[Blindtlk] white cane day
Lloyd Rasmussen
lras at sprynet.com
Sat Oct 15 23:26:41 UTC 2016
That article doesn't reflect my experience. Children ask what that cane is,
and I am glad when their parents explain or when Judy and I get a chance to
answer their question. Pedestrians are not watching where they are going as
much as they used to, and they are not hearing the sound of a white cane,
either. I don't think this reflects ignorance.
If we all ride paratransit or cabs everywhere, or self-driving cars if they
become available, the recognition of the white cane as a symbol of mobility
and independence of blind people will be diminished.
Lloyd Rasmussen, Kensington, MD
http://lras.home.sprynet.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Hachey via blindtlk
Sent: Friday, October 14, 2016 5:34 PM
To: 'Blind Talk Mailing List'
Cc: Bob Hachey
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] white cane day
Hi all,
Pasted below my name is a rather cynical look at White Cane Safety Day.
While I've not experienced the kind of thing Jim talks about regarding other
pedestrians, I have noticed more distracted drivers who are very likely
paying too much attention to SMART phones and not enough attention to the
road ahead.
One thing we should not do is to follow Jim's advice to stay home. It's very
sad when someone throws in the towel as he has apparently done.
Bob Hachey
Hey, What's With the White Cane?.
Honest depictions of disabled people have vanished from popular culture..
By Jim Knipfel .
Oct. 15 is national White Cane Safety Day, first decreed by President Lyndon
B. Johnson in 1964. Never heard of it? You're not alone.
I'll admit, even as a blind man who uses a white cane on a daily basis, Oct.
15 doesn't get my heart racing, save for one irony: It's not just the day
that Americans don't recognize; increasingly it's the white cane and what it
symbolizes. Think of it as another kind of blindness. I began noticing the
signs roughly seven years ago. My wife and I were in New York City on a
Saturday night, working our way down a crowded sidewalk on our way to a
show. The going seemed unusually slow and frustrating, even for New York.
Soon the reason was clear: No one was stepping out of the way to let us
pass. Some were transfixed by cellphones, but others looked directly at us,
looked at my cane with some confusion, and still refused to take a step in
either direction. I soon realized that many people under the age of 35, not
just in New York City, but across the country, no longer know what a white
cane represents. On more than one occasion, people in their 20s have
approached me and asked, "What's that cane for? For millennia the blind have
used canes and staffs as navigational tools to help detect obstacles in our
path. After World War II, with so many blind veterans returning home, the
standard cane design was refashioned. Mobility sticks grew longer and were
wrapped in red and white reflective tape. By the time LBJ made his 1964
declaration, the white cane was an accepted part of the culture. So how
could a symbol of disability as common as the wheelchair so abruptly vanish
from our collective consciousness? A friend has a theory. In the 1980s and
'90s, as political correctness began infiltrating popular culture, it became
verboten to portray the disabled, particularly the blind, in anything
perceived to be an unflattering light. In a blink, bumbling characters with
white canes, once a mainstay of slapstick films, cartoon shorts and comic
strips, vanished. What blind characters we did get now had superpowers or
were masters of the martial arts, and rarely had any use for a white cane,
even as a signifier. As a result, children who once grew up with images of
characters with white canes no longer saw them, and so the common
understanding of the blind and our symbology began to fade. Questions of
"dignity," "respect" and "inclusion" aside, expunging blind characters from
pop culture for fear of offending someone has had dangerous repercussions
when it comes to the daily lives of blind Americans. If fewer and fewer
people recognize its meaning, what use does the cane maintain as a symbol
directed at the sighted? Pedestrians who once stepped out of the way are now
occasionally hostile obstacles. And with hybrid and electric cars growing
quieter, walking just a few blocks in a well-known neighborhood can become a
perilous journey. Despite all the far-reaching achievements of the Americans
with Disabilities Act, the tool that I and other blind Americans have
trusted to give us some modicum of protection and visibility is fast losing
all meaning. Ironically, the best way for us to mark White Cane Safety Day
may well be to stay home. Mr. Knipfel, a former staff writer for the New
York Press, is the author of "Residue" (Red Hen Press, 2015). .
More information about the BlindTlk
mailing list