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Lauredhel is an Australian woman and mother with a disability. She blogs about disability and accessibility, social and reproductive justice, gender, freedom from violence, the uses and misuses of language, medical science, otters, gardening, and cooking.

This author has written 1553 posts for Hoyden About Town. Read more about Lauredhel »

13 responses to “BADD: The radical notion that people with disabilities are people, and Australia’s 2020 Summit”

  1. Quick summit observations at Hoyden About Town

    [...] Edit: My Blogging Against Disablism day contribution on this issue is now up here: “BADD: The radical notion that people with disabilities are people, and Australia’s 2020 Sum… [...]

  2. tigtog

    Not only are we told we are individually responsible for our own health (with a hefty side serve of blame), but we have a moral responsibility to others to not have disabilities. This type of “public health” rhetoric is nothing more than a reiteration of that individualistic approach, with the addition of a value judgement and a one-way obligation.

    Your earlier remark about the magical thinking lurking under this rhetoric is spot on. It’s a very Puritan approach, that if only we are all saints who resist temptation then we can build a healthy heaven on earth. History teaches us how quickly Puritan idealism becomes abusive intolerance.

  3. Dave Bath

    (1) Lauredhel: Spot on
    (2) I’m hopeful from the discussion paper to this inquiry (submissions due 2008-06-30) that there is some recognition of the hurdles (transport, unpredictable problems, costs of living with something), as well as the special things (sometimes better than “normals”) people can contribute.
    (3) I’m sure L’s experiences would be very useful in the “tell us your story confidentially” form of the submission, although I’d hope she also addresses specific (good and bad) parts of the discussion paper and makes suggestions in a more formal response.
    (4) L is right, the problem is with the “managers” who are blinkered, bigots, or both. For a really positive article on how “specials” are better than normals, look at this article about how a software testing consultancy has 75% of it’s market-rate-paid staff from autism spectrum folk. It took a scandinavian manager to “see the light” – no surprise there! (And they’re opening up offices in India, so Indian Asperger’s folk will have better career prospects than those in Oz!!)

  4. pete

    ‘morality plays and Hallmark specials’
    Great stuff, a good read;-)

    pete

  5. Stentor

    The concept of a “wellness footprint” is just … appalling.

  6. NTE

    This was amazing – you covered so many topics, so well. Cheers for people with disabilities being recognized as PEOPLE. Just a wonderful discussion.

  7. imfunny2

    This is so great (and scary at the same time) “Healthism”

    Blaming us for our impairment or our inability to sustain exersize. Like *that* would solve anthying.

    Thanks for posting this.

  8. The Goldfish

    Thank you for this great contribution to Blogging Against Disablism Day – sorry for taking so long to say so.

    This health = morality thing really makes me cross. It is like the new heaven; as you say, if you eat “good”, exercise, refrain from smoking etc. then no ill can come of you and you get to live forever. And that is, apparently, the moral ideal. As opposed to enjoying ourselves and looking after one another…

    Anyway, this is a truly excellent post.

  9. Jacqui

    One of the other great things about BADD is being able to visit other blogs that you don’t necessarily know about.

    Thanks for a great post. I will be back.

  10. FWD/Forward » BADD: The radical notion that people with disabilities are people, and Australia’s 2020 Summit

    [...] post was originally written for BADD – Blogging Against Disablism Day, and posted on May 1, 2008 at Hoyden About Town. The 2020 Summit was an attempt by the then-new Rudd government to brainstorm ideas for the [...]

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