Watch this documentary!
Oct. 11th, 2009 09:53 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
You should read her post, or you can go directly to the online video which is uncaptioned.
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I think I forgot to say it in my own journal!
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Generally for me, learning about disability is frankly a survival tactic: it gives me tools, resources, communities, ways of thinking that help me with a sometimes very challenging life. But I also think that DS is interesting to learn about, it is concerned with justice and feminism and anti-oppression, it involves ethics (always something I've been interested in), thinking about bodies and embodiment, thinking about the way we treat people as a society; it's about humanity, and the wrong messages we're given growing up, like how if you only try harder you can change, you can be better, stronger, smarter, prettier, more able; and how to undo some of those messages.
And even if you are able-bodied now, it is likely you won't always be, so, as Jesse says,
"Learning why disablism is wrong now will make your life easier later."