior that has usually been quite the polar opposite of the ideal, with oppression and inequitable treatment of the majority of humanity (whether on grounds of gender, or nationality, or class, or religion, or race) being the norm. So the argument cannot be that as a matter of definitional truth, or factual irrelevance, or factual convergence, ideal theory is required. The argument has to be, as in the quote from Rawls above, that this is the best way of doing normative theory, better than all the other contenders. But why on earth should anyone think this? Why should anyone think that abstaining from theorizing about oppression and its consequences is the best way to bring about an end to oppression? Isn't this, on the face of it, just completely implausible?" 2. Descriptive Ideality: ideal theory ignores social realities, which in turn contradicts ideals. Normative ideals aren't created separately from the social norms that govern us because those influence what we can count as an ideal in the first place. MILLS 2: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"I suggest that this spontaneous reaction, far from being philosophically naïve or jejune, is in fact the correct one. If we start from what is presumably the uncontroversial premise that the ultimate point of ethics is to guide our actions and make ourselves better people and the world a better place, then the framework above will not only be unhelpful, but will in certain respects be deeply antithetical to the proper goal of theoretical ethics as an enterprise. In modeling humans, human capacities, human interaction, human institutions, and human society on ideal-as-idealized-models, in never exploring how deeply different this is from ideal-as-descriptive-models, we are abstracting away from realities crucial to our comprehension of the actual workings of injustice in human interactions and social institutions, and thereby guaranteeing that the ideal-as-idealized-model will never be achieved." (170) 3. Global justice requires a reduction in inequality and a focus on material rights.Okereke 07 ~Chukwumerije Okereke (Senior Research Associate at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia). Global Justice and Neoliberal Environmental Governance. Routledge 2007~ 4. No act omission distinction for states.Sunstein and Vermule 05~Cass R. Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule. The University of Chicago Law School. "Is Capital Punishment Morally Required? The Relevance of Life‐Life Tradeoffs." JOHN M. OLIN LAW and ECONOMICS WORKING PAPER NO. 239. The Chicago Working Paper Series. March 2005~ Case5. Kant fails—it can't weigh conflicts of duty. Collapses into consequentialismCummiskey 90, David, professor of philosophy at Bates College, Ph.D., "Kantian Consequentialism." 1990. http://www.bates.edu/Prebuilt/kantian.pdf | 11/20/16 |
NOVDEC - Glenbrooks R6 NCTournament: Glenbrooks | Round: 6 | Opponent: Harvard-Westlake EE | Judge: Rebecca Kuang 1-offInterpretation: Affirmatives that defend supreme court action must specify the test case used. 2-off: DAA. Link—aff solvency is reliant on more litigation against police officers. Either the aff has no solvency or they link to this DA. Increased litigation concerning police misconduct drains city budgets.Elinson and Frosch 15 ~Zusha Elinson and Dan Frosch, Cost of Police-Misconduct Cases Soars in Big U.S. Cities, WSJ, 7-15-2015~ B. Impact: Municipal financial struggles are the root cause of overpolicingGraeber 15 ~David Graeber (London School of Economics, the author of Debt: The First 5,000 Years, Towards an Anthropological Theory of Value, Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion, and Desire, and Direct Action: An Ethnography, "Ferguson and the Criminalization of American Life," Gawker 3/19/2015~ This overpolicing disproportionately harms African-AmericansNatapoff 15 ~Alexandra Natapoff, PhD, "The Cost of "Quality of Life" Policing," Washington Post, November 11, 2015~ 3-off: CPCounterplan Text: The United States Federal government shall introduce CompStat technology into police departments and use it to track police misconduct.
This stops misconduct and holds people accountable Hennelly 15, Robert, 2015 Statistically this decreases crime and holds police officers accountableChettiar 15, Inimai M. , 2015 Chettiar is the director of the Justice Program at New York University Law School's Brennan Center. "More Police, Managed More Effectively, Really Can Reduce Crime" The counterplan holds police accountable with a centralized police process that ensures individual decision making play less of a role. Takes the perm because qualified immunity because that holds individual police officers accountable, which tanks the counterplan.Willis et al 03, James, Stephen D. Mastrofski, David Weisburd. "COMPSTAT IN PRACTICE: AN IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS OF THREE CITIES", Police Foundation, pg 21-22. https://www.policefoundation.org/publication/compstat-in-practice-an-in-depth-analysis-of-three-cities/ Case AnswersPlan Flaws"Supreme Court" can also mean supreme courts of states. Not specifying "of the US" means it's unclear who you're referring toUS Legal ~US Legal, "State Supreme Courts," https://system.uslegal.com/state-supreme-courts/~~ JW 1. Jurisdiction: you have to vote on an aff that defends the right actor that makes sense. It's like saying "turtles should limit qualified immunity," meaning you're not actually affirming2. Not specifying means you can shift between various Supreme Courts and where you implement the plan3. Vagueness: kills legal edu benefits and solvencyAT Shapiro Spike
Solvency1. Terminal defense on solvency- police don't pay legal fees, are unaware of complains and potential liability doesn't alter actions.De Stefan 16 ~Lindsey de Stefan, ~JD Candidate, Seton Hall University School of Law~, "No Man is Above the Law and No Man is Below It: How Qualified Immunity Reform Could Create Accountability and Curb Widespread Police Misconduct," Seton Hall Law Student Scholarship, July 26, 2016 (2017 Academic Year)~ 2. Turn- The Supreme Court will limit constitutional rights to compensate for removing Qualified Immunity, empirics prove.Fallon 11 ~Richard H. Fallon, Jr., (The Ralph S. Tyler, Jr. Professor of Law, Harvard Law School). "Asking the Right Questions About Officer Immunity." 80 Fordham L. Rev. 479 (2011). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr/vol80/iss2/3~~ 3. Litigation is high now- limiting qualified immunity explodes the amount of cases, chilling police officers and increasing crime.
5. Terminal defense—liability doesn't affect police conduct- empirically provenSchwartz 14 ~Joanna C. Schwartz, ~Assistant Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law~, "Police Indemnification," New York University Law Review, Vol. 89, 2014~ | 11/20/16 |
NOVDEC - Glenbrooks R7 NCTournament: Glenbrooks | Round: 7 | Opponent: WDM Valley AJ | Judge: Chetan Hertzig 1-off NCOverview to your framework: prefer non- ideal theory—1. Motivation: Ideal theory cannot guide action since its starting point has diverged from the descriptive model of the real world. Non-ideal theory is key for ethical motivation. MILLS: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"A first possible argument might be the simple denial that moral theory should have any concern with making realistic assumptions about human beings, their capacities, and their behavior. Ethics is concerned with the ideal, so it doesn't have to worry about the actual. But even for mainstream ethics this wouldn't work, since, of course, ought is supposed to impl~ies~ can the ideal has to be achievable by humans. Nor could it seriously be cal imed that moral theory is concerned only with mapping beautiful ideals, not their actual implementation. If any ethicist actually said this, it would be an astonishing abdication of the classic goal of ethics, and its link with practical reason. The normative here would then be weirdly detached from the prescriptive: this is the good and the right—but we are not concerned with their actual realization. Even for Plato, a classic example in at least one sense of an ideal theorist, this was not the case: the Form of the Good was supposed to motivate us, and help philosophers transform society. Nor could anyone seriously say that ideal theory is a good way to approach ethics because as a matter of fact (not as a conceptual necessity following from what "model" or "ideal" means), the normative here has come ~is~ close to converging with the descriptive: ideal- as-descriptive-model has approximated to ideal-as-idealized-model. Obviously, the dreadful and dismaying course of human history has not remotely been a record of close-to-ideal behavior, but rather of behavior that has usually been quite the polar opposite of the ideal, with oppression and inequitable treatment of the majority of humanity (whether on grounds of gender, or nationality, or class, or religion, or race) being the norm. So the argument cannot be that as a matter of definitional truth, or factual irrelevance, or factual convergence, ideal theory is required. The argument has to be, as in the quote from Rawls above, that this is the best way of doing normative theory, better than all the other contenders. But why on earth should anyone think this? Why should anyone think that abstaining from theorizing about oppression and its consequences is the best way to bring about an end to oppression? Isn't this, on the face of it, just completely implausible?" 2. Descriptive Ideality: ideal theory ignores social realities, which in turn contradicts ideals. Normative ideals aren't created separately from the social norms that govern us because those influence what we can count as an ideal in the first place. MILLS 2: Charles W. Mills, "Ideal Theory" as Ideology, 2005"I suggest that this spontaneous reaction, far from being philosophically naïve or jejune, is in fact the correct one. If we start from what is presumably the uncontroversial premise that the ultimate point of ethics is to guide our actions and make ourselves better people and the world a better place, then the framework above will not only be unhelpful, but will in certain respects be deeply antithetical to the proper goal of theoretical ethics as an enterprise. In modeling humans, human capacities, human interaction, human institutions, and human society on ideal-as-idealized-models, in never exploring how deeply different this is from ideal-as-descriptive-models, we are abstracting away from realities crucial to our comprehension of the actual workings of injustice in human interactions and social institutions, and thereby guaranteeing that the ideal-as-idealized-model will never be achieved." (170) 3. Global justice requires a reduction in inequality and a focus on material rights.Okereke 07 ~Chukwumerije Okereke (Senior Research Associate at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia). Global Justice and Neoliberal Environmental Governance. Routledge 2007~ 4. No act omission distinction for states.Sunstein and Vermule 05~Cass R. Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule. The University of Chicago Law School. "Is Capital Punishment Morally Required? The Relevance of Life‐Life Tradeoffs." JOHN M. OLIN LAW and ECONOMICS WORKING PAPER NO. 239. The Chicago Working Paper Series. March 2005~ 5. Only consequences are relevant because the government is a collection of individuals so it doesn't have a unified intent. Even if it does there is no way to epistemologically access it. And, conflicting side constraints means that the state always violates rights with every action it takes. Only consequentialism solves because it assigns equal weights to all citizens rather than arbitrarily valuing certain people or procedural methods. Prefer government specific obligations because obligations differ by agent- surgeons have an obligation to cut open people while that would be repugnant for a normal person to do.2-off DAA. Link—aff solvency is reliant on more litigation against police officers. Either the aff has no solvency or they link to this DA. Increased litigation concerning police misconduct drains city budgets.Elinson and Frosch 15 ~Zusha Elinson and Dan Frosch, Cost of Police-Misconduct Cases Soars in Big U.S. Cities, WSJ, 7-15-2015~ B. Impact: Municipal financial struggles are the root cause of overpolicingGraeber 15 ~David Graeber (London School of Economics, the author of Debt: The First 5,000 Years, Towards an Anthropological Theory of Value, Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion, and Desire, and Direct Action: An Ethnography, "Ferguson and the Criminalization of American Life," Gawker 3/19/2015~ This overpolicing disproportionately harms African-AmericansNatapoff 15 ~Alexandra Natapoff, PhD, "The Cost of "Quality of Life" Policing," Washington Post, November 11, 2015~ Overcriminalization disproportionately criminalizes the queer bodyLeavitt 12 ~Adrien Leavitt, JD- Magna Cum Laude, Seattle University 2011, BA- Smith College 2004, "Queering Jury Nullification: Using Jury Nullification as a Tool to Fight Against the Criminalization of Queer and Transgender People," Seattle Journal For Social Justice, Volume 10, Issue 2, April 2012~ | 11/20/16 |
SEPTOCT - Greenhill Doubles NCTournament: Greenhill | Round: Doubles | Opponent: Marlborough LG | Judge: Agarwala, Gandra, Phillips 1-offinterp: The affirmative must defend countries in general and must not defend that only a single country or some combination of countries prohibits the production of nuclear power.
2-offFirst is framing—The role of the ballot is to question the border assumptions of the 1AC's scholarship prior to the consequence of the plan. Questioning the violence of borders is a forgotten discussion in that needs to be revisisted.Van Houtum 05 ~Henk Van Houtum, Nijmegen Centre for Border Research, Radboud University, The Netherlands, "The Geopolitics of Borders and Boundaries," 2005~ JW Next is the criticism:The affirmative reifies the legitimacy of nation states by choosing to defend a specific country pursuing prohibition of nuclear weapons. The aff could have chose to defend the whole resolution with an implementation mechanism that included an international institution such as the UN, uniting the call for global action by all nation-states and deconstructing the unflinching prevalence of the nation state model. Instead, the affirmative chose to orient it's politics around the nation-state which inevitably reproduces violent boundaries and borders. This link is unavoidable and damning.Walker 9 ~R.B.J., Walker is a professor in the department of Political Science at the University of Victoria and is the chief editor of the Journal of International Political Sociology, "After the Globe, Before the world", pg. 77 – 80~ The affirmative cannot delink—I extended an olive branch in CX and asked if they would be willing to defend that all countries embark on the aff's project and they refused. This link is supercharged because borders are an ontological division of the inside versus the outside which fuels nationalism.Agnew 08—Department of Geography @ UCLA (John, 2008, Ethics and Global Politics, Vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 175-191"Borders on the mind: re-framing border thinking," rmf) The affirmative fuels the creation of a mutual xenophobic otherization of those across the border- this results in cartographical violence that is justified by the perpetually fear of the other. Bornstein 2:Bornstein 2(Avram Bornstein, professor @ John Jay college anthropology PhD and masters @ Columbia, "Borders and the Utility of Violence State Effects on the 'Superexploitation' of West Bank Palestinians" vol 22, 2002) Bornstein 2 is empirically proven by the rise of Donald Trump—he's literally built his platform around building a wall on the southern BORDER of the US and making AMERICA great again and WINNING against other countries and keeping out Muslims from the US. This nativist logic results in real violence, and is depending on something to be native about, i.e. that there is such a thing as a real America and that people who have arbitrarily been deemed Americans have a right to live freely, which also independently justified US foreign policy actions like the Iraq war. 2 implications:The permutation cannot solve the link without being severance, since the very plan text and advocacy of the aff is the link to the K. Even if affirming would result in some good impacts, its underlying assumptions are intellectually bankrupt. The permutation is akin to the slave master saying they are good because they donate to charity.The alternative is to critically engage the border and re-evaluate our norms in relation to the violence they create.Grosfoguel 06 ~Ramon Grosfoguel, Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies @ UC Berkeley, "World-Systems Analysis in the Context of Transmodernity, Border Thinking, and Global Coloniality," Review (Fernand Braudel Center), Vol. 29, No. 2, From Postcolonial Studies to Decolonial Studies: Decolonizing Postcolonial Studies, 2006~ JW CaseAccidents are rare, nuclear power is the safestWalsh 13 – Bryan, Writes for Time ("Nuclear Energy Is Largely Safe. But Can It Be Cheap?" http://science.time.com/2013/07/08/nuclear-energy-is-largely-safe-but-can-it-be-cheap/) CR | 9/18/16 |
SEPTOCT - Greenhill R2 NCTournament: Greenhill | Round: 2 | Opponent: Loyola DW | Judge: Eric Melin GBTL KBanning nuclear power is a form of imperial paternalismJefferies 08 ~Sierra M. Jefferies, J.D. candidate, "ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND THE SKULL VALLEY GOSHUTE INDIANS' PROPOSAL TO STORE NUCLEAR WASTE," Journal of Land, Resources and Environmental Law, 2008~ JW Internal colonialism posits the United States as the master while subjugating indigenous peopleByrd 11 ~Jodi A. Byrd, Associate Professor of English, American Indian Studies, and Gender and Women's Studies at U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, "Introduction: Indigenous Critical Theory and the Diminishing Returns of Civilization," University of Minnesota Press, 2011~ JW Colonialism causes indigenous peoples to be structurally placed in a space of social death where agency is separate from their existenceByrd 11 ~Jodi A. Byrd, Associate Professor of English, American Indian Studies, and Gender and Women's Studies at U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, "Introduction: Indigenous Critical Theory and the Diminishing Returns of Civilization," University of Minnesota Press, 2011~ JW The alternative is to imagine a world in which the U.S. has been removed from all lands originally belonging to the nativesChurchill 96 ~Ward Churchill, professor of ethnic studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, "From a Native Son: Selected Essays in Indigenism, 1985-1995," South End Press, 1996~ Warming DAU.S. carbon emissions are getting lower and are on track to meet environmental goalsMcMahon 6/23 ~Jeff McMahon, contributor at Forbes, "U.S. On Track To Achieve 2030 Emissions Goals In 2016," Forbes Magazine, June 23, 2016, http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcmahon/2016/06/23/u-s-on-track-to-achieve-2030-emissions-goals-in-2016/~~#fa3d9fa42c8e~~ JW Closing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Meeting the 2 degrees Celsius change is key to stopping climate change catastropheMastroianni 15 ~Brian Mastroianni, "Why 2 degrees are so important to the climate," CBS News, November 30, 2015, http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-un-climate-talks-why-2-degrees-are-so-important/~~ DA turns case: Native Americans are especially vulnerable to climate changeHalpert 12 ~Julie Halpert, author at Yale Climate Connections, "Native Americans and a Changing Climate," Yale Climate Connections, June 21, 2012, http://www.yaleclimateconnections.org/2012/06/native-americans-and-a-changing-climate/~~ JW CPCP Text: Indigenous communities should decide for themselves to ban nuclear power. Mutually exclusive with the aff since tribes that want nuclear power can continue to use itGover et al 92 ~Kevin, and Jana L. Walker (Native American Attorneys at Gover, Stetson and Williams). "Escaping Environmental Paternalism: One Tribe's Approach to Developing a Commercial Waste Disposal Project in Indian Country." University of Colorado Law Review 63 (1992): 933. The Counterplan solves better than the plan: consultation leads to the best policies for each clan. Thomas 95 EDWARD K. THOMAS, 1995 (PRESIDENTCENTRAL COUNCIL OF THE TLINGIT AND HAIDA INDIAN TRIBES OF ALASKA, May 18, 1995, http://www.archive.org/stream/biataskforcehear00unit/biataskforcehear00unit_djvu.txt) CaseBanning nuclear power doesn't solve environmental injustice and prevents Natives from accessing resources on their landsJefferies 08 ~Sierra M. Jefferies, J.D. candidate, "ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND THE SKULL VALLEY GOSHUTE INDIANS' PROPOSAL TO STORE NUCLEAR WASTE," Journal of Land, Resources and Environmental Law, 2008~ JW Natives can't profit off of their own landJefferies 08 ~Sierra M. Jefferies, J.D. candidate, "ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND THE SKULL VALLEY GOSHUTE INDIANS' PROPOSAL TO STORE NUCLEAR WASTE," Journal of Land, Resources and Environmental Law, 2008~ JW N/U: Native Americans had already been exposed to a range of unhealthy environmental factors besides nuclear powerJefferies 08 ~Sierra M. Jefferies, J.D. candidate, "ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND THE SKULL VALLEY GOSHUTE INDIANS' PROPOSAL TO STORE NUCLEAR WASTE," Journal of Land, Resources and Environmental Law, 2008~ JW | 9/17/16 |
SEPTOCT - Greenhill R4 NCTournament: Greenhill | Round: 4 | Opponent: Strake Jesuit AS | Judge: Megan Nubel 1-offGlobal carbon emissions are way downMcKenna 15 ~Phil McKenna, Boston-based reporter for InsideClimate News, master's degree in Science W "Global CO2 Emissions Decline in 2015 After Soaring for a Decade, Study Says," Inside Climate News, December 7, 2015, https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07122015/global-carbon-emissions-rising-decades-decline-2015-study-climate-change-paris~~ JW Closing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Nuclear power is key to preventing global warming- empirics prove.
Meeting the 2 degrees Celsius change is key to stopping climate change catastropheMastroianni 15 ~Brian Mastroianni, "Why 2 degrees are so important to the climate," CBS News, November 30, 2015, http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-un-climate-talks-why-2-degrees-are-so-important/~~ Global runaway warming causes extinctionCarana 14 – Sam Carana is an environmental analyst whose expertise lies in environmental policy and sustainable energy. He also is a writer and policy developer. "Near-Term Human Extinction",~ http://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2014/04/near-term-human-extinction.html) CR Ethical uncertainty means we prioritize existential risks.Bostrom 13 ~Nick Bostrom, Professor in the Faculty of Philosophy @ University of Oxford, "Existential Risk Prevention as Global Priority," Global Policy Vol. 4 Issue 1, February 2013~ Climate change disproportionately affects people of color and causes extinction.Pellow 12 policymaking is the only way to create change.Coverstone 5 Alan Coverstone (masters in communication from Wake Forest, longtime debate coach) "Acting on Activism: Realizing the Vision of Debate with Pro-social Impact" Paper presented at the National Communication Association Annual Conference November 17th 2005 An important concern emerges when Mitchell describes reflexive fiat as a contest strategy capable of "eschewing the power to directly control external actors" (1998b, p. 20). Describing debates about what our government should do as attempts to control outside actors is debilitating and disempowering. Control of the US government is exactly what an active, participatory citizenry is supposed to be all about. After all, if democracy means anything, it means that citizens not only have the right, they also bear the obligation to discuss and debate what the government should be doing. Absent that discussion and debate, much of the motivation for personal political activism is also lost. Those who have co-opted Mitchell's argument for individual advocacy often quickly respond that nothing we do in a debate round can actually change government policy, and unfortunately, an entire generation of debaters has now swallowed this assertion as an article of faith. The best most will muster is, "Of course not, but you don't either!" The assertion that nothing we do in debate has any impact on government policy is one that carries the potential to undermine Mitchell's entire project. If there is nothing we can do in a debate round to change government policy, then we are left with precious little in the way of pro-social options for addressing problems we face. At best, we can pursue some Pilot-like hand washing that can purify us as individuals through quixotic activism but offer little to society as a whole. It is very important to note that Mitchell (1998b) tries carefully to limit and bound his notion of reflexive fiat by maintaining that because it "views fiat as a concrete course of action, it is bounded by the limits of pragmatism" (p. 20). Pursued properly, the debates that Mitchell would like to see are those in which the relative efficacy of concrete political strategies for pro-social change is debated. In a few noteworthy examples, this approach has been employed successfully, and I must say that I have thoroughly enjoyed judging and coaching those debates. The students in my program have learned to stretch their understanding of their role in the political process because of the experience. Therefore, those who say I am opposed to Mitchell's goals here should take care at such a blanket assertion. However, contest debate teaches students to combine personal experience with the language of political power. Powerful personal narratives unconnected to political power are regularly co-opted by those who do learn the language of power. One need look no further than the annual state of the Union Address where personal story after personal story is used to support the political agenda of those in power. The so-called role-playing that public policy contest debates encourage promotes active learning of the vocabulary and levers of power in America. Imagining the ability to use our own arguments to influence government action is one of the great virtues of academic debate. Gerald Graff (2003) analyzed the decline of argumentation in academic discourse and found a source of student antipathy to public argument in an interesting place. I'm up against…their aversion to the role of public spokesperson that formal writing presupposes. It's as if such students can't imagine any rewards for being a public actor or even imagining themselves in such a role. This lack of interest in the public sphere may in turn reflect a loss of confidence in the possibility that the arguments we make in public will have an effect on the world. Today's students' lack of faith in the power of persuasion reflects the waning of the ideal of civic participation that led educators for centuries to place rhetorical and argumentative training at the center of the school and college curriculum. (Graff, 2003, p. 57) The power to imagine public advocacy that actually makes a difference is one of the great virtues of the traditional notion of fiat that critics deride as mere simulation. Simulation of success in the public realm is far more empowering to students than completely abandoning all notions of personal power in the face of governmental hegemony by teaching students that "nothing they can do in a contest debate can ever make any difference in public policy." Contest debating is well suited to rewarding public activism if it stops accepting as an article of faith that personal agency is somehow undermined by the so-called role playing in debate. Debate is role-playing whether we imagine government action or imagine individual action. Imagining myself starting a socialist revolution in America is no less of a fantasy than imagining myself making a difference on Capitol Hill. Furthermore, both fantasies influenced my personal and political development virtually ensuring a life of active, pro-social, political participation. Neither fantasy reduced the likelihood that I would spend my life trying to make the difference I imagined. One fantasy actually does make a greater difference: the one that speaks the language of political power. The other fantasy disables action by making one a laughingstock to those who wield the language of power. Fantasy motivates and role-playing trains through visualization. Until we can imagine it, we cannot really do it. Role-playing without question teaches students to be comfortable with the language of power, and that language paves the way for genuine and effective political activism. Debates over the relative efficacy of political strategies for pro-social change must confront governmental power at some point. There is a fallacy in arguing that movements represent a better political strategy than voting and person-to-person advocacy. Sure, a full-scale movement would be better than the limited voice I have as a participating citizen going from door to door in a campaign, but so would full-scale government action. Unfortunately, the gap between my individual decision to pursue movement politics and the emergence of a full-scale movement is at least as great as the gap between my vote and democratic change. They both represent utopian fiat. Invocation of Mitchell to support utopian movement fiat is simply not supported by his work, and too often, such invocation discourages the concrete actions he argues for in favor of the personal rejectionism that under girds the political cynicism that is a fundamental cause of voter and participatory abstention in America today. 2-offThe 1AC misdiagnoses the problem- you simplify racism to a question of bodily characteristics and overall goals, which ignores the social context of oppression. Yamamoto 2 Trying to articulate your solvency advocate as a reason that you meet the wishes of the oppressed is another link- this allows the 1AC to paper over other individuals and enforce a hierarchy that privileges the dominant voices.McDonald and Coleman 99 This ignores the actual voices of the oppressed- applying blanket statements to all just re-affirms dominant power structures.Yamamoto 99 This means your movement just harms traditional groups, such as indigenous people- turns case and no solvencyYamamoto 01, Eric (Professor of Law, University of Hawai'i Law School; Visiting Professor of Law, Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley, 1999.)., and Jen-L. W. Lyman. "Racializing environmental justice." U. Colo. L. Rev. 72 (2001): 311. Thus, the alternative: communities should individually decide for themselves whether they want to prohibit the production of nuclear power in their area. Mutually exclusive: they decide for themselves, so they don't actually necessarily ban. The perm is severance.Alt solves best- you cannot make rulings over the needs of the oppressed without reifying their oppression. Friere 68 PEDAGOGY OF THE OPPRESSED Paulo Freire. 1968.It is essential for the oppressed to realize that when they accept the struggle for humanization they also accept, from that moment, their total responsibility for the struggle. They must realize that they are fighting not merely for freedom from hunger, but for freedom to create and to construct, to wonder and to ven ture. Such freedom requires that the individual be active and responsible, not a slave or a well-fed cog in the machine. . . . It is not enough that men are not slaves; if social conditions further the existence of automatons, the result will not be love of life, but love of death. The oppressed, who have been shaped by the death-affirming cli mate of oppression, must find through their struggle the way to life- affirming humanization, which does not lie simply in having more to eat (although it does involve having more to eat and cannot fail to include this aspect). The oppressed have been destroyed precisely because their situation has reduced them to things. In order to regain their humanity they must cease to be things and fight as men and women. This is a radical requirement. They cannot enter the struggle as objects in order later to become human beings. The struggle begins with men's recognition that they have been destroyed. Propaganda, management, manipulation—all arms of domination—cannot be the instruments of their rehumanization. The only effective instrument is a humanizing pedagogy in which the revolutionary leadership establishes a permanent relationship of dialogue with the oppressed. In a humanizing pedagogy the method ceases to be an instrument by which the teachers (in this instance, the revolutionary leadership) can manipulate the students (in this instance, the oppressed), because it expresses the consciousness of the students themselves. The method is, in fact, the external form of consciousness manifest in acts, which takes on the fundamental property of consciousness—its intentionality. The essence of consciousness is being with the world, and this behavior is permanent and unavoidable. Accordingly, consciousness is in essence a way to wards something apart from itself, outside itself, which surrounds it and which it apprehends by means of its ideational capacity. Consciousness is thus by definition a method, in the most general sense of the word. A revolutionary leadership must accordingly practice co-inten- tional education. Teachers and students (leadership and people), co- intent on reality, are both Subjects, not only in the task of unveiling that reality, and thereby coming to know it critically, but in the task of re-creating that knowledge. As they attain this knowledge of real ity through common reflection and action, they discover themselves as it£ permanent re-creators. In this way, the presence of the op pressed in the struggle for their liberation will be what it should be: not pseudo-participation, but committed involvement. Case | 9/18/16 |
SEPTOCT - Greenhill R6 NCTournament: Greenhill | Round: 6 | Opponent: Cypress Woods LC | Judge: Michael OKrent 1-offInterp: The affirmative must defend a prohibition on all types of nuclear power. They may not defend a prohibition on only (X) reactors.
2-offThe 1AC is addicted to the bomb—evoking images of atomic destruction legitimizes the use of nuclear weapons on a broader scale and condones any "lesser" form of violenceLamarre 08 This fixation on national interests and apocalyptic scenarios justifies endless violence, totalitarianism, and nuclear warShapiro 10, Iraq vs. U.S.: Total War Meets Pure War, http://www.alan-shapiro.com/iraq-vs-u-s-total-war-meets-pure-war/ Specifically their truth claims are a self-fulfilling prophecyDavis 06 – assistant prof. of English at Gordon College Security is self-defeating – security creates fear and insecurity – justifies endless conflictLifton, 03 – Prof. of Psychiatry @ Harvard U Med. School Security imposes a calculative logic that perpetuates structural violence and destroys Value-To-Life.Dillon 96 (Michael, Professor of Politics – University of Lancaster, Politics of Security, p. 26) The alternative is to reject the aff's securitization to solve violent security imaginationsNeocleous 08 ~Mark Neocleous, Professor of the Critique of Political Economy @ Brunel University, London, "Critique of Security," Edinburgh University Press, 2008~ JW The role of the ballot is to critically examine the 1AC's securitization politics and discourse.Case | 9/18/16 |
SEPTOCT - Loyola Octas NCTournament: Loyola | Round: Octas | Opponent: Lynbrook CW | Judge: Phillips, Tambe, Lallas 1-offA. Interpretation: The affirmative must defend countries in general and must not defend that only a single country or combination of any countries prohibits production of nuclear power.
This means for the aff to be topical, even if countries don't refer to a bare plural, the aff has to defend 2 countries banning nuclear power.C. Framers intent- If the framers wanted to discuss Belgium they would have specified that country or would have added a qualifier to the word country. Framers intent is key- words are only meant to communicate the meaning that the author intends. 2-offThe terrorist discourse creates binary identities of "us" vs. "the other".Talbot 08 (Steven, Defence Science and Technology Organisation, Sociological Research Online 13(1)17 'Us' and 'Them': Terrorism, Conflict and (O)ther Discursive Formations, http://www.socresonline.org.uk/13/1/17.html) Terrorist rhetoric generates more violence and creates a self-fulfilling prophecy – 4 warrants, turns case.Kapitan and Schulte 2 (Tomis and Erich, Thomas – Prof of Philosophy @ N Illinois U, and Erich – , Journal of Political and Military Sociology Vol. 30 Issue 1, 2002, pp. 172+, Questia) JPG The alternative is to reject the discourse and not construct them as the "OTHER." Break down the binaries and reject the urgent call to action.Enns 04 (Diane, Philosophy Department at the University of Toronto, John Hopkins University Press, Bare Life and the Occupied Body http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/theory_and_event/v007/7.3enns.html) Role of the judge key—must examine the discourse of the 1ACEdwards 10 (Brian, American Literary History, http://alh.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/22/2/360, date accessed: 7/7/2010) AJK And discourse is particularly relevant to deconstructing power relations. Bleiker writes Discourse and Human Agency Roland Bleiker1 School of Political Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QID 4072, Australia. E-mail: bleiker@mailbox.ug.edu.an Contemporary Political Theory, 2003, 2, (25–47) r 2003 Palgrave Macmillan Ltd 1470-8914/03 $15.00 Case | 9/12/16 |
SEPTOCT - Loyola Quarters NCTournament: Loyola | Round: Quarters | Opponent: La Canada AZ | Judge: Steele, Tan, Bistagne 1-offA. Interpretation: The affirmative must defend countries in general and must not defend that only a single country or combination of any countries prohibits production of nuclear power.
This means for the aff to be topical, even if countries don't refer to a bare plural, the aff has to defend 2 countries banning nuclear power.C. Framers intent- If the framers wanted to discuss Belgium they would have specified that country or would have added a qualifier to the word country. Framers intent is key- words are only meant to communicate the meaning that the author intends. 2-offCP Text: Egypt will ban the production of nuclear power with the exception of energy produced by thorium reactors.Thorium reactors are the most promising form of energy production in the futureSchaffer 13 ~Marvin Baker Schaffer, researcher for RAND corporation with expertise in Accelerator Physics, Medical Physics, Nuclear Physics, "Abundant thorium as an alternative nuclear fuel: Important waste disposal and weapon proliferation advantages," Energy Policy Vol 60, September 13, 2013~ JW Mutually exclusive with the aff: the aff bans all nuclear energy production which would include thorium reactorsThorium reactors are extremely resilient to proliferation. Solves prolif and terrorSchaffer 13 ~Marvin Baker Schaffer, researcher for RAND corporation with expertise in Accelerator Physics, Medical Physics, Nuclear Physics, "Abundant thorium as an alternative nuclear fuel: Important waste disposal and weapon proliferation advantages," Energy Policy Vol 60, September 13, 2013~ JW Thorium reactors are also way safer than traditional nuclear plantsJacoby 15 ~Mitch Jacoby, senior correspondent at Civil and Engineering News, "Trying to Unleash the Power of Uranium," Civil and Engineering News, July 6, 2015, http://cen.acs.org/articles/93/i27/Trying-Unleash-Power-Thorium.html~~ JW Banning all nuclear power kills 55 thousand people per country, scientific expected value analysis provesBrook et al 15, Barry and Staffan Qvist, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Uppsala University, Sweden Faculty of Science, Engineering and Technology, University of Tasmania, Australia, Environmental and health impacts of a policy to phase out nuclear power in Sweden, 2015, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421515001731Nuclear power faces an uncertain future in Sweden. Major political parties, including the Green party of the coalition-government have recently strongly advocated for a policy to decommission the Swedish nuclear ~power~ fleet prematurely. Here we examine the environmental, health and (to a lesser extent) economic impacts of implementing such a plan. The process has already been started through the early shutdown of the Barsebäck plant. We estimate that the political decision to shut down Barsebäck has resulted in $2400 avoidable energy-production-related deaths and an increase in global CO2 emissions of 95 mil- lion tonnes to date (October 2014). The Swedish reactor fleet as a whole has reached just past its halfway point of production, and has a remaining potential production of up to 2100 TWh. The reactors have the potential of preventing 1.9–2.1 gigatonnes of future CO2-emissions if allowed to operate their full life- spans. The potential for future prevention of energy-related-deaths is 50,000–60,000. We estimate an 800 billion SEK ( ~and~ 120 billion USD) lower-bound estimate for the lost tax revenue from an early phase-out policy. In sum, the evidence shows that implementing a 'nuclear-free' policy for Sweden (or countries in a similar situation) would constitute a highly retrograde step for climate, health and economic protec- tion. ACMiddle Eastern Relations2. Banning nuclear power doesn't solve: the Russia-Egypt deal has already given Russia more influence even if they're forced to withdraw.3. Turn: having Egypt do something that's against what they want antagonizes the relations between U.S. and Egypt4. Turn: banning nuclear power just means that Russia will export other forms of energy production to Egypt. Double-Bind eithera) Russia wants to expand influence so it will continue to displace the U.S.b) Russia is not interested in expanding Middle Eastern influence and will thus practically not displace the U.S.5. Advantage is non-unique: Russia already has Egypt's preference because of Obama's hesitance to endorse PutinBorshchevskaya 15 ~Anna Borshchevskaya , "Russia-Egypt Nuclear Power Plant Deal: Why Ignoring Egypt's Needs Is Bad For The U.S." Forbes, February 13, 2015, http://www.forbes.com/sites/annaborshchevskaya/2015/02/13/russia-egypt-nuclear-power-plant-deal-why-ignoring-egypts-needs-is-bad-for-the-u-s/~~#3beeb00b2f1b~~ JW | 9/12/16 |
SEPTOCT - Loyola R1 NCTournament: Loyola | Round: 1 | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Michael Fried 1-off – Solvency Advocate theoryA. Interpretation: All plans must have solvency advocates - an author that advocates the entirety of the aff plan.B. Violation: they don't have a solvency advocateC. Standards:
D. Voters:Fairness is key to deciding the better debater, since it can't be done if one has an unfair advantage. Education is key since it's the end goal and why school's fund debate.Drop the debater since the round's already skewed and scratching args off the flow harms us equally but not in proportion to your violation.And use competing interps since I don't know what you think is reasonable and I'd always have a risk of offense.And No RVI's since 1. We have a reciprocal burden to be fair in every round, don't vote them up for being fair if I was being fair too, and 2. Deters illegit args, else they'd get good at theoretically defending their position and winning back on the RVI.2-off – IFNEC CPText: Belgium should join the International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation.It creates networks for nuclear power without having to establish domestic facilities, educates countries on the safe and proper use of nuclear power—solves prolif and warming.WNA 15 ~World Nuclear Association; Information on nuclear energy and the nuclear fuel cycle; August 2015; "International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation"; http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/international-framework-for-nuclear-energy-coopera.aspx**; JLB (8/8/2016)~ Eliminates extra plutonium—solves terror and war.WNA 15 ~World Nuclear Association; Information on nuclear energy and the nuclear fuel cycle; August 2015; "International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation"; http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/international-framework-for-nuclear-energy-coopera.aspx**; JLB (8/8/2016)~ 3-off – Warming DAUQ – Carbon Emissions LowGlobal carbon emissions are way downMcKenna 15 ~Phil McKenna, Boston-based reporter for InsideClimate News, master's degree in Science W "Global CO2 Emissions Decline in 2015 After Soaring for a Decade, Study Says," Inside Climate News, December 7, 2015, https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07122015/global-carbon-emissions-rising-decades-decline-2015-study-climate-change-paris~~ JW Nuclear power is key to preventing global warming- empirics prove.
Squo solves. Nuke energy is orders of magnitude better for emissionsPedraza 12 IMPX – 2 Degrees CelsiusMeeting the 2 degrees Celsius change is key to stopping climate change catastropheMastroianni 15 ~Brian Mastroianni, "Why 2 degrees are so important to the climate," CBS News, November 30, 2015, http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-un-climate-talks-why-2-degrees-are-so-important/~~ IMPX – ExtinctionHigh probability risk of extinction from climate changeMeyer 4/29 ~Robinson Meyer, associate editor at The Atlantic, where he covers technology, "Human Extinction Isn't That Unlikely," The Atlantic, April 29, 2016, http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2016/04/a-human-extinction-isnt-that-unlikely/480444/~~ JW Global runaway warming causes extinctionCarana 14 – Sam Carana is an environmental analyst whose expertise lies in environmental policy and sustainable energy. He also is a writer and policy developer. "Near-Term Human Extinction",~ http://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2014/04/near-term-human-extinction.html) CR CaseAccidents are rare, nuclear power is the safestWalsh 13 – Bryan, Writes for Time ("Nuclear Energy Is Largely Safe. But Can It Be Cheap?" http://science.time.com/2013/07/08/nuclear-energy-is-largely-safe-but-can-it-be-cheap/) CR Alternatives are worseWaldman 15 - Susanne, PhD in Risk Communication at Carleton University ("Why we Need Nuclear Power to Save the Environment" http://energyforhumanity.org/climate-energy/need-nuclear-power-save-environment/) CR | 9/10/16 |
SEPTOCT - Loyola R4 NCTournament: Loyola | Round: 4 | Opponent: San Marino BK | Judge: David Dosch 1-offGlobal carbon emissions are way downMcKenna 15 ~Phil McKenna, Boston-based reporter for InsideClimate News, master's degree in Science W "Global CO2 Emissions Decline in 2015 After Soaring for a Decade, Study Says," Inside Climate News, December 7, 2015, https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07122015/global-carbon-emissions-rising-decades-decline-2015-study-climate-change-paris~~ JW Closing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Nuclear power is key to preventing global warming- empirics prove.
Meeting the 2 degrees Celsius change is key to stopping climate change catastropheMastroianni 15 ~Brian Mastroianni, "Why 2 degrees are so important to the climate," CBS News, November 30, 2015, http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-un-climate-talks-why-2-degrees-are-so-important/~~ Global runaway warming causes extinctionCarana 14 – Sam Carana is an environmental analyst whose expertise lies in environmental policy and sustainable energy. He also is a writer and policy developer. "Near-Term Human Extinction",~ http://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2014/04/near-term-human-extinction.html) CR Ethical uncertainty means we prioritize existential risks.Bostrom 13 ~Nick Bostrom, Professor in the Faculty of Philosophy @ University of Oxford, "Existential Risk Prevention as Global Priority," Global Policy Vol. 4 Issue 1, February 2013~ 2-offNuclear power is the only way to generate sufficient energy for large-scale desalinationIAEA 15 ~— widely known as the world's "Atoms for Peace" organization within the United Nations family. Set up in 1957 as the world's centre for cooperation in the nuclear field, the Agency works with its Member States and multiple partners worldwide to promote the safe, secure and peaceful use of nuclear technologies, "New Technologies for Seawater Desalination Using Nuclear Energy," IEAE TecDoc Series, 2015~ Water crises cause escalating global conflict.Rasmussen 11 ~(Erik, CEO, Monday Morning; Founder, Green Growth Leaders) "Prepare for the Next Conflict: Water Wars" HuffPo 4/12~ That goes nuclearZahoor 12 (Musharaf, Researcher at Department of Nuclear Politics – National Defense University, Water Crisis can Trigger Nuclear War in South Asia, http://www.siasat.pk) 3-offCP Text: Indigenous communities should decide for themselves to ban nuclear power. Mutually exclusive with the aff since tribes that want nuclear power can continue to use itGover et al 92 ~Kevin, and Jana L. Walker (Native American Attorneys at Gover, Stetson and Williams). "Escaping Environmental Paternalism: One Tribe's Approach to Developing a Commercial Waste Disposal Project in Indian Country." University of Colorado Law Review 63 (1992): 933. Banning nuclear power is a form of imperial paternalismJefferies 08 ~Sierra M. Jefferies, J.D. candidate, "ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND THE SKULL VALLEY GOSHUTE INDIANS' PROPOSAL TO STORE NUCLEAR WASTE," Journal of Land, Resources and Environmental Law, 2008~ JW 4-off1NC – GenericCP Text: All countries except developing countries should ban the production of nuclear powerNuclear energy, not renewables, is the best source of energy for developing countries. Solves intermittency problem and provides energy security.Chowdhury 12 ~Navid Chowdhury, "Nuclear Energy For Developing Countries," Submitted as coursework for PH241, Stanford University, Winter 2012, http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2012/ph241/chowdhury1/~~ JW Case | 9/11/16 |
SEPTOCT - Loyola R6 NCTournament: Loyola | Round: 6 | Opponent: Peninsula IG | Judge: Joseph Barquin 1-off – Warming DAUQ – Carbon Emissions LowGlobal carbon emissions are way downMcKenna 15 ~Phil McKenna, Boston-based reporter for InsideClimate News, master's degree in Science W "Global CO2 Emissions Decline in 2015 After Soaring for a Decade, Study Says," Inside Climate News, December 7, 2015, https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07122015/global-carbon-emissions-rising-decades-decline-2015-study-climate-change-paris~~ JW Link – Carbon ShiftClosing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Nuclear power is key to preventing global warming- empirics prove.
IMPX – 2 Degrees CelsiusMeeting the 2 degrees Celsius change is key to stopping climate change catastropheMastroianni 15 ~Brian Mastroianni, "Why 2 degrees are so important to the climate," CBS News, November 30, 2015, http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-un-climate-talks-why-2-degrees-are-so-important/~~ IMPX – ExtinctionHigh probability risk of extinction from climate changeMeyer 4/29 ~Robinson Meyer, associate editor at The Atlantic, where he covers technology, "Human Extinction Isn't That Unlikely," The Atlantic, April 29, 2016, http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2016/04/a-human-extinction-isnt-that-unlikely/480444/~~ JW Ethical uncertainty means we prioritize existential risks.Bostrom 13 ~Nick Bostrom, Professor in the Faculty of Philosophy @ University of Oxford, "Existential Risk Prevention as Global Priority," Global Policy Vol. 4 Issue 1, February 2013~ 2-off – Oil Wars DAUQNuclear energy makes a significant portion of the world energy supplyNEI 16 ~Nuclear Energy Institute, "Nuclear Energy Around the World," 2016, http://www.nei.org/Knowledge-Center/Nuclear-Statistics/World-Statistics~~ LinkJapan proves that nuclear power reductions leads to more oil demandPatrick 15 ~Hugh Patrick, Columbia Business School, "Japan's post-Fukushima energy challenge," East Asia Forum, November 23, 2015, http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2015/11/23/japans-post-fukushima-energy-challenge/~~ JW IMPX – Oil WarsThis causes Western powers to become more aggressive in the protection of oil interests to keep prices stable and keep the flow of oil steady.Jones 12 ~Toby Craig Jones, associate professor of Middle East history at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, "America, Oil, and War in the Middle East," Journal of American History (2012) 99 (1): 208-218~ This causes oil wars and imperialist oppression by western nations.Jones 12 ~Toby Craig Jones, associate professor of Middle East history at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, "America, Oil, and War in the Middle East," Journal of American History (2012) 99 (1): 208-218~ 3-off – Thorium PICCP Text: All relevant aff actors will ban the production of nuclear power with the exception of energy produced by thorium reactors.Thorium reactors are the most promising form of energy production in the futureSchaffer 13 ~Marvin Baker Schaffer, researcher for RAND corporation with expertise in Accelerator Physics, Medical Physics, Nuclear Physics, "Abundant thorium as an alternative nuclear fuel: Important waste disposal and weapon proliferation advantages," Energy Policy Vol 60, September 13, 2013~ JW Mutually exclusive with the aff: the aff bans all nuclear energy production which would include thorium reactorsThorium reactors are extremely resilient to proliferation. Solves prolifSchaffer 13 ~Marvin Baker Schaffer, researcher for RAND corporation with expertise in Accelerator Physics, Medical Physics, Nuclear Physics, "Abundant thorium as an alternative nuclear fuel: Important waste disposal and weapon proliferation advantages," Energy Policy Vol 60, September 13, 2013~ JW Thorium reactors are also way safer than traditional nuclear plantsJacoby 15 ~Mitch Jacoby, senior correspondent at Civil and Engineering News, "Trying to Unleash the Power of Uranium," Civil and Engineering News, July 6, 2015, http://cen.acs.org/articles/93/i27/Trying-Unleash-Power-Thorium.html~~ JW CaseMeltdownsAccidents are rare, nuclear power is the safestWalsh 13 – Bryan, Writes for Time ("Nuclear Energy Is Largely Safe. But Can It Be Cheap?" http://science.time.com/2013/07/08/nuclear-energy-is-largely-safe-but-can-it-be-cheap/) CR Alternatives are worseWaldman 15 - Susanne, PhD in Risk Communication at Carleton University ("Why we Need Nuclear Power to Save the Environment" http://energyforhumanity.org/climate-energy/need-nuclear-power-save-environment/) CR | 9/12/16 |
SEPTOCT - Voices Octas NCTournament: Voices | Round: Octas | Opponent: Mountain View DZ | Judge: Wheeler, Fife, Walton 1-offInterpretation: If the affirmative chooses to specify an actor that bans the production of nuclear power, they must specify a minimum of two countries with a carded solvency advocate that specifies all the countries involved in the aff plan text. Dictionary.com defines that countries is a, Dictionary.com, Countries, http://www.dictionary.com/browse/countries==== | 10/11/16 |
SEPTOCT - Voices R1 NCTournament: Voices | Round: 1 | Opponent: San Marino ED | Judge: Jack Coyle 1-off1NCROB/FramingThe Role of the Judge is to be a critical educator focusing on the liberation of the oppressedGiroux 06 ~Henry Giroux, American scholar and cultural critic, "America on the Edge: Henry Giro ux on Politics, Culture, and Education," Springer, March 31, 2006~ JW The Role of the Ballot is to endorse the best methodology to liberate oppressed groupsDebate should deal with questions of real-world consequences—ideal theories ignore the concrete nature of the world and legitimize oppression
Link – Developing CountriesNuclear energy, not renewables, is the best source of energy for developing countries. Solves intermittency problem and provides energy security and sovereignty.Chowdhury 12 ~Navid Chowdhury, "Nuclear Energy For Developing Countries," Submitted as coursework for PH241, Stanford University, Winter 2012, http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2012/ph241/chowdhury1/~~ JW Big energy companies explicitly target developing countries in their marketing and expansions. Expanding use of fossil fuels will have devastating consequences for these countriesKlare 14 ~Michael Klare, professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, "Big Oil Won't Let the Developing World Kick the Habit," Mother Jones, May 27, 2014, http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2014/05/big-energy-developing-country-oil-exxon-coal~~ JW Link – Emission GoalsNuclear power is key for developing countries to meet emissions goalsNEI 2K ~National Energy Institute, "Nuclear Energy Key for Developing Nations To Meet Carbon Reduction Goals," November 17, 2000, http://www.nei.org/News-Media/Media-Room/News-Releases/Nuclear-Energy-Key-for-Developing-Nations-To-Meet~~ JW Impact – ImperialismTo deny these countries the ability to pursue energy to meet growing demands and meet climate change goals is to affirm the self-serving logic that permits affluent lives in the developed world and destitute lives in the developing oneSaran 15 ~Shyam Saran, former foreign secretary of India, "Paris climate talks: Developed countries must do more than reduce emissions," The Guardian, November 23, 2015, https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/nov/23/paris-climate-talks-developed-countries-must-do-more-than-reduce-emissions~~ JW Imperialism is the root cause of global capitalist exploitation – imperialism makes exploitation by global elites inevitable.Lotta '13 Raymond Lotta - revolutionary intellectual who takes as his foundation Bob Avakian's new synthesis on revolution and communism. He has written extensively on China during and after the Cultural Revolution. "On the "Driving Force of Anarchy" and the Dynamics of Change Alt – PolicyThe alternative is to allow free will in pursuing nuclear energy and implementing an international nuclear fuel bank. New reactor designs solve cost and the fuel bank solves prolif concerns.Pontin 7 ~Mark Williams Pontin, "Nuclear Energy for the Developing World," MIT Technology Review, February 27, 2007, https://www.technologyreview.com/s/407373/nuclear-energy-for-the-developing-world/~~ JW 2-offNuclear power is resolving emissions now- models show it prevents almost half of the CO2 necessary to stop runaway warming.Kharecha and Hansen 13, Pushker A. Kharecha* and James E. Hansen NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University Earth Institute, "Prevented Mortality and Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Historical and Projected Nuclear Power," American Chemical Society, Environmental Science and Technology, 2013 Climate change disproportionately affects people of color and causes extinction.Pellow 12 3-offCP Text: All relevant aff actors should dismantle their nuclear weapon arsenalsUNESCO 01 ~United Nations Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, "Making the World Safe," 2001, http://www.unesco.org/education/tlsf/mods/theme_a/interact/www.worldgame.org/wwwproject/what17.shtml~~ JW Solves the entirety of the aff: we resolve the root cause of militarism by getting rid of all nuclear weapons. Also our strength of link to the culture of militarism is stronger since we establish a moral order that unequivocally condemns the tools of militarism.CaseImpact TurnsT/ Allowing democratic nations to have access to nuclear weapons is key to checking back other rogue states that are already in the process of becoming nuclear powersCarpenter 04 ~Ted Galen Carpenter, senior fellow for defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute, "Not All Forms of Nuclear Proliferation Are Equally Bad," CATO Institute, November 21, 2004, http://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/not-all-forms-nuclear-proliferation-are-equally-bad~~ JW | 10/9/16 |
SEPTOCT - Voices R4 NCTournament: Voices | Round: 4 | Opponent: Mission San Jose JP | Judge: Kris Kaya 1-offNuclear power is resolving emissions now- models show it prevents almost half of the CO2 necessary to stop runaway warming.Kharecha and Hansen 13, Pushker A. Kharecha* and James E. Hansen NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University Earth Institute, "Prevented Mortality and Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Historical and Projected Nuclear Power," American Chemical Society, Environmental Science and Technology, 2013 That solves 1.84 million air pollution deathsKharecha and Hansen 13, Pushker A. Kharecha* and James E. Hansen NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University Earth Institute, "Prevented Mortality and Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Historical and Projected Nuclear Power," American Chemical Society, Environmental Science and Technology, 2013 Closing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Only nuclear power solves – alternative energy growth is unaffected by phase-out but rather by state requirements and is statistically insufficient to replacing nuclear energyBrintone and Freede 15, Samuel Brinton Master's degree program at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in nuclear engineering and the technology and policy program and Josh Freed Vice President at GMMB, a social marketing and advocacy firm, where he advised the senior leadership of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; regularly advises senior federal and state policymakers, and his work has been featured in The Washington Post, NPR, National Journal, POLITICO, The Los Angeles Times and Wired., "When Nuclear Ends: How Nuclear Retirements Might Undermine Clean Power Plan Progress," Third Way, 8-19-2015, http://www.thirdway.org/report/when-nuclear-ends-how-nuclear-retirements-might-undermine-clean-power-plan-progress, Climate change disproportionately affects people of color and causes extinction.Pellow 12 DA turns case: Native Americans are especially vulnerable to climate changeHalpert 12 ~Julie Halpert, author at Yale Climate Connections, "Native Americans and a Changing Climate," Yale Climate Connections, June 21, 2012, http://www.yaleclimateconnections.org/2012/06/native-americans-and-a-changing-climate/~~ JW 2-offNuclear power is the only way to generate sufficient energy for large-scale desalinationIAEA 15 ~— widely known as the world's "Atoms for Peace" organization within the United Nations family. Set up in 1957 as the world's centre for cooperation in the nuclear field, the Agency works with its Member States and multiple partners worldwide to promote the safe, secure and peaceful use of nuclear technologies, "New Technologies for Seawater Desalination Using Nuclear Energy," IEAE TecDoc Series, 2015~ Desalination is coming and saves millions of lives- water shortages specifically harms poorer countriesPanlilio 13: Panlilio, Rafael Contributor, The Borgen Project "How Desalination Can Prevent a World Water Crisis." The Borgen Project, March 2013 Water crises cause escalating global conflict.Rasmussen 11 ~(Erik, CEO, Monday Morning; Founder, Green Growth Leaders) "Prepare for the Next Conflict: Water Wars" HuffPo 4/12~ That goes nuclearZahoor 12 (Musharaf, Researcher at Department of Nuclear Politics – National Defense University, Water Crisis can Trigger Nuclear War in South Asia, http://www.siasat.pk) 3-offCP Text: All countries already or considering developing nuclear power should join the International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation.It creates networks for nuclear power without having to establish domestic facilities, educates countries on the safe and proper use of nuclear power—solves prolif and warming.WNA 15 ~World Nuclear Association; Information on nuclear energy and the nuclear fuel cycle; August 2015; "International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation"; http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/international-framework-for-nuclear-energy-coopera.aspx**; JLB (8/8/2016)~ Eliminates extra plutonium—solves terror and war.WNA 15 ~World Nuclear Association; Information on nuclear energy and the nuclear fuel cycle; August 2015; "International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation"; http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/international-framework-for-nuclear-energy-coopera.aspx**; JLB (8/8/2016)~ CaseSubstanceTerrorEven if terrorists steal nuclear fuel, the process of converting that to a bomb is impossible. Neushaser 16:Neuhauser, Alan. "How Real Is the Dirty Bomb Threat?" US News. U.S.News and World Report, 24 Mar. 2016. Web. 06 Aug. 2016. http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-03-24/how-real-is-the-dirty-bomb-threat. Spent fuel in a nuclear plant is harder for terrorists to useMurray 8/16 | 10/9/16 |
SEPTOCT - Voices R6 NCTournament: Voices | Round: 6 | Opponent: Polytechnic JL | Judge: Travis Fife 1-offDiscourse surrounding opposition to nuclear power is based on fear mongering that ignores growing scientific backing of nuclear power and sets up a moral boundary that kills democratic deliberation. Taylor 13:~Bob Pepperman Taylor (Professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont, he specializes in and has been published on political theory, the history of political thought, American political thought, and environmental political theory), "Thinking About Nuclear Power." March 18, 2013. Polity Volume 45, Issue 2, pgs. 297-311. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/pol.2013.3~~ SF Turn - Fear mongering about nuclear power forces us to a world of coal, which produces cyclical public health harms and is worse for Nature as a whole. Taylor 13:~Bob Pepperman Taylor (Professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont, he specializes in and has been published on political theory, the history of political thought, American political thought, and environmental political theory), "Thinking About Nuclear Power." March 18, 2013. Polity Volume 45, Issue 2, pgs. 297-311. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/pol.2013.3~~ SF Liberal environmentalism has been pigeonholed as a "special interest" that regular people can't relate to. We should not judge environmentalism through individual policies but rather how we as a community can help solve. The alternative is a third wave of environmentalism structured around investing in the people as a creative body that can commit itself to solving massive issues – the New Apollo Project models this. Nordhaus and Shellenberger 04:~Ted Norhaus (American author, environmental policy expert, and the director of research at The Breakthrough Institute) and Michael Shellenberger (American author, environmental policy expert, and cofounder of Breakthrough Institute.) Having faith in humanities ability to solve warming through technological advances has the ability to rally public support for environmentalism. Taylor 13:~Bob Pepperman Taylor (Professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont, he specializes in and has been published on political theory, the history of political thought, American political thought, and environmental political theory), "Thinking About Nuclear Power." March 18, 2013. Polity Volume 45, Issue 2, pgs. 297-311. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/pol.2013.3~~ SF 2-offNuclear power is resolving emissions now- models show it prevents almost half of the CO2 necessary to stop runaway warming. Closing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Nuclear power is key to preventing global warming- empirics prove.
CaseEvery reduction in emissions counts – there's no threshold for extinction, it's about degreeNuccitelli 12 (Dana, environmental scientist at a private environmental consulting firm, Bachelor's Degree in astrophysics from the University of California at Berkeley, and a Master's Degree in physics from the University of California at Davis, "Realistically What Might the Future Climate Look Like?,") It's not too late—emissions reductions can avoid and delay catastrophic impacts.Chestney 13 – Nina, senior environmental correspondent, "Climate Change Study: Emissions Limits Could Avoid Damage By Two-Thirds," 1/13 | 10/11/16 |
SEPTOCT - Voices RR R2 NCTournament: Voices RR | Round: 2 | Opponent: Dougherty Valley CS | Judge: Michael Harris, Nick Steele T
Louisiana House 3-8-2005, http://house.louisiana.gov/house-glossary.htm**
2-offa. interpretation: google defines "prohibit"formally forbid (something) by law, rule, or other authority. b. he defends a boycottC.
3-offGlobal carbon emissions are way downMcKenna 15 ~Phil McKenna, Boston-based reporter for InsideClimate News, master's degree in Science W "Global CO2 Emissions Decline in 2015 After Soaring for a Decade, Study Says," Inside Climate News, December 7, 2015, https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07122015/global-carbon-emissions-rising-decades-decline-2015-study-climate-change-paris~~ JW Closing nuclear plants forces increased fossil fuel useRoston 15 ~Eric Roston, writer for Bloomberg, "Why Nuclear Power Is All but Dead in the U.S." Bloomberg News, April 15, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-15/soon-it-may-be-easier-to-build-a-nuclear-plant-in-iran-than-in-the-u-s-~~ JW Meeting the 2 degrees Celsius change is key to stopping climate change catastropheMastroianni 15 ~Brian Mastroianni, "Why 2 degrees are so important to the climate," CBS News, November 30, 2015, http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-un-climate-talks-why-2-degrees-are-so-important/~~ Empirically, the fossil fuel industry has outspent almost all other industries in political influenceAtkin 14 ~Emily Atkin, "The Fossil Fuel Industry Spent More Than Seven-Hundred Million Dollars During 2014's Midterm Elections," Think Progress, December 23, 2014, https://thinkprogress.org/the-fossil-fuel-industry-spent-more-than-seven-hundred-million-dollars-during-2014s-midterm-85cf181503a7~~#.r9fho0vgh~~ JW | 10/8/16 |
SEPTOCT - Voices RR R3 NCTournament: Voices RR | Round: 3 | Opponent: Lynbrook VV | Judge: Scott Wheeller, Anna-Marie Hwang 1-offinterp: The affirmative must defend countries in general and must not defend that only a single country or some combination of countries prohibits the production of nuclear power.
2-offCP Text: All relevant aff actors will adopt the American model for nuclear power plant security. Solves terror attacksMacFarlane 4/14 ~Allison MacFarlane, "How to protect nuclear plants from terrorists," phys.org, April 14, 2016, http://phys.org/news/2016-04-nuclear-fromterrorists.html Mutually exclusive with the aff because they shut down nuclear reactors while the CP keeps them openNet beneficial with the DA's3-off fParis DALinksBelgium and the entire EU signed the Paris Agreement into force. Chee 16: Nuclear energy is a key part of the Paris Climate agreement's carbon reduction goalsNEI 15 ~Nuclear Energy Institute, "French Lessons: What the Paris Climate Agreement Means for Nuclear," December 17, 2015, http://www.nei.org/News-Media/News/News-Archives/French-Lessons-What-the-Paris-Climate-Agreement-Me~~ JW Belgium needs nuclear reactors to meet carbon reduction targetsWNA 16 ~World Nuclear Association, "Nuclear Power in Belgium," March 2016, http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/country-profiles/countries-a-f/belgium.aspx~~ JW IMPXThe power behind the Paris Agreement comes from its global support. Meyer 15Meyer, Robinson. (an associate editor at The Atlantic, where he covers technology) "A Reader's Guide to the Paris Agreement." The Atlantic. 15 Dec 2015. Web. 1 Oct 2016. http://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2015/12/a-readers-guide-to-the-paris-agreement/420345/ Lewis, Simon L. 2016. "The Paris Agreement Has Solved A Troubling Problem". Nature 532 (7599): 283-283. Nature Publishing Group. doi:10.1038/532283a.Is this the beginning of the end of the fossil-fuel age, as some suggest? It could be — its influence is certainly being felt. Peabody Energy, the largest private coal company, lost 12.6 of its value the day after the Paris deal was agreed. It filed for bankruptcy last week. But even before countries queue up to sign, the Paris Agreement could already have solved one of the most troublesome problems in the climate arena, one that has plagued scientists and policymakers for almost a quarter of a century. And yet almost nobody — scientists included — seems to have noticed. Cockburn, Harry. 2016. "What Burning All Remaining Fossil Fuels Would Do To The Planet". The Independent. Accessed October 4 2016. http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/climate-change-burning-all-fossil-fuels-could-cause-global-mass-extinction-a7047761.html.==== | 10/8/16 |
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