It is important that someone with a disability be given an opportunity to participate in activities like anyone without any form of discrimination. We need to be as accommodative as possible. Another consideration is making sure that the emotional and physical needs are being meet so they are given the same opportunities as people who do not have disabilities. Physical and emotional wellbeing are important for a person’s functionality. It is ethically important that we are able to participate in work, education, society
A disability can make someone look at a "disabled" person in a specific way, even though they are just as capable as others of doing things. Some people don't realize the impact someone with a disability can have on the world because they are limited and criticized for their issues. People without disabilities can show what they have, and those with disabilities will never even get past the starting line because of people's biased views on disabilities. After listening to the Ted Talk by Keith Nolan, a private cadet, he established ethos, logos, and pathos through his educational speech on the deaf in the military. In the Ted Talk, Keith Nolan backs up his story with emotion, statistics, credible information, and real-life experience.
Andre Dubus was once able-bodied, who then lost both legs in a car accident. He has experienced both ends of the spectrum, pitying for the disabled and rejecting that pity placed on him. He begins his essay, Why the Abled-Bodied Still Don’t Get It, with two contradictory anecdotes: “I read the newspaper story about a 34-year-old man...he is a quadriplegic.” (Dubus). He then juxtaposed to “I was hit by a car...lost my left leg above the knee; my right leg was too damaged to use.” (Dubus).
By showing how discrimination, exclusion, and inequality are the consequences of such attitudes, Wong aims to educate and empower readers about disability rights and activism. Wong's audience includes a broad range of individuals, including disabled people, disability activists, advocates, scholars, policymakers, and non-disabled individuals interested in disability rights and inclusion. The essay mainly targets non-disabled individuals who may be less familiar with disability issues. It offers insights into the experiences and struggles of disabled people and guides how non-disabled individuals can be allies in the fight for disability justice. It challenges ableist attitudes and assumptions prevalent in society and encourages readers to reconsider their views on disability.
In Andre Dubus’ “Why the Able-Bodied Still Don’t Get It”, Dubus similarly describes how he recognizes himself being treated patronizingly by others. Furthermore, Dubus explains how prior to being hit by a car and losing the use of his legs, he had not understood the disabled community. While discussing this Dubus states, “I lacked the compassion and courage to imagine someone else’s suffering” (Dubus). This statement shows a perspective that is true for many people who do not understand how a disability affects one’s life, and Dubus is able to convey this message in his essay. Harriet McBryde Johnson also has a valuable perspective on disability representation and treatment that she argues in her essay “Should I Have Been Killed at Birth?”.
Leaving people who have a disability out of things and forgetting about them hurts their feelings. For instance, in Mairs’ essay she says “…you might feel as though you don’t exist, in any meaningful social sense, at all” (14). No one wants to feel that way, but people who have a disability go through it all the time. The media’s influence may convince people who have a disability to feel as if they’re an outsider since they have a “shameful” part of
Throughout the course of history, federal legislation and Supreme Court decisions have empowered the evolution of rights for Americans With Disabilities. Milestones made by both branches of government have efficiently modernized and safeguarded this marginalized group of people. For instance, discrimination against these individuals is prohibited, in manners such as, education, public transportation, and employment. However, in the free country of America, their freedom wasn’t granted. Restaurants were able to refuse service to people with disabilities and people confined to wheelchairs were forced to leave them behind to be able to ride a bus or a train.
And if not, there is nowhere. But this denial of disability imperils even those who are able-bodied, and not just by shrinking your insight into the physically and emotionally complex world you live in. Nancy explains how all of the mistreatment and mis-viewing of her and her disability have a lot of effects on her. But she also points out how it can be harmful to anyone with a disability. This last quote gives examples of how all of the misrepresentations can
In The Odyssey by Homer, Odysseus should be considered a hero! Odysseus has done more good deeds than bad deeds throughout the years of the Odyssey. Odysseus has saved lives more than he has taken them for no good reason. Odysseus has honored people more than dishonored people. Today’s hero code is completely different than in Odysseus’s time.
People may tend to think they are compassionate and nonjudgmental when it comes to people's disabilities. However, everyone is judgmental in some way shape or form. Even people who don’t think are. Whether it’s a dirty look, mean comment, or fear of those with disabilities. What a majority of these able bodied people aren't aware of is their own personal invisible disabilities.
When someone thinks of someone with a disability, they usually feel bad for them. They will also associate the word disability with a disadvantage. What if that wasn't true? What if instead of being at a disadvantage, people with disabilities just have to look at the task differently? As Oscar Pistorius, the
Just about 650 million people suffer from some type of disabilities in their lifetime. There are all kinds if disabilities that people suffer from, they can be hidden or they can be obvious. We should take in consideration the physical and mental challenges disabled people may face, acknowledge the history of disabled segregation, and the burdens these people deal with. Throughout history the treatment of the disabled has been pretty rough.
Don't take my word for it, According to ,https://www.adl.org/education/resources/bacBig Bet, you didn’t know there is over 650 million people with disabilities, visible and not visible since 2016. So why now in 2018 we still think they are stupid, abandoned, because studies can still prove that. When people with disabilities are the strongest most unique individuals in the world. Disabilities could happen to anyone invisible and none in visible,so for people who can handle it and not show feel comfortable being them self in world and have more types of things to help them with it.
Reports online mentioned that 87% of people think that disabled people should be treated equally. The people who opposed this statement felt that the disabled use their disability as a free ride to an easy life. Most of my friends mentioned that their parents would object them to befriend those with disabilities as they feel that they would affect their well being and exam results . Albeit disappointed, I knew that it was an existing issue. I feel that being disabled is neither especially cursed nor especially blessed .
And a disabled person’s ambition is like all other human beings, the looks of pity and compassion negatively affect that ambition. People should embrace the disabled person and give them a helping hand, and they should have laws, which defend their rights, which should be respected. However, most societies do not have laws that ensure an equal life for the disabled population. It is a shame that the rights of the disabled people has turned many times to mere slogans.