Everyday Erinyes #154

 Posted by at 8:23 am  Politics
Jan 262019
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

Between the indictment and arrest of Roger Stone, and the unmasking of mild-mannered Senator Michael Bennet (D-CO) as a superhero, I’m not even going to try to work up any outrage this weekend – I doubt that I could, and I’d rather enjoy the lull. So, instead, I’ll be sharing an article from Yes! magazine by Megan Wildhood. Yes! magazine operates under a Creative Commons license, so I could just copy the article. Instead, I want to share parts with comments. But the amount I’m quoting would exceed fair use if that applied, so I wanted to explain up front.

The title of the article is “5 Ways to Protect the Planet Without Disenfranchising People With Disabilities.” As I have mobility issues myself, it caught my eye. And I know I’m not alone here. If not mobility issues, some of us have vision or hearing or immunity issues, or we rely on prescription medications to survive – which we would like to think would be considered in a disaster, or even not in a disaster when we needed assistance, but might not be.

Wildhood (a freelance writer who lives in Seattle, whose work has appeared in The Atlantic, The Sun, and America Magazine, among others, and had her first book, “Long Division,” published in 2017) points out

People with disabilities are disproportionately affected by disasters, which are worsening and increasing because of climate change. The National Council on Disability estimated that a “disproportionate number of the fatalities” amid Hurricane Katrina were people with disabilities. Typical evacuation routes and disaster plans are often not accessible to this vulnerable group, while interruptions to electricity are deadlier for those who require machines to treat medical conditions.

And it isn’t just disasters like fires, superstorms, and floods. Extreme heat, which up to 75 percent of humanity may be at risk of experiencing by 2100, has adverse physical and mental health effects in healthy individuals. But people with neurological conditions who cannot sweat or regulate body temperature are even more vulnerable to extreme heat.

And those are just a few examples.

She notes that the needs of people with disabilities can even be thought to be in opposition to the needs of the planet. The issue which leaps to mind – at least to my mind – is the current real and warranted concern about single-use plastic straws. Yes, they end up filling oceans with plastic particles – if they haven’t killed wildlife first – wildlife who can get them stuck up their noses. Wildlife who think they are edible and can fill their stomachs with, essentially, poison. But, unless we want to replace throwing away straws with throwing away people (yeah, some people might, but I trust no one here), we must come up with a way to deal with straws which allows people who need their assistance to be able to drink.

Wildhood identifies five initiatives which – well, I’ll let her say it:

Actions that protect the environment don’t have to disenfranchise the disability community. In fact, the needs of people with disabilities are not an impediment to good planet care. They’re essential to it. When we pursue the inclusion of people with disabilities, caring about nature can come naturally. Here are five initiatives that can safeguard people with disabilities and the planet, too. 

1. Universal Health Care
2. Disaster Planning
3. Corporate Accountability
4. Universal Design
5. Stronger Environmental Regulations  

The one that probably needs more explanation is universal design. I’m not an expert, but the basic concept of universal design is that we need to include consideration of disabilities into all facets of design of everything from entire buildings down to forks and spoons, so that instead of making “accommodations,” we are improving accessibility for disabled and abled alike.

These principles make environments more inclusive, often while conserving more energy and materials than conventional design. Installing ramps, for example, especially in single-family homes, can be less energy-intensive and more cost-effective than stairs, while meeting diverse needs. Installing power doors with motion sensors eases entry into grocery stores and office buildings while cutting down on energy by preventing doors from being left open, savings which can add up.

The Global Universal Design Commission was formed to work on this. It is global, and has projects in many nations. Of course, you won’t hear anything about it at Fox News.

Stronger environmental regulations probably sound like a fever dream, given the “President” and Congress we have. But the “President” and Congress we have are not necessarily the “President” and Congress we will have forever, especially if we keep working as hard as we worked in 2018.

Environmental pollutants harm all of us, but especially the most vulnerable. While those with asthma or more severe breathing disorders such as COPD may be particularly affected by smoke from California’s wildfires and other air pollution, for example, we all need clean air to breathe. According to data collected in 2013 from MIT, air pollution causes 200,000 early deaths a year in the United States.

That is no surprise to anyone in California … or even in Oregon. And don’t even think about letting me get started on the hormone disruptors in the thermally printed receipts we get every time and every place we spend money.

I can, and do, ask Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone to look into all of these areas, but this really is a case where we need to be working on it ourselves. More power to all of us.

The Furies and I will be back.

Cross posted to Care2 HERE.

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  12 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #154”

  1. Thank you so much for this, JD.  As a disabled person I have experienced some of the hardships you discussed and limited accessibility has been an ongoing problem for me. 35

  2. Disaster Preparedness: For example: In seeing how the fires were here, a few years ago, our neighborhood disaster planning will nill. One example of this was: Leaving the area, with many other cars to leave the community was an hours long wait in line, while breathing the smoke, and debris in the air. 2 main roads, and a deadlock. Also, burglars coming in by boat (from the Colorado River) to break into homes, and steal the homeowners possessions. Flooding has the same analogy here, unfortunately. I can’t even imagine the horror for our disabled during another catastrophe, physically, mentally, or not being able to call for help. It’s frightening, to me, imo.

    Straws: I’ve since banned plastics, straws included, in seeing the poor sea turtle with a straw stuck in his nose on a beach somewhere. I pick up trash, litter, and gawd awful stuff along the road when I go walking, and my paper bag is full by the time I get home. Not much, but I do and am aware of how wildlife can ingest, or harm them.

    I am all for stronger mandates with the environment, so that ALL of us, no matter who we are, can live a good healthy life, and leave it for our generations to come. Fingers crossed, x 10 !!!

    Excellent post, Joanne, & Furies. Thank you!

  3. I especially like the idea of Universal Design, never having heard omit before!

    • I realize this is a duplicate post, but I approved it anyway … the more duplicates we approve,the better the chances that, eventually, no matter how you type your info, it will get auto-approved.

  4. I especially like the idea of Universal Design, never having heard of it before!

  5. “According to data collected in 2013 from MIT, air pollution causes 200,000 early deaths a year in the United States.” 

    WOW!!!

    Yet sadly, i guess you can’t expect much in the way of the above initiatives being implemented any time soon!!

    The “President” & Congress you have are not necessarily the “President” & Congress you will have forever, especially if you keep working as hard as you worked in 2018. 

    RESIST!!!!!

  6. Try to implement any reasonable initiatives to deal with climate change, and a chorus of lobotomized ninnies hollers “Fake news!” “Socialism!” “Squelching business!” and other garbage like that.

  7. We were having some fancy juices served in a glass jam pot as is the fashion in these hip establishments on the Sunshine Coast last week, and wondered how we could drink them without using a plastic straw and spilling it over ourselves. But we need not have worried, the straws were made of recycled paper and returned to the paper bin afterwards, and worked perfectly fine. So it apparently is easy enough to come up with sustainable design that doesn’t disenfranchise anyone. It was an open fronted/sided restaurant where air-conditioning would be a terrible waste, so they kept the place cool by spraying a very fine mist from the edges of the ceiling. That worked like a treat too.

    It seems to me that young designers, already having made the switch to deal with climate change in their design, only need a little nudging from the Furies in the right direction. However, investors may need a big kick up the backside from our ladies before they are willing to go that way.

    • Disabled people who need straws are generally bedridden, and cannot sir up so the liquid has to reach them from a different angle.  I have (it must be decades ago) seen paper straws which have the pleating to accommodate the odd angle.  I’ve also seen sturdier, reusable straws, and even straws attached to the cup (which would be a sterilizing nightmare I would think.)  Yes, there are alternatives.  Especially if people are willing to come up with them.

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