trouble: In your history emphasizing your cripples (in yr history emphasizing ur cripples)trouble ([personal profile] trouble) wrote,
@ 2011-10-23 03:45 am UTC
Entry tags:disability, disability: disabled people don't exist, history, history: dead white men
Crossposts:http://troubleinchina.livejournal.com/675533.html
I know a lot of people skip titles of posts. Please read the title of this one.

I had an argument with someone at school on Thursday and it's still sitting with me. I think this is because we'd had an earlier argument on a similar subject on Tuesday. As you can probably imagine, it was about disability, or more specifically, about how disabled people have existed and advocated for themselves since long before the mainstream folks started paying attention, and well before I ever started paying attention.

The argument on Thursday was about my colleague's disagreement with the abstract for a master's research paper on disability discrimination in the Montreal Metro System. I'm not from Montreal, so the place this system has in Montreal was a bit much for me to grasp. Apparently it's a big thing, a progress thing. A thing about how Montreal has been advancing into the future. When it was opened in 1966, it was opened to everyone.

Everyone, of course, except people who can't walk up and down stairs.

The presentation and follow-up short video talked explicitly about ableist constructions of public spaces. She called it out very bluntly: this is discriminatory. This has always been discriminatory.

The part that others tend not to get, the part my colleague at the university didn't get, is that the people at the time knew this.

This is one of the things about disability-based discrimination that drives me up the wall. The theory that many people express is that no one in the past could possibly have been expected to think about disability as a category because this whole disability rights thing didn't start until [the speaker learned of it, whatever time period that is] and obviously not a moment before. (See: many feminist responses to disability-based critiques online that ignore even something as simple as the presence of disability activists at the Beijing conference in 1995. I've been told again and again and again that disability only became a "thing" to consider in the past few years and it's mostly "oversensitive" types at that. Arg.)

So, let me lay some facts on you:

The late 1960s and early 1970s, when the Metro was being built to be inaccessible to many people with physical disabilities, was also the time when people with disabilities were getting out of unwanted institutional settings. It's called "The Great Exit," and I'm pretty sure you haven't learned of it. The Great Exit didn't happen spontaneously, and it wasn't an austerity measure. People with disabilities campaigned for it. They fought for it. Just like they fought for employment and education in the 1800s and early 1900s in Nova Scotia.

Once they left institutions, people with disabilities fought for employment rights and to live free from discrimination. To some extent, they won. The Quebec Human Rights Act included disability as a protected class, passed in 1975.

Except for transit users. Explicitly, transit was not included, you could not sue for a human rights violation for not being allowed on a bus if you were disabled.

In 1988, ADAPT (a US-based protest group) came to Montreal to highlight how inaccessible the transit system was. This PDF has some of their information [in English] about the protest. It was all over the news, and people were arrested for crashing through barricades with their wheelchairs.

And still, the Metro remained inaccessible. In fact, it wasn't until 2004 - Sixteen Years Later - that the law saying that you couldn't sue for inaccessible transit was struck down, and it wasn't until 2006 that a Metro station was made wheelchair accessible. And even then, it was a debate, and one that apparently was won because it "looked bad" that the Metro was still inaccessible. Not that it was bad, that it looked bad.

The Metro in Montreal is currently being retrofitted to be accessible. The current rate is less than one transit station becoming accessible per year. Again, The Montreal Metro System will be fully wheelchair accessible in 2058.

My colleague argued that it is wrong ("presentist," the worst thing to accuse an historian of being within the discipline) to chide people in the past for not thinking of people with disabilities when they made the Metro. "They didn't know better then. We know better now."

This is a lie. They knew. Disability-based historians and disability rights activists know how far back the fight for equal access goes. It didn't spring, fully formed from the head of Hephaestus, in 1995 in Beijing. It didn't suddenly arrive the day you first learned of it. It's always been here. In ignoring that, in assuming that his ignorance is in fact the truth, my colleague (and many others like him) are betraying their own attitudes about disability, about history, and about what matters.

Don will be 78 years old when he can physically get into every Metro station in Montreal. The lifespan of people with Don's disability is less than that.


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jackandahat: (Knitting Addict)


[personal profile] jackandahat
2011-10-23 08:07 am UTC (link)
I want to know how stupid people think their parents and grandparents were, and if they'd say it to Dad or dear old Grandma's face. "Yes, Grandma, I know you lived through the war, you raised 7 kids on your own, and half of their kids too... but I'm going to tell everyone you were too stupid to realise that people who couldn't walk wouldn't be able to get up stairs."

I mean, seriously. Come on now.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:45 pm UTC (link)
I had an interesting conversation with someone half a generation older than I am about that a bit, and she said that she thinks everything must be so much better now because she sees more people with disabilities out and about. Which, as you know, a lot of people think. And it is great that more disabled people are able to participate in society. But that is so only a small piece of the picture. I think that's the problem.

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jackandahat: (Knitting Addict)


[personal profile] jackandahat
2011-10-23 03:55 pm UTC (link)
I was having a conversation with someone about this yesterday. I have never been served in a shop by someone with a visible mobility impairment. I have never seen "people like me" working. I've seen a couple of guys in suits who look like they're on the way to the office using canes, but I haven't interacted with tham in a work environment.

People go on about representation on TV, but my experience of representation in life is that "people like me" don't get to hold down jobs and support ourselves. And then the Job Centre wonders why I get cynical with them.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 04:01 pm UTC (link)
One of the things I'm finding very nice about being in York is the sheer number of people who are disabled people part of the student and academic environment. I mean, it's not proportional at all, but there are a lot of students who use mobility devices, a strong Deaf student group, an active Mad Students Society, and my adviser is very out about his diagnosis with schizophrenia. It's still a long way to go by any means, but there's more there than there was in Halifax.

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jackandahat: (Knitting Addict)


[personal profile] jackandahat
2011-10-23 04:50 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, that's very very different to my uni experience - I wasn't a full-time cane user then, and I doubt I'd have even applied if I had been (I shouldn't have anyway) - it was built into a hillside, lots of areas you could only access by stairs, so we automatically didn't have a visible disabled population because half of them wouldn't have been able to get to class.

And when I went to "see someone" about depression, she tried to tell me I missed my mother and all students went through this. After I'd told her how wonderful it was not having to live with [censored] any more, but that I was thinking of killing myself anyway.

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amandaw: A river strap runs toward the camera, over large round rocks, starkly back-lit by setting sunlight. (three rivers)


[personal profile] amandaw
2011-10-24 10:57 am UTC (link)
I experienced a similar change in the visibility of disability when I changed workplaces. Went from a place where the incentive was to hide, hide hide because you'd be more likely to be targeted for, than supported in, your disability, to a place where _at least half_ of the workers are out with disabilities, and I'm pretty certain there are at least several others who are quiet about it because they're just quiet people. And the environment is, well, disability would not be a barrier to employment unless we as a society made it one, and our entire work is helping address those barriers, so of course PWD working there face a better (not perfect) environment being out about it, if nothing else as proof positive for their clients that it is possible.

I guess what I'm saying is it is _so nice_ to be surrounded by people who are comfortable enough being out, being in an environment where we can talk about being disabled without the implication being "and this is why I'm broken and deserve derision." It is so nice being surrounded by open talk about it. It's refreshing in a way I've never experienced in the general public or any other workplace. I want to export this experience for other people, so bad.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-24 02:45 pm UTC (link)
Seriously. Having friends who are similarly Crazy to me has been such a ... boon? to my mental health. Suddenly I can talk about Crazy without it being a huge THING.

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redbird: profile photo of me (profile)


[personal profile] redbird
2011-10-24 05:03 pm UTC (link)
I think part of the problem is that we're starting from such a low point that "much better now" can be true even while there are a huge number of problems left. Emphasizing the improvement is also a way for non-disabled people to think/claim that no more is needed (insert analogies to race, gender, sexual orientation).

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serene: serene (ooh)


[personal profile] serene
2011-10-23 08:39 am UTC (link)
The stupid just pours out of some people when they open their mouths.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:46 pm UTC (link)
I think it's more that people are really struggling with "Wait, what?" Which I'm trying to be kind about, but it's not working as well as I would like. I think they're always shocked there's someone right in the room with them who knows & cares about this stuff.

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serene: serene (ooh)


[personal profile] serene
2011-10-23 04:43 pm UTC (link)
Yes. There comes a time, though, when willful ignorance becomes something that makes smoke come out of my ears.

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lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)


[personal profile] lilacsigil
2011-10-23 09:20 am UTC (link)
$5 Canadian bets there's a budget crisis or ten between now and 2058 and the stations aren't accessible by then either. Because accessibility isn't really that important.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:47 pm UTC (link)
I'm betting $5 Canadian that the plan of having Ontario be accessible by 2025 isn't going to go anywhere either, because some government or another will pull the plug on it. The leader of the Ontario Conservatives pretty much said exactly that.

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ginny_t: You say "ulterior motive" like it's a bad thing. (GH Yasuhara Ulterior motive)


[personal profile] ginny_t
2011-10-23 07:58 pm UTC (link)
I'm not taking either of those bets. That money is much better spent on cupcakes and tea.

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jae: (gecko)


[personal profile] jae
2011-10-23 12:05 pm UTC (link)
That...is an awesome response to your colleague. I hope he/she sees it, somehow.

-J

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:47 pm UTC (link)
I may break it down for him later. If I feel up to it. And when we're all less stressed.

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laughingrat: A detail of leaping rats from an original movie poster for the first film of Nosferatu (Leaping Rats)


[personal profile] laughingrat
2011-10-23 12:31 pm UTC (link)
"Presentist." *cries*

from the head of Hephaestus

Oh, nice one. *admires*

It's one thing to be ignorant, but another to be willful about it. You have clean, simple facts at your disposal; what, on god's green earth, is there for people to friggin' debate about? IDEK.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:48 pm UTC (link)
I stole Hephaestus from [personal profile] capriuni. :D

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wrdnrd: (sewing)


[personal profile] wrdnrd
2011-10-23 05:44 pm UTC (link)
My impulse reaction was, "But, wait, it wasn't Hephaes... Ohhhhh, i see what you did thar."

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laughingrat: A detail of leaping rats from an original movie poster for the first film of Nosferatu (Leaping Rats)


[personal profile] laughingrat
2011-10-23 06:00 pm UTC (link)
Well it was brilliant, because at first I was all "No but it was Zeus but OHHHHH, right, Hephaestus. Totes." :-D

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capriuni: Text: "I know where my towel is, But I can't find anything else." (geek god)


[personal profile] capriuni
2011-10-24 11:46 pm UTC (link)
Also, in one version of the myth, it's Hephaestus who opens Zeus's head for Athena to be born... (in the other version of the myth, Hephaestus was born after Athena).

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laughingrat: A detail of leaping rats from an original movie poster for the first film of Nosferatu (Leaping Rats)


[personal profile] laughingrat
2011-10-24 11:54 pm UTC (link)
That's right! Very "just beat me about the head with your hammer, it'll either let the evil spirits loose or it'll kill me, and either way I'll be outta my misery." Hee.

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capriuni: Text: "I know where my towel is, But I can't find anything else." (towel)


[personal profile] capriuni
2011-10-25 06:08 am UTC (link)
Hee! Exactly!

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bcholmes: (yes)


[personal profile] bcholmes
2011-10-23 12:57 pm UTC (link)
This is an excellent post. Thank you.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:48 pm UTC (link)

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ironed_orchid: pin up girl reading kant (Default, intellectual hottie (green))


[personal profile] ironed_orchid
2011-10-23 01:28 pm UTC (link)
it wasn't until 2006 that a Metro station was made wheelchair accessible.

It seems to me that one accessible station is not actually very useful. It would mean that you can get on at that station, but you can't get off anywhere else. Of course, in a refitting to make them all accessible, it makes sense that at some stage there will be a first station.

It seems so bizarre to me that people could build a station in the 1960s and 1970s and not think that a lift might come in useful. I mean, it's not like lifts hadn't been around for decades at that point.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:48 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, I'm more just amazed at the "Should we really do this?" portion of the debate. *sigh*

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ironed_orchid: pin up girl reading kant (Default, intellectual hottie (green))


[personal profile] ironed_orchid
2011-10-23 11:07 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, when I think about it, it just seems strangely stubborn.

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automaticdoor: text: "oops, did i spill some of my self-respect in your entitlement?" (spill self-respect in entitlement)


[personal profile] automaticdoor
2011-10-23 01:28 pm UTC (link)
The theory that many people express is that no one in the past could possibly have been expected to think about disability as a category because this whole disability rights thing didn't start until [the speaker learned of it, whatever time period that is] and obviously not a moment before.

I have seen this with racism, I have seen this with sexism, but good lord I have never seen it more than with disability rights. So far.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:49 pm UTC (link)
*nodnodnod* I find it especially irritating in online discussions because there's so much information to counteract that if one just searches for "disability rights".

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meloukhia: Red stockinged legs in black heels, standing next to a watering can with a red flower. (Watering Shoes)


[personal profile] meloukhia
2011-10-23 01:43 pm UTC (link)
The level of contortions people will go to in order to plausibly deny is really quite remarkable.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 03:50 pm UTC (link)
I'm mostly appalled, I admit, at how little this information is out there. We study the Quiet Revolution, but never the disability one.

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capriuni: Text: "I know where my towel is, But I can't find anything else." (towel)


[personal profile] capriuni
2011-10-23 04:26 pm UTC (link)
I don't know if you had time to read my post on "The False-parted woman" ballads, but the (able-bodied) man I was discussing the genre with, via email, made the claim that, following the old broadside ballads as evidence, people often faked having wooden legs, in order to get more money when they begged (Like that's not an argument we're still fighting, today.

To be specific, this is the precise ballad he cited at me, as "proof" of his argument -- written in 1641:

1. There was a jovial beggar; he had a wooden leg,
Lame from his cradle, and forced for to beg.

CHORUS: And a begging we will go, we'll go, we'll go;
And a begging we will go!

2. A bag for his oatmeal, another for his salt;
And a pair of crutches, to show that he can halt.

3. A bag for his wheat, another for his rye;
A little bottle by his side, to drink when he's a-dry.

4. Seven years I begged for my old Master Wild,
He taught me to beg when I was but a child.

5. I begged for my master, and got him store of pelf;
But now, Jove be praised! I'm begging for myself.

6. In a hollow tree I live, and pay no rent;
Providence provides for me, and I am well content.

7. Of all the occupations, a beggar's life's the best;
For whene'er he's weary, he'll lay him down and rest.

8. I fear no plots against me; I live in open cell;
Then who would be a king when beggars live so well?

---

Now, if you're living safely within the cozy bubble of able-bodied privilege, you might be able to read (or hear) that and convince yourself that the beggar is gloating over how easy he's got it. Since I'm not in the cozy bubble of AB privilege, I read that and get nothing but the bitter laugh of someone fighting for a last shred of human dignity.

Just saying...

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 04:32 pm UTC (link)
Also, there's nothing in there that says "fake wooden leg" to me, but what do I know? I'm just a girl.

I had a real fight with a prof once about this. She claimed that it was perfectly acceptable to argue with no proof that people faked disability all the time in the past, even though the article we were reading that did that also made a list of all the ways that someone could become injured and permanently disabled as a peasant.

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capriuni: Text: "I know where my towel is, But I can't find anything else." (towel)


[personal profile] capriuni
2011-10-23 05:12 pm UTC (link)
But there are two verses in there about the able-bodied exploiting disabled children in the name of "charity" that's really all about personal profit... (side-eyes the MDA).

Also, how is it even possible to fake missing a limb? I can understand how someone could fake a limp, or blindness for a few hours at a time -- but actually hiding half-an-arm or half-a-leg? I don't think so.

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shiyiya: Shiyiya, a very pale white girl with brown hair and eyes. (shiyiya dark fairy)


[personal profile] shiyiya
2011-10-25 12:50 am UTC (link)
One of the Lackey books I just read had someone saying that if he was begging on the streets he'd bind his leg up to look like a cripple for sympathy, and I was just like what. how would that even work. NOBODY would notice that your 'whole' leg is half the thickness of your 'crippled' one? and where the hell is your foot supposed to be hiding? What is this I don't even.

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ironed_orchid: pin up girl reading kant (Default, intellectual hottie (green))


[personal profile] ironed_orchid
2011-10-23 11:42 pm UTC (link)
JFC! Have these people not heard of the practice in India and other countries where there is extreme poverty, where people maim children to make them more effective beggars?

This is not faking it, this is actually wounding people and giving them lifelong disabilities.

Slumdog Millionaire may have been 6 types of crap, but on the living conditions of children in slums, it was pretty accurate.

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unusualmusic: an old style mic against a blue background (mic blue)


[personal profile] unusualmusic
2011-10-23 05:19 pm UTC (link)
May I ask if you would like to link/post this over to [community profile] politics?

Last edited 2011-10-23 05:19 pm UTC

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 05:21 pm UTC (link)
It's linkable. I'm not participating in communities at all right now just because of time. ♥

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unusualmusic: an old style mic against a blue background (mic blue)


[personal profile] unusualmusic
2011-10-23 05:23 pm UTC (link)
Cool. Thanks!

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unusualmusic: an old style mic against a blue background (mic blue)


[personal profile] unusualmusic
2011-10-23 05:22 pm UTC (link)
Why on earth would it take so long for them to fix it? I mean surely it would be less expensive if they threw a bunch of money at it now, instead of piecemealing all over the place?

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-23 05:25 pm UTC (link)
Because they had para-transit and that's entirely like having full and easy access to the metro system, right? Right?

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amadi: A stylized photo of two calla lily flowers (Calla Lily)


[personal profile] amadi
2011-10-23 07:46 pm UTC (link)
The existence of para transit as an excuse is explicitly cited in documentation as to why Pittsburgh intentionally built a new light rail transit system in the mid-80s with 47 out of 60 stops inaccessible not just to wheelchair users but to anyone who isn't capable of climbing up 1½ to 2 feet to enter into the vehicle. There is no discussion about ramping or installing a lift system at the inaccessible stops; it's just expected that if you cannot get on at the "street level" stops, you will either use the (increasingly slashed and limited) bus system (with problems not at all unlike Toronto's) or you will find a way to get to and from the nearest accessible station.

Because PWDs have an abundance of time and well, if they're on wheels, it's no big deal to roll themselves a few extra miles up and down hills, etc. in a city that gets lots of snowy weather to get to a station they can use, right?

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amandaw: A river strap runs toward the camera, over large round rocks, starkly back-lit by setting sunlight. (three rivers)


[personal profile] amandaw
2011-10-24 11:05 am UTC (link)
Not to mention lack of sidewalks altogether, or crappy sidewalks that were done with thin stone strips that looked cool when installed but now make it like going out on the terrain (the more cracks, the more places for water to freeze and thaw, expand and buckle), or where the sidewalks are never shoveled in the winter even when they exist...

And the thing about the 47 stops is, *it wouldn't be hard to add a ramp*. They're basically begging for them: long, flat platforms with a set of stairs leading straight up at the long ends, usually 2 sets next to one another.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-24 02:42 pm UTC (link)
*sigh*

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amadi: A stylized photo of two calla lily flowers (Calla Lily)


[personal profile] amadi
2011-10-24 06:36 pm UTC (link)
Actually, some of the street level stops are really small, so I could see how it would be hard to add ramps because of their placement (most are on "islands" in the middle of the street you should be able to see one in street view here). Retrofitting for universal accessibility is just... hard to imagine, thanks to the original design of the system, which is really frustrating and obnoxious.

But it wouldn't be difficult to add a lift at a couple of the stops, at least, to not have such long swaths with no accessibility at all.

Last edited 2011-10-24 06:41 pm UTC

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jesse_the_k: Well nourished white woman riding black Quantum 4400 powerchair off the right edge, chased by the word "powertool" (JK powertool)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 10:06 pm UTC (link)
And yet San Francisco has created ramped islands (not enough of them, that is, not 100%) on the F - Market/Embarcadero streetcar line. It's a tourist area, so the PCC cars are painted in the liveries of other streetcars around the US.

The transit agencies overwhelming website for this is:
http://www.sfmta.com/cms/mcust/access.htm#fmarket

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amadi: A stylized photo of two calla lily flowers (Calla Lily)


[personal profile] amadi
2011-10-25 11:09 pm UTC (link)
The islands most in need of modification are between two lanes in the middle of the street, and barely wide enough for a large person to stand on, so there'd be a major change to traffic patterns, too. It'd be amazing, but I cannot imagine anyone in our city having the political will to demand it. I doubt it's even on anyone's radar.

It makes me sad and tired.

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jesse_the_k: Text reads: "I'm great in bed ... I can sleep for days" (sleep for days)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 11:18 pm UTC (link)
Many days I feel my study is shrouded in "sad&tired&sad&tired" drapery. My city started out the ADA gate in great form, and now creates ped-hostile intersections which make me want to bite somebody. The ADA coordinator died, they never replaced him, and I keep trying to generate the oomph to complain to the four committees responsible for intersections.

Not yet :(

If only there were a way to crowdsource energy....

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amadi: A stylized photo of two calla lily flowers (Calla Lily)


[personal profile] amadi
2011-10-25 11:21 pm UTC (link)
"If only there were a way to crowdsource energy..."

You said about twenty mouthfuls, right there.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-24 02:43 pm UTC (link)
This sort of thing just drives me up the damned wall. I think there are people for whom para-transit is necessary due to their needs/wants, but for people like Don? Fuck no. Don should be able to use the damned bus system without any dramas because his wheels are like legs except round. Just... arg.

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amadi: A stylized photo of two calla lily flowers (Calla Lily)


[personal profile] amadi
2011-10-24 06:43 pm UTC (link)
Exactly! Especially when you say that something is accessible, then it damn well better be! (I'm reminded, since I'll be there again soon, of my issues with the London Underground. Oh boy.)

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deird1: Fred looking pretty and thoughful (Fred pondering)


[personal profile] deird1
2011-10-23 07:32 pm UTC (link)
Update on Melbourne, just so you can be reassured that at least some public transport systems are beginnning to work it out:

- All the "higher-ups" in Public Transport just had to take a course where they had to use wheelchairs, scooters, etc around public transport, and discuss all the issues they encountered and how to solve them.

- Every single station or tram stop that gets updated at all has to be fully accessible after the update.

- We're producing a whole stack of requirements for making train stations more accessible, covering every possible thing we can think of.

- There are at least two wheelchair users at the top levels of the Transport Dept, advocating for this very issue. Anyone foolish enough to say that accessibility isn't important has to go and tell them, to their faces, that they don't really need to travel. And then get laughed out of the room...

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-24 02:42 pm UTC (link)
I'm glad there are actual disabled people involved in the process.

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jesse_the_k: Bambi fawn cartoon with two heads (Conjoined Bambi)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 10:08 pm UTC (link)
Indeed, in my experience, that's the key between lip service and getting things done. Nothing about us without us not only means we want to be part of the decision, but also we'd better make sure we're part of the decision.

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willow: Raspberry on black background. Text: Original Unfiltered Willow (Willow:Unfiltered)


[personal profile] willow
2011-10-24 05:15 am UTC (link)
1. I am reminded of Delux Vivens going 'No, talk about the representation of PoC in SF didn't just happen in 2009'. The internet did NOT just create PoC fans (McMasters Bujold).


2. I am reminded of the first year or so I got my cane, also being the year in which I went to Boston. **busts out laughing* Oh, it was ridiculous. And funnily enough, about a year or so before, I'd been reading about it, because I noticed everyone in places I was rping was white, able bodied. So I made a character in a wheelchair, who was over 27, who lived in Boston (she was never accepted anywhere) and in researching to create her, realized she couldn't bloody get around ANYWHERE w/o personal access to a car and/or parking. And then I was there, for the lived in experience. And everytime I read stuff like this, I'm reminded of my friend looking at me hobbling along, and the subway system, and it dawning on her how utter crap the system really was.


3. Did the person waving their ignorance in your face realize that THIS IS YOUR FIELD? That the accusation even, that this was sprung straight out of your head with anachroninism is bs, because you read all the old letters and planning committee memo notes etc... ON TOP of general basics? Did they perchance also miss the concept of the continent of North America having a Civil Rights Movement against the concept that SOME PEOPLE MATTERED and others didn't?

4. I did actually learn about The Great Exit. But I can't remember where. I want to say a movie, but it was more than likely a documentary (then again, given my habit of researching a topic that makes me whoa, might have been both).

5. The Ugly Laws

6. There is no six.

7. **hugs muchly**

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-24 02:41 pm UTC (link)


And yeah, they know disability is my focus, but they seem to think this is some sort of neutral topic for me rather than one I care a lot about. It apparently concerns people that I'm so enthused about my topic. I don't know what the heck they're doing with their time.



I'm really curious as to the Ugly Laws and if they applied in Canada at all. Halifax certainly had the right environment for them at the time they were being passed in Chicago.

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jesse_the_k: Due South's Ray Kowalski and Benton Fraser both rubbing their foreheads (dS F/K headache)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 11:46 pm UTC (link)
I skimmed some reviews of Susan Shweik's book but saw no mention.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-25 11:56 pm UTC (link)
She focuses pretty exclusively on the US context. I don't think she mentioned Canada at all.

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jesse_the_k: David Hewlett wearing almost nothing except a halo, wings, a sneer & extended middle finger (Fucky fuckity fuck)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 11:19 pm UTC (link)
Boston sidewalks are practice lanes for hell.

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wordweaverlynn: (busy, housework)


[personal profile] wordweaverlynn
2011-10-24 07:08 am UTC (link)
Horrified but not surprised.

Linking.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-24 02:39 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, that's kinda my take on it. Mostly I'm frustrated that this history is right there for the picking up and people keep going "Wait, what? There were disabled people before 1981? I never knew that!" (Not here, obviously, but elsewhere.)

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jesse_the_k: sign reads "torture chamber unsuitable for wheelchair users" (even more access fail)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 06:42 pm UTC (link)
Disability is an inevitable part of the human condition. Ipso facto therefore, we're in all history.

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-25 09:51 pm UTC (link)
You would think.

Actually, that's one thing I really liked about the presentation I went to. She basically pointed out exactly that, and said she wanted to look at history in a way that centered disabled people's experiences rather than looking at separate things that were specifically about disability, which is what I tend to do.

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jesse_the_k: Silhouette of a 19th century carriage, text reads "they see me rollin' they hatin'" (on the disabling wagon)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 09:53 pm UTC (link)
So, what is this look[ing] at history in a way that centered disabled people's experiences? Pointer welcome!

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trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Bookworms)


[personal profile] trouble
2011-10-25 09:56 pm UTC (link)
For Laurent Parent (I think I spelled her name correctly), she chose an event that is fairly well documented (that is, the building of the Montreal Metro and the Quiet Revolution in Quebec, both of which are big deals), and put disabled people back in the picture. So she talked about the Great Exit and about disability rights people protesting and occupying space and the like in the context of these other events.

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jesse_the_k: Slings & Arrows' Anna offers up "Virtual Timbits" (Anna brings doughnuts)


[personal profile] jesse_the_k
2011-10-25 09:58 pm UTC (link)
Thanks!

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vass: batgirl looking sad (Do NOT make me use the sad eyes)


[personal profile] vass
2011-11-01 08:31 pm UTC (link)
I've had this tab open for more than a week, and I haven't responded because my brain keeps whiting out when I read the subject header and then scroll down to "The lifespan of people with Don's disability is less than that."

I just.

DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD:

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