Answer To Condo Good CP Theory
Answer To Condo Good CP Theory
Answer To Condo Good CP Theory
**Notes
**2ac
**1ar
1ar Overview
Conditionality is bad four arguments up top 1. Vote on the exact text of your flow of the 2ac versus the 2nc we slowed down at our own expense in a time-pressed 2ac dont reward the 2nc for racing through a theory block unclearly by allowing new 2nr extrapolation 2. Equity yes, conditionality has benefits theyre HEAVILY weighted towards the Negative. Equity comes first debate is a competitive game where we debate the EVENLY BALANCED topics instead of the most interesting. Why else are we debating transportation? The Neg will be fine without multiple conditional advocacies. Almost everyone flips Neg in elims. Theres a reason: conditionality creates a larger chance of victory by allowing an inequitable level of flexibility. We cant generate unique 2ac offense and we only get one constructive to generate offense 3. Decision-making research and pre-round decision-making solve their offense our interpretation solves argument depth and decision-making by rewarding early choices that deepen explanation. Critical thinking and decision-making skills effect every moment of our lives and improve policy-making. 4. Use a cost-benefit paradigm our interpretation solves their benefits it allows one conditional advocacy or multiple dispositional advocacies. They dont have any real cost to our counter-interpretation. (****) Cost-benefit is the best way to decide debates we have evidence to frame how you should make your decision
**NOTE ONLY READ IF YOURE WILLING TO INVEST LOTS OF TIME IN CONDITIONALITY IN THE 1AR Hardin, 8 Don Bradford Jr., JD from Alabama Law, Alabama Law Review, 59 Ala. L. Rev. 1135 Against this background, CBA came to prominence as part of a larger administrative law decisionmaking paradigm--so-called "comprehensive rationality"--which supplanted the incrementalism of the previous era. Under the comprehensive rationality paradigm, a policymaker was to "specify the goal he seeks to attain[,] . . . identify all possible methods of reaching [the] objective[,] . . . evaluate how effective each method will be in achieving the goal[,] . . . [and] select the alternative that will make the greatest progress toward the desired outcome." "The most demanding aspect of [comprehensive rationality was] the care with which it require[d] policymakers to consider the consequences of each policy option." CBA was designed to meet this demand, and was touted as "a practical way of assessing the desirability of projects." As a result, Congress began to enact statutes that required various forms of CBA.
Some of the earliest examples, such as the National Environmental Policy Act, passed in 1969, loosely applied CBA to administrative decisionmaking. As time passed, the requisite CBA became more concrete and particularized. For example, the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments, passed in 1972, required a "'limited cost-benefit analysis' . . . intended to 'limit the application of technology only where the [benefits are] wholly out of proportion to the costs of achieving such marginal level of reduction,'" and the Toxic Substances Control Act, passed in 1976, authorized the EPA to regulate substances that posed an "unreasonable risk" to health or safety and required consideration of the benefits of the substance and the economic costs of the contemplated regulation. While the late seventies saw a surge of legislative interest in
CBA for government decisionmaking, it was the order of a President, not Congressional enactments, that
vaulted CBA to prominence as the regulatory decisionmaking paradigm of the administrative state.
A2 Everything is Conditional
They say all arguments are conditional no, theyre not if we turn a DA youre stuck with it and if we prove your CP or alternative is bad you arent
A2 Neg Flex
They say neg flex two responses: We solve our interpretation enables negative flexibility while ensuring the Aff has an equitable right to generate offense they allow an unfair level of flexibility