Quote:
Originally Posted by SuperFemme
i want to reiterate AGAIN that giving a pass is not about erasing empathy and compassion. people don't seem to be getting that message....
a "pass" is a different set of rules for DA people and a complete lack of personal responsibility.
|
Oh yeah, I meant to say something about this because it keeps getting buried in other concepts (which are also really important, but what you said above is specifically what this thread is about).
I totally agree - I know I said in my first post that I give everybody passes, DA or not, but having thought about it - under that definition, they aren't passes.
While we seem to be talking all around the subject, but not specifically addressing it, I actually think that most of us are in agreement that being differently abled should not entitle anyone to a pass - i.e. being DA shouldn't absolve them from taking responsibility for their own behaviour (but only according to each person's capacity).
I think the crux of the issue is that there is a whole bunch of societal baggage that informs people what an appropriate response to DA ought to be.
A lot of it is well meaning, but in the end there is a huge grey area between giving a person compassion and understanding because of X, and not holding a person accountable because of X, and where A will see one, B sees the other.. . and it's not always clear-cut who is right.
I believe that this is where the conversation is falling down.