BY HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT
Dear America:
It’s been nearly a quarter
century since the Americans with Disabilities Act was passed. Many of you may
think folks with disabilities are equal now. That perhaps we should just shut
up already and move on.
I understand that reaction. People
with disabilities haven’t told their story. We’ve let others – usually clueless,
often cruel -- tell it for us.
A common but inaccurate story is
told by the business owner who resents the ADA. He thinks he’s done everything
for those gimps, even put in a ramp. Why can’t they just be grateful, even if
the ramp is dangerously steep? The local news airs a story of the struggling
business owner allegedly on the verge of bankruptcy, because those darn gimps
insist his ramp isn’t up to snuff.
But the story fails to explain
that the ADA is not a burdensome building code but a civil rights law. It fails
to point out that its requirements are usually less expensive to meet than
already existing structural, electrical and plumbing codes. The story doesn’t
say ramps are involved so people with disabilities can get into the building like
everyone else. The story doesn’t clarify that refusing to remove physical
barriers is the same as denying basic civil rights by posting a sign saying
“Whites Only” or “Men Only” or “Christians Only.”
There are other stories told about people with disabilities rather
than stories told by them. Like when
the media made Christopher Reeve the de facto spokesperson for every disabled
person on the planet.
I have no ill feelings toward
Reeve. But Reeve expressed a very different mindset than the majority of folks
with disabilities. He lived many years without a disability. After his injury,
he was focused on curing disability rather than making a meaningful life with
it.
Fueled by the national media,
Reeve’s message aligned with the medieval way of thinking: a disabled person is
a broken person. And the only way to deal with someone who’s broken is to fix
him. There are normal people and there are disabled people. The normal are
whole and valuable, and the disabled are broken and worthless.
The media’s focus on Reeve and
his obsession with a cure took away the focus on everyday folks living with
disabilities. The message was that every red cent should be used to find a
cure. Why direct resources to fund affordable, accessible housing so 30-year
olds in nursing homes can have full lives in the community with in-home
attendant care? The lives of the broken hold no value until they are fixed.
Only a fraction of news stories
focus on the modest investments in the built environment and simple
reapportionment of government funding that would truly improve the quality of
life for millions of disabled folks. The majority of media coverage reinforces
vile stereotypes of the pathetic, pitiable and broken.
If news outlets repeated reprehensible
stereotypes of African Americans, Jewish Americans and Hispanic Americans, the
public would be justifiably outraged. But pigeonholing Disabled Americans as
pathetic is still acceptable.
So I implore disabled men and
women to tell their stories. To assert their civil rights to employment and
transportation and goods and services. To claim the right to a life, just like
anyone else.
http://earthboundtomboy.blogspot.com/2015/07/unbroken.html
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