Once Again, Jail and Bail Fundraisers aren’t cool

As I wrote back in April, fundraisers that “arrest” and “jail” volunteers for fundraising purposes are tasteless and outrageous.  Imagine my shock and dismay when I arrived at church this morning to find that the rector  has agreed to have a “warrant” put out for a fundraiser for Muscular Dystrophy Association (aka “Jerry’s Kids”)  hosted by a local restaurant.  I was so angry I wanted to say something during the announcements portion of the service but decided to hold my tongue and come up with a more coherent, constructive reaction to this.  So, here goes:

Dear Rev.

I am very disappointed to find that you have agreed to participate in the Jail and Bail fundraiser for MDA. Please understand that this is not an objection to the idea of helping out children with disabilities.  However, there are two major  problems with this fundraiser.  First of all is the whole notion of “jailing” someone for fun — sorry, but I fail to see anything funny about incarceration.  I’m sure you are aware of the arrest of Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. in his own home last summer, as well as the  experience of my colleague Ravi Shankar, who was arrested for “driving while brown” following a poetry event in Manhattan earlier this year. Unfortunately, this kind of racial profiling is all too common in America, and is part of the legacy of slavery and racial discrimination you spoke about so eloquently in your sermon today.  An event that makes fun of those who are wrongly imprisoned is, in my opinion, incredibly tasteless and insensitive.  When I was in high school, we had senior “slave auctions” for fundraisers.  Teachers wisely told us that these were offensive.  I consider “jail and bail” fundraisers to be just as outrageous.

The secondary issue has to do with the perspective on disability presented by the MDA, aka “Jerry’s Kids.” A number of disability rights activists have spoken out against Mr. Lewis’ work which tends to stigmatize persons with disabilities by making them into objects of pity.  This type of marginalization is perpetuated by the phrase in the fundraiser which calls neurodegenerative diseases “crimes.” For more on this issue, see the website The Trouble with Jerry: Pity Isn’t Progress.

I will leave it to you to decide whether to share these views with the congregation and/or continue to participate in the fundraiser.  I just thought I would let my views be known to you in the hope to educate you on these issues.

New Feminist Disability Blog Launched

via Our Bodies Our Blog.  According to their About section:

“FWD/Forward is a group blog written by feminists with disabilities. It is a place to discuss disability issues and the intersection between feminism and disability rights activism. The content here ranges from basic information which is designed to introduce people who are new to disability issues or feminism to some core concepts, to more advanced topics, with the goal of promoting discussion, conversation, fellowship, and education.”

In short, disability is a feminist issue.  Right on!

Stephen Hawking: Not Dead, Still British.

Not Dead Yetvia Disability Studies, Temple U.:

Brilliant article.  The comments are even better [okay, some of them are disablist but others are right on].  No wonder the folks across the pond think Americans are clueless.  I hope Penny will send me a button.

Logo at left is from the disability rights advocacy group Not Dead Yet.  Yes, they got their name from the following priceless bit from “Monty Python and the Holy Grail.”

Psycho Donuts: Q’est-ce que c’est?

Psycho donuts via The Trouble with Spikol. There’s a donut shop in Northern California that uses mental illness and an insane asylum as it’s theme. Here’s a sampling of news stories from Fox News AOL, and  ABC News. In addition to naming donuts after various mental illnesses and brain conditions (e.g. “bipolar donut” and “massive head trauma,” the latter of which has incensed veterans groups), the store also has a “padded cell” and “group therapy room” where one can consume the donuts, and offers customers the chance to be photographed in a straightjacket.  What fun (not)!

What annoys me the most is that the company calls itself  “progressive” — sorry, if you don’t get why persons with mental illness and mental health advocates are offended, you’re not progressive.  Would you have a donut called “little black Sambo”?  I don’t think so.

Liz argues that there are more important things to be concerned about than donuts.  But isn’t battling stigma and fighting for better health care, legal rights, and so forth all part of the same movement?  Here’s an excellent article from Stigmanet that puts this is in the context of campus mental health issues.

So, q’est-ce que c’est? (what is it) — offensive marketing campaign or not?

Added later:  more on protests, from Media Dis&Dat.

Tenured Radical on Dis/Ability

Another insightful post from Tenured Radical — I guess my nagging about the word “crazy” worked!

It’s amazing to me why wealthy liberal arts colleges like Zenith have fewer resources for students with disabilities than state universities.  Is this an extension of benefits offered in public K-12 schools?  Or veterans benefits (we are seeing a number of returning veterans of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan)?

Speaking of K-12 education, here’s a story from today’s Wall Street Journal about efforts to ban use of restraint in public schools, after the GAO found hundreds of allegations of death and abuse since 1990. Who would have thought a student with disabilities would be safter in a locked psychiatric facility than a public school?

Media dis&dat: AMA says there’s no more need to research link between vaccines, autism

Media dis&dat: AMA says there’s no more need to research link between vaccines, autism.

Because there isn’t one!  The real danger is that vaccine rates have dropped to the point where childhood diseases are reappearing. I hope this puts the issue to rest, but given the tenacity of crackpot erroneous theories on the Web, I doubt it.

If folks are really interested in helping persons with autism, how about helping teens and adults get a college education?

Nixon and Abortion

RICHARD NIXON FAREWELLYesterday’s New York Times reported on a newly released Nixon tape that reveals the president’s private thoughts on abortion.  Although the President made no public statements about the Roe v. Wade decision, he made the following private statements on January 22, 1973, the day the decision was handed down (audio file here):

Nixon worried that greater access to abortions would foster “permissiveness,” and said that “it breaks the family.” But he also saw a need for abortion in some cases — like interracial pregnancies, he said.

“There are times when an abortion is necessary. I know that. When you have a black and a white,” he told an aide, before adding, “Or a rape.”

I’m somewhat surprised that Nixon supported abortion at all.  Yet, I’m not as surprised as others that he supported neoeugenics — i.e. selective reduction of births of “undesirables.” As Rebecca Kluchin demonstrates in her excellent new book, Fit to Be Tied, forced sterilization of poor women, especially women of color, continued well into the later half of the twentieth century, at the same time that more privileged white women were asserting their rights to reproductive self-determination.  So, Nixon’s views, while certainly bigoted and abhorrent, were similar to the views of some population control experts who saw limiting reproduction as a solution to the “culture of poverty”.

Blogging Against Disabilism, One Day Late

badd02 Things have been quite frantic in Knitting Clio land, so I plumb forgot to write a blog post yesterday.  Here is a round up of on-time posts from Diary of a Goldfish.
My contributions will be brief.  I’m excited about NAMI-CT’s Keep the Promise blog.  This Tuesday, May 5th, is Mental Health Awareness Day at the CT state capital. The event is from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Legislative Office Building (room 1E) in Hartford
Please join Representative Walker, Fellowship Place and Keep the Promise Coalition (KTP) at an advocacy event to support expanded housing and health care options, and true community integration for people living with mental illnesses.

Finally, I’ve answered Lizzie Simon‘s call for interview subjects for a WebMD series on bipolar disorder.  They’re calling me on Tuesday so may not make it to the capital.  I’ll be there in spirit though.