2009-2010 Canton Central Catholic (OH) - Keller & Massarelli

From NDCA Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Affirmative

1. THE FOOD DELIVERY PROGRAM ON INDIAN RESERVATIONS IS NOT ENOUGH—OVER TWENTY PERCENT OF INDIANS HUNGRY

SPARK 2007

(Dr. Arlene, nutritionist and associate professor at Hunter College, CUNY, Nutrition In Public Health, p 421)


2. DESPITE PROMISES TO THE CONTRARY, THE USDA PROCURES FARM-RAISED BISON FOR THE FOOD DELIVERY PROGRAM FROM NON-TRIBAL SUPPLIERS—INDIANS ARE LEFT OUT OF THE PROCESS

METRO SPIRIT 2007

(“Bison in a Can,” August 4, http://www.metrospirit.com/index.php?ShowArticle_ID=11013107074654929&cat=1211101074307265)


3. SCENARIO ONE—HUNGER

FAILURE OF STATUS QUO FOOD PROGRAMS CAUSES BOTH DISPROPORTIONATE HUNGER AND OBESITY AMONG NATIVE AMERICANS—THE RESULT IS A RANGE OF HEALTH PROBLEMS LIKE MALNUTRITION, DIABETES, AND HEART DISEASE

NEWPORT 2007

(Melinda, MS,RD/LD Director Nutrition Services for Chickasaw Nation, Hearing before the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee, Jan 31, http://agriculture.senate.gov/Hearings/hearings.cfm?hearingid=2511&witnessId=6032)

4. WE MUST CHALLENGE THE UNEVEN DISTRIBUTION OF FOOD AT ANY COST—OUTWEIGHS ANY POTENTIAL DISADVANTAGE

WATSON 77

(Richard, Professor of Philosophy at Washington University, World Hunger and Moral Obligation, p. 118-119)


5. The starvation is a denial of basic human rights.

Polly VIZARD Research Associate Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion London School of Economics 2006 Oxford University Press


6. Violations of human rights threaten survival.

Rhonda Copelon, Professor of Law and Director of the International Women's Human Rights Law Clinic at the City University of New York School of Law, New York City Law Review, 1998/99, 3 N.Y. City L. Rev. 59


7. SCENARIO TWO—CULTURE

REFUSAL TO PURCHASE BISON FROM INDIAN PRODUCERS UNDERMINES TRIBAL CULTURE—THIS ACT SPILLS OVER TO CRUSH TRIBAL AUTONOMY

LULKA 2006

(David, San Diego State University, Great Plains Research, Spring, http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1804&context=greatplainsresearch)


8. INDIAN CULTURE IS KEY TO ALL CULTURES—POLICIES IMPLEMENTED FOR INDIANS ARE MODELED THROUGHOUT SOCIETY

CHURCHILL 1997

(Ward, Professor of Ethnic Studies at University of Colorado at Boulder, A Little Matter of Genocide: Holocaust and Denial in the Americas, 1492 to the present, p. 340)


9. SURVIVAL AND RESTORATION OF TRIBAL CULTURE ARE KEY TO PREVENT HUMAN EXTINCTION—THIS IMPACT SOLVES ALL OTHERS

WEATHERFORD 1994

(Jack, Anthropologist, Savages and Civilization: Who Will Survive?, pp. 287-291)



10. SCENARIO THREE—REINTRODUCTION


CORPORATE BISON INTERESTS FIGHT FOR REGULATION INSTEAD OF EXPANDING WILD BISON HERDS—THIS WILL DESTROY BISON’S UNIQUE CULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES AND UNDERMINE SUPPORT FOR WILD BISON RESTORATION

LULKA 2008

(David Lulka, Dept of Geography, San Diego State University, Journal of Cultural Geography, February)


11. NOW IS THE KEY TIME TO INFLUENCE THE BISON MARKET—CHANGING POLICIES NOW CAN ALTER THE DEBATE OVER BISON RESTORATION

LULKA 2008

(David Lulka, Dept of Geography, San Diego State University, Journal of Cultural Geography, February)


12. Bison reintroduction is key to restore prairie ecosystems.

Valles Caldera National Preserve, 5/9/09, “Bison Enhanced Prairie,” Caldera Options, http://calderaoptions.com/Bison_Enhanced_Prairie.html

13. PRAIRIES ARE KEY TO OVERALL BIODIVERSITY

WWF 2005

(World Wildlife Fund, “Agriculture and Environment: Wheat,” Nov 13, http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/what_we_do/policy/agriculture_environment/commodities/wheat/environmental_impacts/habitat_conversion/index.cfm)


14.

       BIODIVERSITY IS KEY TO CHECK EXTINCTION 

WATSON 2006

(Captain Paul, Founder and President of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, has a show on Animal Planet, Last Mod 9-17, http://www.eco-action.org/dt/beerswil.html)



15. PLAN: THE UNITED STATES FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SHOULD FUND THE EXPANSION OF THE FOOD DISTRIBUTION PROGRAM ON INDIAN RESERVATIONS, INCLUDING CULTURALLY APPROPRIATE FOODS PROCURED FROM INDIAN PRODUCERS USING TRADITIONAL AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES.


16. CONTENTION THREE—SOLVENCY

THE FDPIR IS CRITICAL TO DISTRIBUTE BISON TO LOCAL COMMUNITIES—THIS DISTRIBUTION IS THE KEY ELEMENT IN PRESERVING NATIVE LIFEWAYS

LULKA 2006

(David, San Diego State University, Great Plains Research, Spring, http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1804&context=greatplainsresearch)


17. CREATING DEMAND IS KEY—THIS ALLOWS TRIBES TO EXPAND THEIR HERDS

CHADWICK 2006

(Douglas, wildlife biologist, Defenders Magazine, Fall, http://www.defenders.org/newsroom/defenders_magazine/fall_2006/where_the_buffalo_now_roam.php)

18. THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS AN OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE BISON—IT SHOULD BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR PAST VIOLENCE AGAINST INDIANS

LULKA 2006

(David, San Diego State University, Great Plains Research, Spring, http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1804&context=greatplainsresearch)

19. OUR EXAMINATION OF FEDERAL BISON POLICY IS CRUCIAL TO CREATE TRANSPARENCY AND SHAPE THE DIRECTION OF DEBATES OVER BISON

LULKA 2008

(David Lulka, Dept of Geography, San Diego State University, Journal of Cultural Geography, February)

Negative

Specific Rounds

Princeton (Ohio)

Aff: STEM Education

1NC: SKFTA Politics T - Social Services Biopower Nietzsche States Case

2NC: Biopower Nietzsche

1NR: Politics Case

2NR: Biopower

Princeton (Ohio) Quarterfinals

Aff: TANF

1NC: Nietzsche Cap and Trade Politics T - Removing a Barrier XO CP Case

2NC: Nietzsche

1NR: Politics XO CP

2NR: Nietzsche

Personal tools