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Link Post Sun, Jul. 22, 2012 66 notes

Trying to find the right words: scintor: josiahd: youneedacat: josiahd: scintor: josiahd: Image...

scintor:

josiahd:

youneedacat:

josiahd:

scintor:

josiahd:

Image description: A woman standing in front of a wheelchair, getting something off a shelf. Text “There has been a miracle in the alcohol isle”.

belleuosus:

Ay-mayzing!

Some people who use…

exactly. It’s not a “tough issue” as to whether to watch all disabled people for signs of scamming. It’s a very easy issue. You don’t. You only do that once someone does something that looks like scamming. And having inconsistent abilities is not that. If anything for the most part scam artists keep their abilities very consistent and try to stick within stereotypes. So standing up out of a wheelchair, defying stereotypes, is something they’d never ever do in public. And therefore it is not ever good to launch a discussion about how awful scam artists are when disabled people are reacting to a prejudiced opinion about someone standing up out of a wheelchair. This is just not the time or the place. Wheelchair users doing what most wheelchair users can do, not ever the time to start talking about how important it is to look out for scam artists. Because that only cements the link in people’s minds between standing up and scamming. And that’s bad. Really bad.

As in attitudes like “disabled people are all potential scammers” (which is what it means when people are always on the lookout whenever they see one of us as much as wiggle our toes) contribute to an uncountable number of disabled people dying or living in dire poverty. And I know how bad scammers are (for the most part) pretty terrible but the level of destruction is just not even comparable. In the UK right now this kind of prejudice (and looking for a scammer under every wheelchair is prejudice, and that’s the prejudice pictures like this act on) is contributing to a rise in hate crimes towards disabled people. And people are dying both from losing benefits over this and from suicide. Things like that have been the norm in the USA for ages. The number of disability scammers people think exist, the number governments try to claim exists, is vastly inflated over what actual statistics show. And so is the damage. Meanwhile that rhetoric is outright killing untold numbers of disabled people. So these situations are just not the place to reinforce that view unless you like contributing to the attitudes that let these things continue. (Mind you I know how bad scammers can be. I just know that the damage to actual disabled people by treating it as the norm and not the extremely rare exception, is several orders of magnitude worse. So it’s no contest. If I want to fight scammers I’ll do it away from pictures of disabled people doing perfectly normal things for disabled people to do.

Honestly I believe that anyone who wants a wheelchair for any reason should be able to use one. It’s no different from a bicycle. It shouldn’t even be a disability thing. We don’t restrict cars only to people who can’t walk a certain distance. But that’s an entirely different subject. Sort of.




COMMENTS
  1. thearseman reblogged this from scintor
  2. 23devil reblogged this from hypergiants
  3. hypergiants reblogged this from belleuosus
  4. punkkimono reblogged this from scintor and added:
    This is why I’m reluctant to use my wheelchair. I can walk, but I need the chair due to pain and exhaustion. I can walk...
  5. stopcallingmebitch reblogged this from thatfeministdyke
  6. youandyourfudge reblogged this from perpetuallysociallyinept
  7. ladyannacrawley reblogged this from sofarfromshameless
  8. sofarfromshameless reblogged this from thatfeministdyke and added:
    This applies to a decent handful of my patients. -nods-
  9. twocentsormore reblogged this from youneedacat and added:
    Yeah. And this stuff can make people who could benefit from using a wheelchair in certain times and places, afraid to...
  10. deanisbatmanandsamlosthisshoe reblogged this from myasphyxiatedmind and added:
    ^Education: Taking ignorance to school since….
  11. toxicwolf13 reblogged this from thatfeministdyke
  12. belleuosus reblogged this from lindsay-irene and added:
    Just want to say, I apologize to everyone I offended by posting this. I really didn’t think when I posted it, and I...
  13. theawkwardhug reblogged this from thatfeministdyke
  14. thatfeministdyke reblogged this from myasphyxiatedmind
  15. perpetuallysociallyinept reblogged this from myasphyxiatedmind
  16. myasphyxiatedmind reblogged this from randomlycastle
  17. randomlycastle reblogged this from fallenagain and added:
    I’m grateful that I can most of the time walk. But for big shopping days, especially during a bad week, I go and get a...
  18. karalianne reblogged this from josiahd
  19. josiahd reblogged this from youneedacat and added:
    Yes, that too. It’s like there’s this idea that anything useful to people with disabilities must be tightly controlled,...
  20. youneedacat reblogged this from josiahd and added:
    exactly. It’s not a “tough issue” as to whether to watch all disabled people for signs of scamming. It’s a very easy...
  21. wolfennights reblogged this from farmerinthedelll
  22. farmerinthedelll reblogged this from warlocksexalways
  23. warlocksexalways reblogged this from youneedacat
  24. scintor reblogged this from josiahd and added:
    This is a tough issue here people. As I said here earlier, both my son and I need to use wheelchairs on an as needed...
  25. guilleum2 reblogged this from originalthundercatsho
  26. todbrowning reblogged this from youneedacat
  27. kaline-chan reblogged this from fallenagain
  28. fallenagain reblogged this from strychninespinaltap and added:
    And myself. Wheelchair user doesn’t always mean paralyzed, asshole.
  29. an-innerverse reblogged this from strychninespinaltap
  30. strychninespinaltap reblogged this from kris-guin and added:
    Like me.
  31. kris-guin reblogged this from josiahd
  32. originalthundercatsho reblogged this from belleuosus
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