For all those that celebrate Christmas I wish you well. Good cheer to all. If you have the time I highly recommend you cut and paste the link below. Wheelie Catholic has written an interesting Christmas post.
http://wheeliecatholic.blogspot.com/
Paralyzed since I was 18 years old, I have spent much of the last 30 years thinking about the reasons why the social life of crippled people is so different from those who ambulate on two feet. After reading about the so called Ashley Treatment I decided it was time to write a book about my life as a crippled man. My book, Bad Cripple: A Protest from an Invisible Man, will be published by Counter Punch. I hope my book will completed soon.
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Tuesday, December 25, 2012
MERRY CHRISTMAS
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Death By Bedsores
Late last month I read an article by Art Caplan on Medscape: "Patients Have the Right to Choose Death From Bedsores". Caplan's article has been discussed in some detail within bioethics. Caplan's article is about an elderly man in his 80s who lived in a rural area, had one daughter, and lived an independent life until he had a series of strokes. At some point during his hospitalization this man was told he could not return to his home and formerly independent life. He was going to be admitted to a long term care facility. Not surprisingly the man in question balked at this idea. Controversy erupted when he refused to be turned. He knew that if he were not turned severe wounds would develop, grow in size, and eventially become infected. Death was inevitable. According to Caplan the man died in the
hospital, with huge ulcers. Basically, his body fell apart,
the nursing staff was in an uproar, doctors fighting about whether
or not it was right to let this happen. It was quite
divisive for the staff morale, and indeed they were investigated about
how a person in their hospital could die from infected skin
ulcers.
Caplan concluded the elderly man had the right to refuse to be touched and moved even if it would result in death. Caplan thought the refusal to be turned was akin to a patient that refuses a feeding tube or dialysis. This is an interesting point no doubt. However, Caplan really goes off the rails at the end of his essay when he wrote that this man's decision started to affect nursing and staff morale and began to become a problem in the delivery of care for others, then I believe that is a factor that has to be considered when deciding whether to honor what he says. The nurses cannot work if the unit becomes a smelly, untenable mess, and although this man had his rights, other people have their rights too. If I thought the care of others was being compromised by these morale issues and staff problems, I might override a patient's wishes. I might not honor his request in the name of other people's rights. In my opinion, there may be limits to what you can request when it affects the care that others can receive. That is a tradeoff that has to be weighed at all times. As tough as this case was, it provides lessons to take home. Autonomy and patient rights may have some limits when they begin to affect others and the care that others can get. It may be important to think about this kind of dilemma in advance, and be ready to say as soon as a request comes that this is the patient's right, but it is not something we can accept at this facility.
Caplan's conclusion left me shaking my head in disbelief. Caplan should know better than to pen such a sloppy anaysis. In my estimation Caplan's scholrship is undermined by his penchant for shooting from the hip and pumping out opinions that clearly need to be considered much more carefully. When I read Caplan's conclusion I immediately thought of Susan Schweik's book the Ugly Laws that masterfully details how people with a disability were prevented from begging because their mere presence in public was objectionable. Historically, people with disabling conditions were overrepresented in the ranks of beggars. This undoubtedly distressed those without a disability in the past and present. One word comes to mind when I think about the end of Caplan's essay: outmoded. I find it distressing Caplan is willing to overide a patient's wishes if this person affected the moral of the staff or care of others. This is no mere "tradeoff|" as Caplan asserts. I can readily imagine the implications for disenfranchised populations, people with a disability included. These thoughts bring forth words we now deem antiquated like feebleminded, lame, epileptic, retarded, idiot, insane and many others. And what about the present? Will the presence of a person with Alzheimer's disease affect the moral of the staff? Will such a person who yells out cause distress to other patients? Will this person be chemically restrained to improve moral? And what about a person such as myself who is paralyzed? Could my presence alone cause staff members to be depressed? Could other patients fear my condition is contagious? Yes, I am using a slipperly slope argument here--something I do not ordinarily utilize.
Caplan's article was likely written to prompt debate. Afterall, he is a larger than life character in bioethics and recently took up a position in the Division of Medical Ethics at the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York. When I heard about this I thought one thing: Caplan wants to live in the media capital of the country. This is not such a bad thing--bioethics as afield is devoted to critically important issues in healthcare. Caplan has positioned himself to be the go to guy when any ethically questionable issue arises. I simply wish he would think before he speaks.
Caplan concluded the elderly man had the right to refuse to be touched and moved even if it would result in death. Caplan thought the refusal to be turned was akin to a patient that refuses a feeding tube or dialysis. This is an interesting point no doubt. However, Caplan really goes off the rails at the end of his essay when he wrote that this man's decision started to affect nursing and staff morale and began to become a problem in the delivery of care for others, then I believe that is a factor that has to be considered when deciding whether to honor what he says. The nurses cannot work if the unit becomes a smelly, untenable mess, and although this man had his rights, other people have their rights too. If I thought the care of others was being compromised by these morale issues and staff problems, I might override a patient's wishes. I might not honor his request in the name of other people's rights. In my opinion, there may be limits to what you can request when it affects the care that others can receive. That is a tradeoff that has to be weighed at all times. As tough as this case was, it provides lessons to take home. Autonomy and patient rights may have some limits when they begin to affect others and the care that others can get. It may be important to think about this kind of dilemma in advance, and be ready to say as soon as a request comes that this is the patient's right, but it is not something we can accept at this facility.
Caplan's conclusion left me shaking my head in disbelief. Caplan should know better than to pen such a sloppy anaysis. In my estimation Caplan's scholrship is undermined by his penchant for shooting from the hip and pumping out opinions that clearly need to be considered much more carefully. When I read Caplan's conclusion I immediately thought of Susan Schweik's book the Ugly Laws that masterfully details how people with a disability were prevented from begging because their mere presence in public was objectionable. Historically, people with disabling conditions were overrepresented in the ranks of beggars. This undoubtedly distressed those without a disability in the past and present. One word comes to mind when I think about the end of Caplan's essay: outmoded. I find it distressing Caplan is willing to overide a patient's wishes if this person affected the moral of the staff or care of others. This is no mere "tradeoff|" as Caplan asserts. I can readily imagine the implications for disenfranchised populations, people with a disability included. These thoughts bring forth words we now deem antiquated like feebleminded, lame, epileptic, retarded, idiot, insane and many others. And what about the present? Will the presence of a person with Alzheimer's disease affect the moral of the staff? Will such a person who yells out cause distress to other patients? Will this person be chemically restrained to improve moral? And what about a person such as myself who is paralyzed? Could my presence alone cause staff members to be depressed? Could other patients fear my condition is contagious? Yes, I am using a slipperly slope argument here--something I do not ordinarily utilize.
Caplan's article was likely written to prompt debate. Afterall, he is a larger than life character in bioethics and recently took up a position in the Division of Medical Ethics at the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York. When I heard about this I thought one thing: Caplan wants to live in the media capital of the country. This is not such a bad thing--bioethics as afield is devoted to critically important issues in healthcare. Caplan has positioned himself to be the go to guy when any ethically questionable issue arises. I simply wish he would think before he speaks.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Holiday Cheer? Bahumbug
The Holiday season puts me on edge. Many people act out of
character during the season of good cheer. I try to limit my social
interactions and avoid any mall like the plague. One thing I cannot avoid is
the Salvation Army. The fact is I hate the Salvation Army and the people that
ring bells outside grocery stores all December.
Every time I hear those bells I get annoyed and it instantly puts me in
a bad mood. The bells remind this is a
bad time of year to be a person with a disability. Charities are out in force
and by extension people seem to have an inner urge to help the handicapped.
Where I wonder are all these do gooders in the spring, summer and fall? Where
are these do gooders when the school budget is cut and the first line items
eliminated are for so called special education? Where were the do gooders in
the Senate when the UN treaty on disability rights I wrote about was not
ratified? Where were these do gooders
when Mayor Bloomberg selected the taxi of tomorrow that is not accessible?
Where were these do gooders when I encounter yet another broken elevator or bus
lift?
Spare me pity and a charity model of disability. Charity at the macro level is a form of social
repression. The charity model awards power to the giver and suppresses the
recipient. If we think of people with a disability as needy this undermines the
civil rights model of disability. This is exactly what I was thinking when I
was grocery shopping. Yesterday I stopped by the supermarket and as I was roaming
the aisles I heard an announcement over the public address system: “A car with
plate number XYZ is blocking the handicapped ramp. The car must be moved
immediately. The police have been called”.
I would suggest that sort of announcement will only occur in December on
the days leading up to Christmas. Ramps are blocked on a regular basis at the
supermarket and elsewhere. Shopping
carts often occupy handicapped parking. This issue is never addressed much less
resolved. The sort of sudden interest based on a feeling of doing good for the
handicapped is a one shot deal and categorically fails to address the
fundamental problem that is ignored by the majority of Americans: disability
rights are civil rights. This depressing
assessment reminds me of the slogan piss on pity. Perhaps I should dig out my t-shirt with these words and wear it as a shield from
do gooders.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Paralysis Long Ago and Paralysis Today
I came across a music video, No More Wheelchairs, that falls
into the category of inspiration porn a few days ago. The video starts with a black screen.
White words scrawl across the screen:
Someday there will be
NO MORE WHEELCHAIRS
Until then…
LET’S MAKE THE BEST OF IT.
The first image after these words show a young well built muscular
man without a t-shirt sitting in a mountain bike wheelchair pushing up a steep
hill. This is followed by many other images of paralyzed people. For instance, a
person using a wheelchair dancing on stage and at a ice rink, surfing, mono skiing,
wake boarding, para-sailing, doing sit ups in a wheelchair, a person walking in
the exoskeleton, Christopher Reeve, scuba diving, a man pushing a wheelchair on
the beach with what I assume are his son and daughter running next to him. If I watched this video without words and the
identical musical score I would have thought cool. My next thought would have
been that it is amazing how easily adapted most sports are for a paralyzed
people. But I did listen to the lyrics
and they are dreadful.
No
More Wheelchairs
by Daryl Holmlund
When I am deep asleep
sometimes I
dream of doing things
that I can’t normally do:
Running, climbing,
jumping,
flying –
and sometimes I’m dancing with you.
But no dream ever compares
to when
I dream that there are no more wheelchairs!
Now to really understand
you’d
have to see my dreamland
the place where everyone feels free.
Missing limbs are
regrown,
spinal cord patches are sown,
and everyone walks on their own
feet.
New legs for Lieutenant Dan
and Chris Reeves is still Superman!
When I have that dream
I try hard
to stay asleep,
and when I wake I don’t know how to feel
Each night when I turn
out the light
I hope that this would be the time,
and I pray the dream would be
real.
I pray that the dream would be
real.
Everyone could choose to use the
stairs
in a world where there is no need for wheelchairs!
The song was written by Daryl Holmlund who experienced a
spinal cord injury in 2004. Music videos
such as the one posted by Holmlund are common. Let me be very clear: I have no
doubt Holmlund meant well and is a good person. I find it encouraging that he
got an adequate amount of rehabilitation after his injury. I am even happier that he finished college
and is employed as a teacher. It is great that he has gotten into handcycling
and I assume other adaptive sports (I gleaned all this from his blog). He
has a very good voice and I wish him well in his career as a teacher and song-writer.
What I do not feel is any connection with his experience as a paralyzed
man. This sense of a profound disconnect
between myself 34 years post SCI and the new generation of paralyzed men and
women troubles me. I am appalled at the
current state of rehabilitation post SCI. The lyrics to No More Wheelchairs
illustrates a decidedly mixed message is sent to people with a SCI. For most with a SCI, rehabilitation is
cursory; it is far too short a period of time to learn how to care for a
paralyzed body. By care I mean learning
how to control one’s bowels and bladder, realize the importance of skin care,
adapt to using a wheelchair, and learn how to cope with the dramatic social
changes associated with SCI. None of this is easy. In fact adapting to a SCI is exceptionally
hard physically and mentally. I am appalled
at contemporary rehabilitation. The cure industry has dug its hooks into
rehabilitation and introduced many high profit and impractical items such as
the exoskeleton. Given how cursory
rehabilitation is after a SCI, it makes no sense to spend time learning how to
walk in an exoskeleton. Symbolically the use of the exoskeleton sends a bad
message to your average person who mere weeks ago had never thought about
paralysis, knows nothing about life post SCI, and has no clue about disability
in general.
Rehabilitation in my estimation needs to be practical and
deeply grounded in reality. What a paralyzed person needs the most is knowledge
and time. A paralyzed person does not need inspirational songs and images. A paralyzed person does not need to see others
glorify walking with a device such as the exoskeleton. There is no need for beautiful rehabilitation
centers that create a bubble of acceptance. What a paralyzed person needs to
think about is not a time when there are no more wheelchairs but instead a
depth of knowledge about the wheelchair industry. They need to learn how to
check their skin daily and determine what wheelchair cushion they should be
sitting on. They need to learn how to
manage one’s bowels and bladder. They need to learn transfers of all kinds.
They need to learn how to repair a wheelchair. A veritable revolution must take
place physically and mentally. The fact is using a wheelchair is deeply stigmatizing.
We paralyzed people are part of a
minority group that is routinely discriminated against. Barriers remain the
norm. Physical access to housing and mass transportation abound. Unemployment
rates are shockingly high and have not changed measurably in decades. A paralyzed person needs to learn how to
reject the stereotypes associated with disability and assert their civil
rights.
The divide between a person such as myself and others who
have lived with a SCI for decades and newly paralyzed men and women is
cultural. That is the way we as a culture react to paralysis has changed
substantially. When I went through rehabilitation long ago I was taught to be
fiercely independent and self-reliant. I was taught to be assertive and pro
active in caring for my body. I never
heard anyone talk about cures for paralysis. This was not subject of
discussion. The unspoken message was hard to miss—this is your life and get on
with it. I also learned about the grim
social realities associated with disability at college. I was surrounded by
other young men and women who knew far more about disability than I did. I
learned about exclusion and the fight for education. One of my first roommates went to
a special segregated school for the handicapped, a fact that stunned me. I learned about baseless prejudice from first hand experience. The greatest period of
learning in my lifetime took place in those first few years after
paralysis. I learned and accepted I was
different—different in that my civil rights would be routinely violated and I
had better fight back. The risk as I perceived it was great—social oblivion and wasted life were a distinct possibility.
The bias I encountered drove me. I wanted to be the best student in class and
crush my peers academically. I wanted to get laid on a regular basis to prove I
was indeed a sexual being. I was determined that I would marry and be a parent.
I was going to get a PhD and do so at Columbia University. I was determined to
have a life.
None of what I learned as a young paralyzed man is reflected
in what I read about people with a recent SCI. I have read much about the
exoskeleton and stem cell treatment in China and other countries. I have heard
Christopher Reeve lauded on a regular basis. I have heard some people state they
will “hold on” or wait a seemingly arbitrary number of years until scientists
discover a cure for SCI. This enables
some to put life on hold; unemployment, the lack of relationships, and failure
to seek or receive an education can all be tolerated when one lives a virtual
life in purgatory waiting for a cure. Some will commit suicide years post injury because a cure is not forthcoming. I have visited truly beautiful
rehabilitation centers that contain high tech gadgets but do little else to
help a person adapt to a SCI in the real world. I have read about rehabilitation centers that
change their name to include the word rejuvenation. I guess this marketing strategy works.
Lost today is a very simple fact: disability is not about
overcoming a physical deficit. Disability is not an individual problem or singularly unusual. Disability is not about paralysis, blindness, deafness, or any other bodily deficit. Disability is a
social malady. When I read this in Robert Murphy’s The Body Silent in
1980 it was as though I was struck by lightening. There was nothing wrong with
me! I do not wish as Holmlund does for a day without wheelchairs. I think
wheelchairs are an instrument of power.
My wheelchair makes my life go.
It is a powerful force. This belief gets me to the heart of the cultural
divide between myself and people with a recent SCI. Disability is not about what one cannot do it
is about society’s refusal to negotiate difference. Our country is constructed for people who are
bipedal and typical. Those individuals, verticals as Mike Ervin humorously
referred to them on his blog Smart Ass Cripple, knowingly choose to be exclusionary.
We as a people choose to exclude those who are different. Culturally we not
value people with a disability—they are too different from the norm. We accept
bias exists and choose to do nothing. We ignore 40 years of legislation
designed to empower people with a disability. And now we are not equipping
people who experienced a SCI to assert their rights as citizens.
Let me end with a suggestion: Rehabilitation centers like to
have visitors who can inspire patients. Paralympians are a perfect example.
This is in part great. Such a visit can open a new world of adaptive sports to
people with a recent SCI. But I would suggest a far more important group of
visitors should be asked to speak as well. People from disability rights groups
such as ADAPT, independent living centers, disability studies scholars and
other activists should speak. This would undoubtedly open up a whole new world
and prepare people for the real world where bias is alive and well.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Shocked: Just Shocked
This video shocked me. "Get Outta Town Retards". This hateful graffiti was spray painted on a home in a small town in Central Illinois. The home and cars were spray painted with other hateful words. This took place in the spring of 2011, a day that changed the parents life. The family was attacked because they have two daughters with Down Syndrome. The response is from the daughter's brothers. I have no idea how much work went into making the above video. I do know that 129,753 on Facebook people "like" this and 55,043 have shared the video. These numbers are a shock. I want to know why did this story not go viral instantly. I want to know why this did not become a national news story debated from coast to coast. This video kept me up last night. How could people be so cruel. How could a human being knowingly spray paint this on a home. I wonder do my neighbors think the same thing when it comes to the group homes that are nearby. Worse yet, do residents of any town in America hate students with Down Syndrome?
Sadly I know the reason why this video did not go viral. Disability rights and civil rights are never thought to be one in the same. The ADA is not and has never been perceived to be civil rights legislation despite the fact that is exactly what it is. Disability rights ring hollow for the vast majority of Americans. If disability rights is discussed it is perceived narrowly--as in the decision to have a bus with a wheelchair lift. Secondary schools simply do not in any way discuss disability rights as part of its curriculum on the civil rights movement. We get a day off for Martin Luther King Day every January. Every child knows exactly who King was and what he did. Every American is exposed to King's I have a dream speech. I am sure no student in elementary school knows who Ed Roberts was. I am sure 99% of the teachers in elementary schools have no idea who Ed Roberts was. I am sure no students, teachers or administrators know the history of accessible transportation, specifically the fight to get wheelchair lifts on public school buses. This lack of knowledge is called ignorance. Ignorance breeds misunderstandings, hate, fear and exclusion. Ignorance made the above video possible. Today is a grim day in my mind.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Friday, December 7, 2012
Santorum, the UN and CRPD: Stick to the Facts
I am a bit late to the party. In the last few days I have carefully followed the reaction
to the Senate’s vote not to ratify the United Nations Convention on the Rights
of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). Two themes have emerged in the mainstream
press. First, Santorum played a key role in the defeat of the CRPD as did other
extreme right wing Christian conservatives. The ability of a small number of
Senators to defeat a benign treaty such as the CRPD is indicative of a
hopelessly dysfunctional government. Second, the United States is the world
leader in disability rights. The CRPD used out ADA as model legislation
designed to extend the same protections Americans with disabilities enjoy to
the rest of the world.
I am delighted to see disability become a hotly debated news
story. However, I am not impressed by the two themes that have emerged as news. Indeed, I get angry each time a commentator
lauds the ADA and asserts people with a disability in America should consider
themselves lucky. I can assure you I do not feel lucky when I leave my home and
encounter bias on a daily basis. I do not feel lucky when I walk in downtown
Katonah where I live and cannot enter 90% stores because they are inaccessible.
I do not feel lucky when I cannot get a cab driver to stop for me in New York
City. I do not feel lucky when I come across elevators filled with trash. I do
not feel lucky when I try to access subway systems that remain grossly
inaccessible. I do not feel lucky when I try and get on a bus and the driver
has no clue how to use the wheelchair lift. The point I am trying to stress is
that our country and court system has done its level best to gut the ADA. In my
experience towns nationwide do their best to avoid complying with the ADA. School districts are the worst offenders in
this regard in large part because so called special education is perceived to
be an unwanted economic burden.
The idea that the United States is the world leader in
disability rights is fiction. There is a divide between what is said about the
ADA and the experience of being a person with a disability navigating our social
and physical cultural environment. This divide has come up many times when I
discuss disability rights with my son. Recently he has used a term I find
fascinating. In one of his political
science classes his professor has maintained we are living in what he calls “a
post factual world.” As I understand it some of his professors believe facts
are not as important as the way words, opinions really, can be spun. Words and
opinions do not need to have a basis in fact in a world dominated by social
media. The news is delivered so swiftly that the way news is delivered is more
important than substance or facts. I was
thinking of this when I read what Santorum had to say about the CRPD. Santorum
stated:
Who should make the critical
health-care decisions for a child with a disability? A well-meaning, but
faceless and distant United Nations bureaucrat, or a parent who has known,
loved, and cared for the child since before birth? The answer should be obvious, and today the Senate made the
right decision by rejecting the United Nation’s Convention on
the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD).
The reason I have so strongly
opposed CRPD is also simple. Karen and I have experienced first-hand as we care
for our little blessing, Bella, that parents and caregivers care most deeply
and are best equipped to care for the disabled. Not international
bureaucrats.
Santorum’s
words were reiterated even more strongly in the far right press. Patriot Voices railed against the CRPD.
The United
Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) would give
the U.N. oversight of the healthcare and education choices parents with special
needs kids make. It is outrageous that the government could tell you and
me what is best for our children, particularly when they’ve never met the
child. If this were to pass, CRPD would become the law of the land under
the U.S. Constitution's Supremacy Clause, and would trump state laws, and could
be used as precedent by state and federal judges. This treaty would give the
government, acting under U.N. instructions, the ability to determine for all
children with disabilities what is best for them. It also would give the U.N.
discretion over decisions about how we educate our special needs kids, and
could potentially eliminate parental rights for the education of children with
disabilities.
Santorum
and Patriot Voices words have no basis
in fact. None. There is no chance the CRPD would give international bureaucrats
control over children with disabilities. The CRPD does not in any way shape or
form alter or amend American laws and certainly not the ADA.
Santorum went on to state:
The best interest of the child” standard may sound like it
protects children, but what it does is put the government, acting under U.N.
authority, in the position to determine for all children with disabilities what
is best for them. That is counter to the current state of the law in this
country which puts parents – not the government – in that position of
determining what is in their child’s best interest. Under the laws of our
country, parents lose that right only if the state, through the judicial process,
determines that the parents are unfit to make that decision.In the case of our
4-year-old daughter, Bella, who has Trisomy 18, a condition that the medical
literature says is “incompatible with life,” would her “best interest” be that
she be allowed to die? Some would undoubtedly say so.
The above is ludicrous. Worse, it is perilously
close to conspiracy theory lunacy. Let me get this straight. If the CRPD is
enacted our government will use UN authority to determine what is in the best interest
of a child with a disability. So according to Santorum his daughter would be
allowed to die because his daughter has Trisomy 18. I am not exactly sure how an international
bureaucrat will accomplish this but I do know one thing—it is not possible. If
Santorum’s words and opinions are not bad enough he has used his beloved
daughter Bella as a political prop. Yes, when Santorum needs to establish
himself as the champion of disability rights he is sure to include Bella in
every possible photo op.
In closing, let me turn to the inconvenient facts. Why is
Santorum and the far right so worked up? They strenuously object to the CRPD
because of article 7 and the following sentence: “Children with Disabilities:
In all actions concerning children with disabilities, the best interest of the
child shall be a primary consideration”. This
statement is not designed to address the status of children with a disability
in this country. The fact is 80% of all
people with disabilities live in developing countries. Most of these countries
have a profound shortage of doctors.
Health care standards are grossly inadequate. Most people with a
disability live in abject poverty and the majority of children with a
disability never celebrate their 21st birthday. This is a human
rights issue few are willing to discuss. To conflate this grim reality abroad
with groundless concerns about international bureaucrats taking control of disabled
children’s live is factually bankrupt.
If anything good can
be found in Santorum’s opposition to the CRPD it is that some might be
inspired to actually read the CRPD and by extension think about the ADA and
disability rights. As I read it the CRPD embodies the principles set forth under the ADA. By
principals I understand the CRPD to be about the civil rights of people with a
disability. Now this is the perspective I
would like to hear discussed by the mainstream media.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Madison Square Garden Disability Policy
I went to see Cornell University play against the University of Michigan at eh famed MAdison Square Garden. This game was advertised as the Frozen Apple. Both universities have excellent hockey programs and multiple NHL first round draft choices were on the ice. As some may know the NHL has locked out its players and the season is most likely going to be lost. I went to MSG for two reasons: first, I miss watching hockey and the opportunity to see NCAA is unique. Second, I was eager to check out the newly renovated garden. I was impressed by the renovations. The garden is no longer an antiquated facility. One result of these impressive renovations is expensive food--expensive even by stadium standards. I drank a $9 Budweiser and ate a hot dog for $6.50. My son had a $5 coke. Yes one beer, one coke and two hot dogs cost $27. We got off cheap. You cannot imagine how much a lobster roll, sushi or sandwich from Carnegie Deli costs.
While we had great fun, I was deeply disturbed by the way handicapped seating is managed. The area we sat in was outstanding, section 108. This area is accessed by a small elevator clearly marked for disabled patrons only. We exited the elevator and a ramp immediately to the right goes down to handicapped seating. Wow, what a great view. I will happily deal with the inconvenience of having to use an elevator to get beer or food and use the rest room for the kind of view of the ice I had. I thought to myself, after decades of bad service and lousy seating the garden finally got it. There is real handicapped seating! Not so fast. The usher asks to see my ticket and shows me where to sit with my son and explains you must sit all the way back and against the wall. I am deeply puzzled. Here we are in a great secured area that is about 6 feet deep and at least twice as long if not more. Directly in front of me is a glass half wall. Yet the usher has told me I cannot under any circumstances sit by the glass. I must sit as far back as possible. This is nothing short of bizarre. If I sat all the way back against the wall at least four to five feet of empty space exists. I told the usher this makes no sense. She replied "this is the policy", a phrase I would hear over and over again. The usher was polite but unyielding--you must sit all the way back against the wall not in front next to the glass. She told me if I sat forward next to the glass I would block the view from the luxury boxes behind handicapped seating. Luxury boxes that were empty and incomplete. I was annoyed and went to speak to a supervisor. The supervisor said yes the usher is correct, sitting all the way back away from the glass is the "policy". She suggested I see customer relations. I see the supervisors supervisor and after waiting he appears. I explain the situation, he leaves and comes back ten minutes later. Sorry I am told that is the "policy". No one can explain the "policy" or the reasoning behind it. The second supervisor is clearly bored and does not care. I told this man every person in handicapped seating has complained though I am the only person in the section using a wheelchair. Again I get a sorry but this is the "policy". Talking to a wall would be more productive.
I have been to professional hockey games in Washington, Boston, New Jersey, Toronto, and many other cities. In newly constructed or renovated buildings patrons sit directly in front of the glass half wall in handicapped seating sections. This is common sense. Sitting back against the wall several feet from the glass half wall at the garden is strange in the extreme. Never have I heard of this "policy". Each person in handicapped seating expressed the same sentiment--the policy makes no sense. As I watched the game I thought of an analogy: a man builds a brand new addition to his house. The addition is spectacular. But when the work is done the man lives on the porch outside the addition. The point here is the handicap section I was in at the garden was outstanding. Great sight lines from the glass half wall could and should be enjoyed. Moreover there is lots of room to move around and we were not shoved together like sardines. The great sight lines are significantly impaired sitting four to five feet away from the glass half wall. In fact when one sits so far back when patrons in front of the handicap section stand you can see absolutely nothing. Even when those in front are sitting in their seats about 15 to 20% of the ice is not visible. Again, this is from four to five feet away from the glass half wall where on should logically sit.
I really am perplexed. The supervisors clearly did not care and refused to make any accommodation or offer a logical explanation for the "policy". It appears to me a person with no knowledge of handicapped seating created an arbitrary "policy" that makes no sense. Supervisors and ushers are powerless to help or explain the "policy". Given the long history of inadequate handicap seating I was thrilled by the new handicap section. Yet the garden screwed this up royally. I am going to contact the garden this week and write a pointed email. I am hopeful the response will be positive--part of working the kinks out of a new building. If I am given the run around I will file a formal complaint with the DOJ.
While we had great fun, I was deeply disturbed by the way handicapped seating is managed. The area we sat in was outstanding, section 108. This area is accessed by a small elevator clearly marked for disabled patrons only. We exited the elevator and a ramp immediately to the right goes down to handicapped seating. Wow, what a great view. I will happily deal with the inconvenience of having to use an elevator to get beer or food and use the rest room for the kind of view of the ice I had. I thought to myself, after decades of bad service and lousy seating the garden finally got it. There is real handicapped seating! Not so fast. The usher asks to see my ticket and shows me where to sit with my son and explains you must sit all the way back and against the wall. I am deeply puzzled. Here we are in a great secured area that is about 6 feet deep and at least twice as long if not more. Directly in front of me is a glass half wall. Yet the usher has told me I cannot under any circumstances sit by the glass. I must sit as far back as possible. This is nothing short of bizarre. If I sat all the way back against the wall at least four to five feet of empty space exists. I told the usher this makes no sense. She replied "this is the policy", a phrase I would hear over and over again. The usher was polite but unyielding--you must sit all the way back against the wall not in front next to the glass. She told me if I sat forward next to the glass I would block the view from the luxury boxes behind handicapped seating. Luxury boxes that were empty and incomplete. I was annoyed and went to speak to a supervisor. The supervisor said yes the usher is correct, sitting all the way back away from the glass is the "policy". She suggested I see customer relations. I see the supervisors supervisor and after waiting he appears. I explain the situation, he leaves and comes back ten minutes later. Sorry I am told that is the "policy". No one can explain the "policy" or the reasoning behind it. The second supervisor is clearly bored and does not care. I told this man every person in handicapped seating has complained though I am the only person in the section using a wheelchair. Again I get a sorry but this is the "policy". Talking to a wall would be more productive.
I have been to professional hockey games in Washington, Boston, New Jersey, Toronto, and many other cities. In newly constructed or renovated buildings patrons sit directly in front of the glass half wall in handicapped seating sections. This is common sense. Sitting back against the wall several feet from the glass half wall at the garden is strange in the extreme. Never have I heard of this "policy". Each person in handicapped seating expressed the same sentiment--the policy makes no sense. As I watched the game I thought of an analogy: a man builds a brand new addition to his house. The addition is spectacular. But when the work is done the man lives on the porch outside the addition. The point here is the handicap section I was in at the garden was outstanding. Great sight lines from the glass half wall could and should be enjoyed. Moreover there is lots of room to move around and we were not shoved together like sardines. The great sight lines are significantly impaired sitting four to five feet away from the glass half wall. In fact when one sits so far back when patrons in front of the handicap section stand you can see absolutely nothing. Even when those in front are sitting in their seats about 15 to 20% of the ice is not visible. Again, this is from four to five feet away from the glass half wall where on should logically sit.
I really am perplexed. The supervisors clearly did not care and refused to make any accommodation or offer a logical explanation for the "policy". It appears to me a person with no knowledge of handicapped seating created an arbitrary "policy" that makes no sense. Supervisors and ushers are powerless to help or explain the "policy". Given the long history of inadequate handicap seating I was thrilled by the new handicap section. Yet the garden screwed this up royally. I am going to contact the garden this week and write a pointed email. I am hopeful the response will be positive--part of working the kinks out of a new building. If I am given the run around I will file a formal complaint with the DOJ.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Conference Controversy
It is my understanding that the below flyer was handed out at Justice Action Center conference yesterday. I read about this conference weeks ago. I thought about attending despite the fact the scholars speaking are virtually all associated with Compassion and Choices. I know three of the speakers and two on the panel "Special People Special Issues". I am also in the midst of writing a long review essay on bioethics and disability. Alicia Quellette's Bioethics and Disability is one of the texts I am reviewing. After some thought I decided not to attend. Unbalanced one day conferences are not unusual. But something struck me as inherently wrong about the conference. Simply reading about the conference made me wary. I suspect others shared my discomfort and chose not to attend. By far the strongest critic was Stephen Drake. He was severely critical of the conference. See: http://www.notdeadyet.org/2012/10/ny-law-school-justice-action-centers-upcoming-annual-justice-symposium-not-fair-to-disability-advocates-let-alone-just.html
I think Drake is too harsh but one cannot dismiss the validity of his concerns. The preponderance of scholars associated with Compassion and Choices should have been acknowledged. The utter lack of any person associated with the disability rights movement is puzzling at best. Ignoring the lack of disability representation, I was troubled for three reasons. First, if I attended I would have been the lone opposition voice and person with a disability. While I embrace the moniker Bad Cripple had I been present and dissented it would be all too easy to dismiss my views. I would be a stereotype of the angry, bitter and, yes, a bad cripple. I did not want to be the straw man. Second, I am stunned by the panel title: "Special People Special Issues". I am not one to engage in polemical battles over the use of words--such debates are largely fruitless in my estimation. However, to use the terms "Special People, Special Issues" is so far out of date it boggles the mind. I am equally stunned the presenters, Alicia Quellette and Ann Neumann, did not vigorously object. Perhaps they did, I do not know. But I can state without question I would not have made a presentation unless the conference organizers changed the session name. This is 2012 not 1952. The language used demonstrates an utter disregard for the last 20 years of political activism on the part of people with a disability. Third, the tension between those in bioethics and disability rights is widely known. I have bemoaned this divide for quite some time. I will readily acknowledge my early work in opposition to the Ashley X Case and severely critical comments about Christopher Reeve contributed to the divide. Efforts at a reconciliation between bioethicists and disability rights activists have all been unsuccessful. This conference demonstrates why disability activists and disability studies scholars object to bioethics. There is no representation, none. Quellette's presence is not as an activist or disability studies scholar but as a bioethicist and lawyer. The agenda set is hopelessly skewed, the imbalance of power grossly unbalanced. From the start disability activists and disability studies scholars are on the defensive. For instance, Ann Neumann notes below my autonomy is threatened by hypothetical others. Bigotry and ignorance abound, it is not hypothetical. Disability based bias is very real and has lethal implications. Does this really need to demonstrated? A vast literature exists that details a long history of disability based bigotry.
Here is my naive hope. We need to get people from Compassion and Choices and Not Dead Yet, lock them in a room and not let them out until they learn to show mutual respect for each other. We need to do the same with bioethicists like Peter Singer and Jeff McMahan and disability studies scholars such as Anita Silvers and Eva Kittay. I have always felt one can learn more from others who you strenuously disagree with. Such an encounter can force one to hone their views and writing.
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Not Dead Yet Flyer
I think Drake is too harsh but one cannot dismiss the validity of his concerns. The preponderance of scholars associated with Compassion and Choices should have been acknowledged. The utter lack of any person associated with the disability rights movement is puzzling at best. Ignoring the lack of disability representation, I was troubled for three reasons. First, if I attended I would have been the lone opposition voice and person with a disability. While I embrace the moniker Bad Cripple had I been present and dissented it would be all too easy to dismiss my views. I would be a stereotype of the angry, bitter and, yes, a bad cripple. I did not want to be the straw man. Second, I am stunned by the panel title: "Special People Special Issues". I am not one to engage in polemical battles over the use of words--such debates are largely fruitless in my estimation. However, to use the terms "Special People, Special Issues" is so far out of date it boggles the mind. I am equally stunned the presenters, Alicia Quellette and Ann Neumann, did not vigorously object. Perhaps they did, I do not know. But I can state without question I would not have made a presentation unless the conference organizers changed the session name. This is 2012 not 1952. The language used demonstrates an utter disregard for the last 20 years of political activism on the part of people with a disability. Third, the tension between those in bioethics and disability rights is widely known. I have bemoaned this divide for quite some time. I will readily acknowledge my early work in opposition to the Ashley X Case and severely critical comments about Christopher Reeve contributed to the divide. Efforts at a reconciliation between bioethicists and disability rights activists have all been unsuccessful. This conference demonstrates why disability activists and disability studies scholars object to bioethics. There is no representation, none. Quellette's presence is not as an activist or disability studies scholar but as a bioethicist and lawyer. The agenda set is hopelessly skewed, the imbalance of power grossly unbalanced. From the start disability activists and disability studies scholars are on the defensive. For instance, Ann Neumann notes below my autonomy is threatened by hypothetical others. Bigotry and ignorance abound, it is not hypothetical. Disability based bias is very real and has lethal implications. Does this really need to demonstrated? A vast literature exists that details a long history of disability based bigotry.
Here is my naive hope. We need to get people from Compassion and Choices and Not Dead Yet, lock them in a room and not let them out until they learn to show mutual respect for each other. We need to do the same with bioethicists like Peter Singer and Jeff McMahan and disability studies scholars such as Anita Silvers and Eva Kittay. I have always felt one can learn more from others who you strenuously disagree with. Such an encounter can force one to hone their views and writing.
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Not Dead Yet Flyer
NOTHING ABOUT US WITHOUT US!
WE ARE DISABILITY RIGHTS ACTIVISTS WHO OBJECT TO A SYMPOSIUM THAT CLAIMS TO ADDRESS DISABILITY RIGHTS CONCERNS BUT INCLUDES NO PRESENTERS FROM THE DISABILITY RIGHTS MOVEMENT.
Today, Friday, November 16th, the Justice Action Center, part of New York Law School, is presenting a symposium entitled ” Freedom of Choice at the End of Life – Patients’ Rights in a Shifting Legal and Political Landscape.”
There are multiple and major problems with the third panel which the Symposium materials describe as follows:
“Panel III: Special People, Special Issues
This panel will discuss the issues of concern for people with disabilities and the conflict between organizations dedicated to protecting their rights and end-of-life advocates. The panel will discuss the views of some of the major religion (sic) and whether conservative theological values can co-exist with patient choice. Finally, the panel will conclude with a discussion of the quality of medical care provided to prisoners and how their end of life choices are treated.”
This panel will discuss the issues of concern for people with disabilities and the conflict between organizations dedicated to protecting their rights and end-of-life advocates. The panel will discuss the views of some of the major religion (sic) and whether conservative theological values can co-exist with patient choice. Finally, the panel will conclude with a discussion of the quality of medical care provided to prisoners and how their end of life choices are treated.”
It is likely that “issues of concern” to disability rights activists will be discussed by panelist Alicia Ouellette. Ouellette recently published a text on bioethics and disability – apparently becoming the newest bioethicist who wants to become known as the “disability-conscious” bioethicist – someone who relates slanted, distorted and outright “straw man” versions of disability critiques, concerns and strong objections to both bioethics and so-called “end of life” advocates. Ouellette gets many things wrong about disability issues in her book.
For more information, contact www.notdeadyet.org.
NOTHING ABOUT US WITHOUT US (CONT.)
It appears likely that panelist Ann Neumann will focus on religious issues, but her blog “Otherspoon” has demonstrated her longstanding marked disdain for disability advocates who organize against pro-euthanasia and assisted suicide groups. In her July 2012 post on “Otherspoon,” she used a familiar move that privileged people make when they’re about to demean and dismiss members of a minority, writing about her great “friendship” with disability studies academic Bill Peace (Bad Cripple blogger), a conventional shield for what came next in her post:
I would never take him to task for how he feels. Or over not seizing his autonomy from hypothetical others, including “pro-life” organizations that have worked very hard to recruit disabled individuals and groups to “their side”–with scary threats of a “culture of death” just waiting around to kill off the “abnormal.”
Instead of giving a fair account of the concerns of disability advocates about these issues, she inserts extreme slogans from the Religious Right – and then implies that we are jumping on their bandwagon because we’re just poor, scared little cripples who can easily be “recruited” by the right propaganda. She denies the agency of disabled people, asserting that those stands we take that she disagrees with can’t be our own.
What makes this all the more appalling is that this Symposium will happen under the auspices of the University’s Justice Action Center. Sadly, the Justice Action Center fails to show even a modicum of respect in making sure the perspectives of disability rights advocates and activists are represented fairly and accurately, and by disability rights activists ourselves, as other minority groups and women would have a right to expect.
On November 12, we wrote to the following Symposium co-sponsors, urging them to withdraw their sponsorship:
New York Law School Law Review and the Diane Abbey Law Center for Children and Families, the American Bar Association Commission on Law and Aging; the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys; the Elder Law Section of the New York State Bar Association; and Collaborative for Palliative Care, Westchester/NYS Southern Region.
For more information, contact www.notdeadyet.org.
PhD 1992 in anthropology Columbia University, I am interested in disability rights and bioethics.
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