Disability

Disability and Media Survey by Beth Haller

Disability and Media Survey by Beth Haller: The purpose of this survey is to have you as a disability advocate evaluate the media and its representation of people with disabilities and their issues. The questionnaire is available in any format that would be most accessible to you, including verbally. If you would like to be called, please contact researcher Beth Haller at bhaller@towson.edu. The survey takes about 30 minutes to complete.

Language Matters

On November 17, 2009, Senators Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) and Michael Enzi (R-WY) introduced a bill they named Rosa’s Law that would replace the phrase “mental retardation” with “intellectual disability” in all Federal policy references (see the press release here).

This development follows the protests around the word “retard” repeated in the 2008 film Tropic Thunder and a campaign by the Special Olympics to get people to stop using “the R-word.” A few months earlier, in July 2009, Little People of America called on the Federal Communications Commission to ban use of the word “midget.”

The request followed an episode of Celebrity Apprentice on NBC, called "Jesse James and the Midgets," that LPA found demeaning. Language is political. And political correctness around words is not new. There have always been offensive epithets for ethnic groups and nonconforming individuals.

Regressive Progressives - Ed Schultz and Norman Goldman

In the car listening to the radio this morning I was disappointed to hear talk show guest host, Norman Goldman, on the Ed Schultz Show, using words and phrases that perpetuate negative stereotypes and reinforce ignorant attitudes about people with psychiatric disabilities. Mr. Goldman is an attorney and describes himself as "progressive." Unfortunately, his attitudes about people with disabilities are incredibly regressive.
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