Saturday Slumgullion #12

  • “Pimp my gimp.” Recent Doonesbury strips showing B.D.’s efforts to decorate his prosthetic leg are the latest in good crip giggles.
  • Sage of Persephone’s Box has an announcement about blog color choices and the her ability to read what is offered. While we’re on the topic, I can’t remember who posted on it recently, but the CAPTCHA function for spam-proofing comments at many sites is troublesome for many of the sight-impaired. I’ve turned mine off and so far the spam on my little site is only about 2 per day.

All down the West Africa coast, ships registered in America and Europe unload containers filled with old computers, slops, and used medical equipment. Scrap merchants, corrupt politicians and underpaid civil servants take charge of this rubbish and, for a few dollars, will dump them off coastlines and on landfill sites.

  • Another article in the same edition tells of the daily struggles of African women and how sexism and ableism work together to make life hard:

An HIV-positive woman is nearly 10 times as likely to experience violence at the hands of her partner as a woman who does not have the disease. Domestic violence causes more deaths and disability among women aged 15 to 44 worldwide than cancer, malaria, traffic accidents and war. In at least 20 African countries, more than half the women have also suffered female genital mutilation.

  • The founder of a Swiss clinic offering assisted suicide for the terminally ill wants to widen the scope of elligible people to those who are depressed.

He claimed that such a move would help to cut the suicide rate to about 20 per cent to 25 per cent of its current level. “You could avoid the huge majority and reduce costs to the health services,” he said.

    Apparently, if someone commits your suicide for you, it isn’t legally suicide. (True, btw. This also means family can cash in on insurance policytaken out on the dead person.)
  • A visually-impaired Atlantic City man sues the city and the “senior-transportation service” (I’m not sure why they call it that and not just paratransit like everyone else) because the driver arriving to pick him up in July, 2004, refused to let his guide dog on the bus. She was afraid of dogs.
  • Time magazine’s feature story, “Who pays for special ed?” begs for some disability blogging by those with more expertise than me on the squeeze between parents of disabled children and school districts feeling a desperate budget crunch.
  • Larry Scott writes about the Republican plan for “Buying-out Disabled Veterans” with a lump-sum disability compensation and all the questions that brings up about eligibility for medical care through the VA.
  • “The Meaning of Deafness” discusses education for deaf students and the conflicting philosophies parents of young children must chose between.

Crossposted at The Gimp Parade

This entry posted in Class, poverty, labor, & related issues, Disabled Rights & Issues, Environmental issues, Link farms, Media criticism. Bookmark the permalink. 

6 Responses to Saturday Slumgullion #12

  1. Pingback: The Gimp Parade

  2. 2
    Josh Jasper says:

    Judean People’s Front Crack Suicide Squad! Atttack!

    /Kills themselves

    Urgh..

    That’ll show ’em!

  3. 3
    JamesRaven says:

    Thank you for the link to the article on deafness which deftly describes the controversy in educating children with hearing loss without taking sides.

    I work in the Deaf community, and my path is to be a Certifed Interpreter within the next two years. I’m two years into it, and signing every day at work is the best environment in which to become acculterated to this special population.

    I continue to be stunned by the near-total lack of language, not just ASL skills (which are sadly deficient in many Deaf people), but the equal lack of any kind of reading/writing English skills.

    Expressing feelings other than acting out physically requires language, and for the most part, the people I work with and around every day exist in a tight trap of illiteracy, anger, and resentment. Even when success in language allows stability and employment, the “balancing” between Hearing and Deaf cultures creates a terrible angst and unhappiness, almost as if the trap follows them into their success.

    One thing I have observed and learned. No matter what device is used, if we’re talking about serious hearing loss, learning ASL should be mandated by law, just like the fucking post-partum hearing tests that cause the buchering of babies’ skulls to make their parents feel normal. (Sorry, my bias is showing here.)

    All Deaf children should be allowed to learn in a combined ASL/English enviroment with a team of Hearing and Deaf teachers who use ASL to teach English.

    If anyone reading this would like to delve deeper into this issue, and the larger issue of Hearing oppression; Audism… Read “Mask Of Benevolence” by Harlan Lane.

  4. 4
    Tuomas says:

    Some interesting Finnish blogs I can’t find a good page translator for. Anyone?

    You’re going to need a person for that, I think. Finnish grammar works in a different way than Ino-European grammar and babelfish etc. simply can’t translate it. I’m not aware of any decent Finnish-English translation program. However, it is possible that I might be able to translate some of them (if they’re not really long) every now and then, as I am native Finnish speaker who happens to be quite fluent in written English.

    I’m not one of the ideological peers of Alas crew, but anyway, you can E-mail me about it.

  5. 5
    Tuomas says:

    Indo-European.

    Sheesh, speaking of being fluent. ;).

  6. 6
    Sage says:

    Thanks for the mention, Blue. I was wondering why a post on blog colours would get so many hits, so many more than my recipe for an orgasm for instance! You never know what people will be really interested in reading. ;)