I have just returned from the public apology for abuse in care at Parliament, feeling only profound frustration and disappointment at how far disabled people still have to go in this country.
I'm sure the Prime Minister's speech was scrutenised by multiple officials. Every phrase, every nuance would have been vetted. But disabled people are so absent from key positions of influence that no one told him that maybe, just maybe, using the expression "turned a blind eye to abuse" when blind people were some of the victims of that abuse is ill-advised.
Let me tell you from first hand experience, you can have blind eyes and know full well that abuse is taking place. Using that pejorative, ableist phrase at any time is not advisable, and that is according to the Government's own published guidelines. To use it in a public apology which actually includes blind people is unforgivable. The abuse just keeps on coming.

@JonathanMosen

Thank you so much for drawing attention to and sharing your experience of this.

I can appreciate that it is all the more hurtful to know that the checks in the system that exist to uphold values and correct unconscious bias and systemic abelism in language failed so utterly in a speech by the Prime Minister that was intended as an apology for historic abuses. I can only imagine how it was to experience this first hand.

#Disability #Abelism #AbelistLanguage
#AccesssibleCanada #CharterOfRights #HumanRights #Blind #Canada

@JonathanMosen This got a literal facepalm from me. Have you noticed that everyonetrips over themselves when using words like "see" and "watch" in conversation, but are still happily misusing the word "blind" without a thought? If it's possible to be objective, was the rest of the apology at least good?
@simon A lot of it was ugly, almost frightening in terms of the anger coming from survivors when Public sector heads were speaking. The whole thing could have been much better handled.
@JonathanMosen Oh my goodness. I am so sorry you had to deal with all of that. And then to be faced with ableist language had to have been like a slap in the face. The level of disregard that must’ve been present to not even bother at least having a sensitivity reader go over the speech is astounding.
@JonathanMosen Speaking as a totally blind person, I don't find the expression offensive. It's a metaphor. If one turns a blind eye to something, one willfully chooses not to see it. Not seeing something is being blind to it, having a blind spot where it's concerned. How is that abuse to blind people? We are blind. We do not see, not willfully, but through some circumstance. Are we ashamed of being blind? No. It is what we are and not what someone would normally choose to be.
@JonathanMosen So sorry for people who have to go through that there. I'm glad that we have a say here, at least to a point, with issues like this. I'm very glad that you're proudly continuing with these advocacy efforts with the NFB going forward!
@JonathanMosen it sounds like it was a thoughtless comment by someone who should have known better.
@JonathanMosen , everything else aside, the real unfortunate thing is that most in this government are 'not too bright' and are getting paid by Aotearoa for the daily onslaught of bad news we have encountered pretty much from day one of them being in office.
@JonathanMosen Well, I guess it's "job security," whether advocacy is part of our earned living or simply part of our daily living. Sorry that you and others had to endure that, all of it.
@JonathanMosen Thank you for sharing and calling out the discrimination and incredibly poor handling of the apology. Sending you and other survivors a big hug.
@JonathanMosen They donn't listen and they don't learn. Some of the most prominent abusers abusers are ministers. They read the Bible and apply the references to blind people they read. Can't they understand that language evolbes. I have discussed this with my minister and he listens and nods his head, but he doesn't change.
@BJac Certainly in this country, we're dealing with the aftermath of a phenomenal amount of abuse from religious organisations.
@JonathanMosen is that in the UK? or in different country
neveermind it's in New Zealand. but that doesn't matter because seams like the country doesn't really care about blind people that much...
it is sad seeing that in alex's country and in parts of my country, blind people are doing well...so that is sad for your country to not care about disabled people...
@adisonverlice Well I can say differently as I know that Jonathan Mozen is from New Zealand and I've not seen him moning about blind people there. i may be mistaken though as I don't monitor his timeline all the time, only if he has replied to me and so on. And his living blindfully pods were fantastic!