Friday, April 19, 2019




The term 'disabled' is insulting and should be replaced by 'Access Inclusion Seekers'

Mark Tonga is a tetraplegic as a result of a football accident

Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore is considering a plan to normalise the term 'Access Inclusion Seekers' when referring to disabled people. 

The City Council is revamping their disability policies, with the council's inclusion expert advisory panel now claiming the 'd' word may soon be as offensive as the 'n' word.  

One on the panel, Mark Tonga, said using the term 'disabled' portrays people as having 'less capacity and less ability,' The Daily Telegraph reports. [Because they do]

'Disability is a subliminal pejorative for many. It's negative. Perhaps sooner than you think, the "d" work will be as offensive as the "n" word is now,' he said. 

But Dr Jeremy Sammut, Centre for Independent Studies research fellow, disagreed. He claimed that policing the language people used was unnecessary and argued issues about inclusion had been dealt with in the past.

'Social attitudes to disability have already changed and almost no one stigmatises and diminishes what people with disability can and should achieve,' Dr Sammut said.

6 comments:

Use the Name, Luke said...

One on the panel, Mark Tonga, said using the term 'disabled' portrays people as having 'less capacity and less ability,' The Daily Telegraph reports.

If that term is inaccurate, I suggest that he prove it by standing up and walking.

ScienceABC123 said...

Everyone is equal before the law, and that's about as far as the everyone is equal concept extends.

stinky said...

"Disabled" was itself introduced to replace such terms as "dumb" and "crippled." It was the newer, kinder way of saying such things.

You say you want a revolution? Round and round we go.

Bird of Paradise said...

Shall we replace words like Liberal and Snowflake with Sissy? hey these people are Sissies the trouble is they want everybody to be like them

Henk Bergmans said...

Almost everyone has a disability of some kind. I have poor eye sight and loss of hearing. Without my glasses I can’t drive and without my hearing aids I can’t hear you, accept for my wife whom I have a tough time hearing all the time

Anonymous said...

It's not really true that everyone is equal before the law.
The law recognises several types of disability that requires special provision.
It even extends to special protection to wives in certain circumstances and jurisdictions.