New Orleans Affirmative- 7ws strategy Page



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Politics


No link – Evacuation is popular and pushed by the following groups

GAO 06 United States Government Accountability Office GAO Report to Congressional Committees TRANSPORTATIONDISADVANTAGED POPULATIONS Actions Needed to Clarify Responsibilities and Increase Preparedness for Evacuations
There are many relevant federal entities and other entities that have served as advocates for all or subsets of transportation-disadvantaged populations. In the federal government, these include the National Council on Disability; and interagency councils such as the Coordinating Council on Access and Mobility, the Interagency Coordinating Council on Emergency Preparedness and Individuals with Disabilities, and the Interagency Council on Homelessness. Outside of the federal government, relevant entities that have advocated for these populations include the National Organization on Disability and the American Association of Retired Persons, as well as transportation groups such as the American Public Transportation Association, the Community Transportation Association of America, and the Association of Metropolitan Planning Organizations.
Plan bipartisan – funding for New Orleans protection

Winchell 09 PRESS RELEASE: Rep. Melancon Secures over $53.4 Million for Projects in South Louisiana FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: February 26, 2009 Robin Winchell http://bayouperspective.blogspot.com/2009_02_01_archive.html
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Rep. Charlie Melancon (LA-03) announced today that he secured $53,477,250 for projects in Louisiana’s Third Congressional District in the FY 2009 appropriations bills. This includes $48,677,250 in the FY09 Omnibus Appropriations Act (H.R. 1105) and $4,800,000 in the FY09 Defense Appropriations Act (H.R. 2638). The Omnibus passed the House last night with bipartisan support and should be considered by the Senate for approval in the next week. The Defense bill passed Congress last September.
Plan bipartisan – FEMA funding

Marino 11 Marino Co-Chairs Coalition to Aid Hurricane, Flood Victims CONTACT: Renita Fennick 202-870-3386 or renita.fennick@mail.house.gov Sep 8, 2011 http://marino.house.gov/press-release/bipartisan-panel-help-fema-funding
WASHINGTON (Sept. 8, 2011) – U.S. Rep. Tom Marino, PA-10, will serve as co-chairman of a bi-partisan House coalition aimed at ensuring the Federal Emergency Management Agency has the resources to support recovery efforts in the wake of recent natural disasters. The Hurricane Irene Coalition was formed Thursday morning after a meeting of House members whose districts were devastated by Hurricane Irene. The coalition’s scope is being extended to include the communities ravaged by this week’s flooding. Marino, of Lycoming Township, and more than 30 other members of Congress met with FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate, Deputy Administrator Richard Serino, and White House staff. Fugate briefed the group on the scope of the storm and the ongoing recovery efforts. The coalition’s goal is twofold: It will work to ensure FEMA has the resources it needs to support the recovery effort; and it will serve as a resource for members to support recovery efforts in their districts as they work with FEMA and other federal agencies. “I am encouraged by the formation of this coalition because the devastation that has been wrought on our constituents has nothing to do with political affiliation,” Marino said. “Helping these hard-working Americans get back on track and restoring our roads, bridges and public buildings is not an issue that can be categorized as conservative or liberal.”
Plan popular – republicans will make exceptions to conservative thoughts

Marino 11 Marino Co-Chairs Coalition to Aid Hurricane, Flood Victims CONTACT: Renita Fennick 202-870-3386 or renita.fennick@mail.house.gov Sep 8, 2011 http://marino.house.gov/press-release/bipartisan-panel-help-fema-funding
Immediately after the meeting, Marino left Washington and headed to his home district where he is expected to spend the next few days visiting the flood-ravaged municipalities. He and his staff have been in contact with emergency management officials in the affected counties. “I am an advocate of a smaller federal government, for sure, but there are some roles that Washington is obligated to fill,” Marino said. “Making sure that we lift people and local government out of the ruins caused by natural disasters is one of them.” Marino said his top priority is to reunite families in a “clean, safe housing by securing federal and state funding immediately.”


K of Politics


PC theory is wrong and abiding by it takes away basic rights

Ruby-Sachs 09 Emma Ruby-Sachs Attorney, An LGBT Report Card for Obama's First 100 Days Posted: 04/28/09 11:33 PM ET http://www.huffingtonpost.com/emma-rubysachs/an-lgbt-report-card-for-o_b_192590.html
But we expect the government to be able to multi-task. We reject the notion that Obama's political power and political capital are all used up by getting this country in basic working order. If we had ranked political problems, like Pelosi urges us to, equality gains, past, present and future, would never have been achieved. She is effectively telling the LGBT community, create a national crisis or good luck getting basic rights.
Their conception of politics as a series of distinct events results in tunnel vision and serial policy failure.

Edelman 98 Murray, Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin “Language, Myths and Rhetoric,” Society, January/February, Volume 35, Issue 2
The various issues with which governments deal are highly interrelated in the contemporary world, even though we are cued to perceive them as distinct. Such cuing also influences public opinion about politics in another sense. Because each day's news and governmental announcements evoke anxieties and reassurances about specific "problems" perceived as separate from each other (foreign affairs, strikes, fuel shortages, food shortages, prices, party politics, etc.), our political worlds are segmented and disjointed, focused at any moment upon some small set of anxieties, even though each such "issue" is a part of an increasingly integrated whole. Wars bring commodity shortages and rising prices, which in turn foment worker discontent and a search for enemies. Economic prosperity leads to a decline in theft and vagrancy, an increase in white-collar crime, higher demands for fuel and other ramifications. But our mode of referring to problems and policies creates a succession of crises, respites and separate grounds for anxiety and hope. Where people perceive links among issues, that perception is likely to be arbitrary and politically cued. To experience the political world as a sequence of distinct events, randomly threatening or reassuring, renders people susceptible to deliberate and unintended cues, for the environment becomes unpredictable and people remain continuously anxious. In place of the ability to deal with issues in terms of their logical and empirical ties to each other, the language of politics encourages us to see and to feel them as separate. This is also a formula for coping with them ineffectively, which is bound to reinforce anxiety in its turn.
Political capital isn’t real and their approach breed violence

Ruby-Sachs 08 Emma Ruby-SachsLawyer Posted: November 24, 2008, J.D. from the University of Toronto and practices civil litigation with Sutts Strosberg LLP, Ranking the Issues: Gay Rights in an Economic Crisis, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/emma-rubysachs/ranking-the-issues-gay-ri_b_146023.html

 

The classic approach to politics is to rank priorities and measure the finite bowl of political capital. If Obama pushes hard on a green new deal, he likely won't have much left for universal health care. If he backs off of serious economic regulation, then he might get more support for social programs from Republicans.  Because gay civil rights struggles affect fewer individuals and relate to less quantifiable harms, it's hard to justify putting them at the top of the list.  The alternative is to reject the ranked priorities political model altogether.  There is little evidence that sway and support is finite in the American political system. Political capital relates to the actions of the leader, yes, but can be infinitely large or non-existent at any point in time. In some ways, the more you get done, the more the bowl of capital swells.  Ranking America's problems to conserve political influence is a narrow minded approach to solving this crisis. Putting banks at the top of the list avoids the plight of large employers (like car companies - as much as we love to hate their executives). Sending health care and other social programs to second or third place, leaves those immediately affected by the crisis with nothing to fall back on. Finally, ignoring the disenfranchisement of a segment of the population breeds discontent, encourages protest, boycotts (a definite harm in this economy) and violence. It divides families (especially those who are still unable to sponsor their partner into the United States), imposes higher tax burdens on gay couples, denies benefits to gay spouses in many employment situations and polarizes social conservatives and social liberals in a time when consensus is essential.


Politics to anticipate the reaction of citizens objectifies them and allows them to be tuned by the government

Oenen 06 Gijs van Oenen is senior lecturer in practical philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Ph.D. from the University of Amsterdam in 1994. Next to the Erasmus University, he has been affiliated with the University of Amsterdam, Webster University Leiden, and the Rotterdam Academy of Architecture and Urban Design. A Machine That Would Go of Itself: Interpassivity and Its Impact on Political LIfe Gijs Van Oenen. Theory & Event. Baltimore: 2006. Vol. 9, Iss. 2;1 pgs 40.

The second mode, the one that follows on the classical model, may be described very broadly as the mode of policy. Of course, politics and government have always involved some form of policy-making. Political decisions need strategies to carry them out, and strategies when discursively laid out tend to become policies. Still, the notion of 'policy' as we use it nowadays can be seen as a distinctive step in the evolution of the praxis of government and politics, indicating a specific form of relation between government and citizen. The decisive point here is the anticipation of the reaction of citizens as part of the political proposals themselves on the one hand, and the coordination of the proposals of different political institutions and branches on the other, in an attempt to implement a coordinated 'policy'. The idea of policy is thus intimately related with the rise of the welfare state and the ambition of government to intervene in social processes in order to promote social goals. 41. Citizens thus become 'involved' in politics to a greater extent than just by voting, or being a member of a political party. But they are not supposed to be somehow actively involved in the formation of policy; their involvement in this 'mode' or phase is restricted to being the passive object of evaluation. The formation of policy might thus be considered part of 'political science', in the sense of being a broad, systematic and integrated approach to social adaptation and change.16 42. We may connect 'policy' in this sense with well-known political projects in post-World War II Europe. In a general sense, this era was characterized by the rejection of 'wholesale', revolutionary solutions and by a broad acceptance of the idea of 'piecemeal social engineering'. Society should be adjusted, fine-tuned and serviced, as a work for experts, rather than thrown about by rough, revolutionary amateurism. More specifically, the Beveridge report and the Marshall plan were the first examples of strong social policy 'unleashed' on postwar Europe. In some important sense, political confrontation was exchanged for social peacekeeping. 43. The notion of 'the end of ideology' might be seen as simultaneously heralding the 'triumph of policy'. Many European leftwing intellectuals distrusted this development; they suspected that political science, as a way to stimulate the formation and implementation of 'social policy', was implicitly or explicitly sponsored by the Marshall plan - at least in an ideological sense. Still, it is fair to say that the large-scale introduction of social policies constituted an almost unprecedented expression of political optimism and enthusiasm. The new approach promised, perhaps for the first time in history, a 'humane' organisation of labor and of social life in general.





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