10NFL1-Nuclear Weapons Page 44 of 199 www.victorybriefs.com easy access to some arguments
in certain situations, and has almost no access to the same arguments in other situations. For example, if the affirmative gets to draw its offense from some imagined world that is sans nuclear weapons, then nuclear deterrence arguments do not make a lot of sense on the negative. Even if the theory of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) is true, the risk of nuclear catastrophe is still greater in the negative world than in the affirmative world. Deterrence doesnʼt matter if there are no nuclear weapons. This is not to say that deterrence arguments cannot be made if the affirmative gets to defend a totally nonnuclear world (negative debaters can still defend that nuclear weapons deter against conventional warfare,
biological warfare etc, but rather that deterrence arguments (probably the simplest negative ground on the topic) are substantially
harder to access. Another relevant consideration in terms of the distribution of affirmative and negative ground is whether the affirmative has to defend an actual process of disarmament. If the affirmative does, in fact, have this burden, this greatly increases potential ground for the negative.
In this case, the negative can defend not only that nuclear weapons are good, but that disarmament is bad. These are two separate things. Disarmament is a lengthy, complicated process that facilitates a great deal of consequences. The negative can fairly easily defend why the process of disarmament is a bad thing, irrespective of the relative goodness or badness of nuclear weapons themselves. Regardless of how
these questions are answered, the existence of these questions is a good indication that debates over what the affirmative has to defend, or rather,
gets to defend, will be commonplace on this topic.
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