Category Archives: Disability Issues

New Year honours for disabled people, and God versus Mammon

One of the great things about writing a disability blog is that I can celebrate the achievements of disabled people. In this year’s New Year’s Honours List there were several honours for service to disabled people. Congratulations to all those people.

I know two of those people well. Bill Wrightson has worked tirelessly for years on access to the built environment. If I need any info on that topic it is always Bill I turn to. His advice is always thoughtful and sound. He has made a huge contribution in his field.
Good on you Bill!

Robert Martin must surely be the first person with an intellectual disability to become a member of the Order of Merit. As the first person, and probably still the only person with an intellectual disability to speak at the UN he is someone I admire enormously. The thing that always struck me about Robert’s life is that he grew up in Kimberly during the sixties and had never heard of the All Blacks! That speaks volumes to me. He is now of course a huge fan. The other thing is that he led a revolt in a sheltered workshop long before any government mooted the repeal of the DPEP Act.
Great stuff Robert!

New Year’s Eve was fairly quiet in this corner of Wellington. We spent the evening sampling the ‘rocket fuel’ very alcoholic eggnog punch contributed by a friend. As we contemplated the Wellington skyline ­ we have a good view across to Mt Vic ­ we couldn’t help but reflect on the relative position of God and Mammon in the twenty-first Century. The fitful gleam of the Christmas cross on the top of Mt Victoria is out-glared by the sign on the crane dominating the view from our window. We wondered what purpose the sign served. Who but disgruntled apartment dwellers like us can see it, and I can’t remember the last time I needed a crane.

After a few more glasses we speculated about the possibility of a sniper attack to “take out” the interloper. Not that any of us would know what to do with a rifle even if we had one. What price energy saving and global warming? If the corporates so obviously don’t care why on earth should I?

Before anyone asks me what relevance the last few paragraphs have to information accessibility, disability issues etc, let me remind you that I am a well-rounded person, sadly in every sense following the festive season, and therefore will blog about whatever else takes my fancy!

Happy New Year!

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Filed under Disability Issues, Miscellaneous

NZ wins international disability award

New Zealand has been awarded the Franklin Delano Roosevelt International Disability Award.

It was great to celebrate the International Day of Disabled People on Dec 3 with the added celebration of an event like this. Sadly, the celebrations were not as exuberant as they might have been as we remembered the life and tragic death of Emma Agnew. Instead of celebrating, the Deaf community was in mourning as they watched her broadcast funeral service around New Zealand.

Emma’s death certainly got more air time in the media than the award did. It is a terrible irony that more New Zealanders have now probably heard of NZ Sign Language, our third national language, than they would have in any other way. It is an outcome that no one would wish for.

Disability media are few and far between in New Zealand and I miss the lack of intelligent, knowledgeable and hard-edged discussion on disability issues in the mainstream media, although coverage is slowly improving in tone, if not in scope. The disability world is changing fast. I am beginning to feel like a walking historical artefact!

Some of the changes and developments have been, in no particular order or importance:

Long may the positive change continue, and I hope that change includes safer streets and communities for our sons and daughters.

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Employ disabled people – We’re running out of everyone else!

I’m such an optimist. I listened with interest in the hope of some new revelation to yesterday’s Insight Doco and Friday’s exhortations form Business New Zealand on Radio NZ’s Morning Report. None came. Just the same tired old messages. Something new and radical will need to happen before there will be real change in what is quite a complex situation.

If I was a cynical Marxist I might consider the reserve labour market theory, to be discarded when the next and more important labour market development comes along, as they always will. I might be reminded that the women who worked during the war were shoved back into the kitchen the minute the boys came home. It took a long time for that ground to be regained.

But because I have experienced discrimination as a disabled person and a woman, and now could on the grounds of age, I have to put my money where my mouth is. So AccEase will take a disabled person on work experience, hoping we may be able to offer them some work eventually.

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Abnormals unite!

I am not normal. Let’s be clear about this. I have never been normal. And frankly my dear I don’t give a damn. Time was I did, that is when I was young and wanted to belong, and resented being bullied for being different. But now I see my lack of normality as a badge of honour. To quote Popeye the Sailor Man “I yam what I yam and that’s all what I yam.” And those who don’t like it, tough!

But the definition of what is “normal” for a human being is becoming narrower by the day. Every day new “conditions” are being identified, with new treatments from the mainstream medical with fancy new drugs, to the weird and wacky quackery of the latest new age proponents.

Those of us who do not conform to the ideal anorexic model body shape for women and the sort of inverted pyramid favoured by the macho model male are consigned to the outer darkness where there is wailing and gnashing of teeth.

The latest freak show is the public humiliation of overweight people by the food Nazis, reality TV at its worst. Society has almost got over the public exhibition of various types of disabled people as freaks in favour of obesity and, for light relief, rare disease of the month, especially in children who probably have no say in their public exploitation.

We should recognise, celebrate and actively value the rich and wonderful diversity of humankind, remembering that it is those on the margins who are often the agents of important change, development and creativity. If we keep narrowing the definition of who is OK we might find ourselves disappearing up our own fundamental genetic orifice.

Come to think of it – if all the “abnormals” united we might just be a majority. Scary eh!

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