[Nfbf-l] Here is an interesting Article about what I thought was aBlind Role Model

Kathy Davis kdavisnfbf at cfl.rr.com
Sat Jan 23 20:07:18 UTC 2010


Dear Dwight,
 
This is a brilliantly written article - one that hits the proverbial nail on
the head. I don't have much time to read e-mail today but I'm really glad I
read this one and I hope every other blind person will as well. 
 
Kathy
 

  _____  

From: nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of repcodds at aol.com
Sent: Friday, January 22, 2010 7:55 PM
To: nfbf-l at nfbnet.org; nfbf-leaders at yahoogroups.com; JPare at nfb.org
Subject: [Nfbf-l] Here is an interesting Article about what I thought was
aBlind Role Model



Article from the INDEPENDENCE TODAY Newspaper

October 2009


N.Y. Governor Paterson 
Blind to Tools of Success 

By Deborah Kendrick 

Several years ago, when I received some mystifyingly bad treatment at the
hands of other people who shared my disability, a friend who was both black
and blind comforted me with her insight. "Blind people can sometimes be like
a basket of crabs," she told me. "When one of them makes it to the top, the
others scramble to pull him down." Folks I thought to be my peers, in other
words, were attacking me out of envy. 

I vowed I would never do that. I would fervently support anyone with any
disability who achieved success in any field. We should all be one happy
family, right? 

Then, following the 2006 elections, alarms went off that challenged that
personal pledge. The good news was that New York state had elected a
lieutenant governor who was both black and blind. The more troubling news
was that David Paterson, that newly elected official, by declaring that he
didn't use any of those blindness tools - Braille, assistive technology, a
white cane - indicated to those who don't have disabilities that he was too
cool for all that nonsense. Those of us who proudly use the tools of
blindness, who depend on them to give us a competitive edge in a host of
professional and educational environments, tried to be tolerant. I wanted to
be first and foremost proud. A blind guy - a sort of brother to me in the
disability family - was rising to the top, and it was cause for serious
celebration. 

Governor Paterson clean shaven. A new imageOf course, when Eliot Spitzer was
caught with his pants down, so to speak, and Paterson rose to the very top
of his state, sworn in as New York governor on March 17th, 2008, the media
made even more noise about how this brilliant guy didn't need Braille or
talking computers or any of that blind nonsense. He had a superhuman memory,
we were told, and relied heavily on staff. His staff read important memos
and documents into voicemail messages that he listened to at all hours. 

Voicemail messages? What? 

He's governor of one of our most important states, and he doesn't use a
computer? Still, I reminded myself to be tolerant. Each of us has different
techniques, different ways to accomplish the same goal. One deaf person
reads lips. Another uses American Sign Language. Another uses Signed
English. And on it goes. The man was governor, after all. He didn't have to
do things the way other blind people do them to earn our support. He was one
of us, and we should stand behind him. 

Then Paterson started doing really dumb things. He didn't always know the
facts. He made decisions and then, under pressure of one kind or another,
reversed them. He appointed a lieutenant governor when nobody was sure he
was even allowed to do that and who, to add insult to injury, had trampled
with dirty boots on transportation prospects for New Yorkers with
disabilities. 

He seemed to "get it" when he responded with disdain to the "Saturday Night
Live" skit that ridiculed his blindness. And yet, he didn't hesitate to grab
a few laughs himself at the possible expense of people with disabilities
when he appeared in a wheelchair for a charity gig. 

More recently, he has vetoed one bill that would prevent discrimination
against people with disabilities in public facilities in his state and
another that would require all polling places to be made physically
accessible. 

OK, we could argue, just because he has a disability doesn't mean he has to
always agree with us, supporting every bill that comes down the political
pike to improve the quality of life for New Yorkers with disabilities.
Shouldn't we still support him? He's both black and blind, after all. 

The proverbial "last straw" in struggling to hang on as a cheerleader for
this New York governor came when I started seeing references in the press
linking his failures to his blindness. One New York state senator, Diane
Savino, was widely quoted as saying, in effect, that hey, even though the
guy is brilliant, he's blind, after all, and being blind means he can't use
the same digital tools -- such as e-mail or a Blackberry -- as his peers. 

Wait a New York minute! And let me do some deep breathing so as not to do
anything undignified like spew bad words in my own e-mail or Smartphone
messages! 

One headline read: "It's not his race, it's his blindness." Let me set the
record straight: "It" -- his failure to lead -- is not because of his race
or his blindness. It's the man himself. But blindness is something I know
well and know more than a little bit about with regard to tools and
techniques, so let me tell you now what I was suppressing all along. 

His avoidance - since childhood - of tools related to blindness, don't make
him superior to other blind people, but rather inferior. He can't read print
but refused to learn Braille. That's denial to the point of masochism. In
other words, he's illiterate by choice! Why, I wonder, if he's so
"brilliant" did it take him 12 years to get two advanced degrees, when lots
of "ordinary" blind people have obtained those same two degrees in six? And
even though the second of those two degrees is a law degree, he never went
into practice as a lawyer because he couldn't pass the bar exam. Why was
that? Was it because he couldn't read Braille or use a computer? Now, in all
fairness, I don't know the answer to that question, but his explanation is
that he didn't receive adequate accommodations. But what would those
accommodations be, anyway, for a man who is blind but doesn't know how to
use any of the tools that similarly educated blind people avail themselves
of daily? 

You could say it's not his fault. When he was a child, New York City schools
couldn't promise that he wouldn't receive any special education, and his
parents moved to a suburb where he could go to public school "unhindered" by
special ed. Now, maybe that was a good thing. I wasn't there. But it sounds
to me like being perceived as sighted was more important to the family than
getting the best education possible. 

And so, here we have a 21st-century governor - the first legally blind
governor to serve in any state longer than 11 days - and he's using 1960s or
'70s tools to do his job. Staffers read materials onto tapes and into
voicemail for him. He has no means of prompting himself with notes, which
would be effortless had he taken the time to learn to read and write
Braille. 

Had he been governor in 1975, the tools he now uses would have been adequate
because sighted people at the time were using them at the same level of
sophistication. But those tools now are inadequate. 

Why doesn't Paterson use a computer with one of the popular screen-reading
programs, such as JAWS or Window-Eyes or System Access? If he did, 99
percent of all documents generated by other computers could then simply be
e-mailed to him. If he wanted to travel light, he could carry a netbook (a
small laptop computer) or a thumb drive, into which staffers could pop
anything he needed to read. With practice, he could do what blind
professionals all over the world do - crank their reading speed up to
several hundred words a minute and get through material as quickly as any
sighted politician. Add that to his amazing memory, and he could have been a
governor to make us proud. 

Why does he have staffers read newspapers to him? For free, he could sign up
for the National Federation of the Blind's NEWSLINE, a telephone service
that would enable him to read any of 220 newspapers around the country, from
any phone anywhere, at any speed he chose. He could zip through articles at
his own speed as quickly or even quicker than his sighted peers. 

Now, this "brilliant" guy is using tools that were state of the art when
Jimmy Carter was president, has an approval rating that has dropped at a
staggering rate, and against even the advice of President Obama, said he'll
run again in 2010. It's pitiable, really, but I'm not feeling sorry for him.
How can I when, along with his own failure, he's pulling the overall
acceptance of and employment opportunities for other blind people down with
him? 

I'm not saying I could do his job. I don't think I could. But I am saying
that lots of people who are blind could and do it brilliantly. He wanted so
much to hide his blindness that now, in his appalling unpopularity, it's the
one thing that outsiders are interpreting as his weakness. It hasn't been.
His weakness has been his own arrogance and denial of reality. It's a shame.
With proper training, he might have done a good job. 

But he isn't doing one, and I'm OK with having broken my promise to myself.
I know now that just because he has a disability doesn't mean I have to like
him. And if he's going to fall headlong into the basket, I don't want him to
kick the rest of us down to the bottom as well. 

Deborah Kendrick is a newspaper columnist, editor and poet. She is currently
working on a biography of Dr. Abraham Nemeth. 

 

  _____  

-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: clip_image002.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 5832 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nfbf-l_nfbnet.org/attachments/20100123/6687843e/attachment.jpg>


More information about the NFBF-L mailing list