If you love #5SmartReads, would you be open to sharing them? You’ll get perks if you do! Set up your unique share link below and share #5SmartReads with anyone you think would enjoy them! Huge thanks to Hitha for letting me take over the editor’s note again this year as we observe Disability Pride Month in the U.S. to commemorate the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990. I must admit, I’m full of mixed emotions when it comes to disability pride this year. On the one hand, I feel incredibly blessed to host Down to the Struts, the podcast about disability, design, and intersectionality, as it has given me the chance to interview incredible people like Conchita Hernandez Legorreta (support her amazing organization, Metas International, which offers blindness education to Latinx children and their families), Justice Shorter, Lydia X. Z. Brown (If you live in MD, check out Lydia’s campaign for the House of Delegates), Rebekah Taussig, Judy Heumann, and many others who have taught me what it means to live the principles of disability justice and fight for disability rights. Through the podcast, I’ve gotten to be in community with amazing leaders like Azza Altiraifi, Sandy Ho, and Prianka Nair to talk about issues I care about like dismantling our ableist immigration system. And now, I get to share these experiences and conversations through my newsletter, Getting Down To It. At the same time, I am deeply troubled by what it now means to be disabled in America. It means you are less likely to have access to employment. It means that public officials openly admit that you are expendable, and that you have no guarantee of bodily autonomy. It means that police are far more likely to commit violence against you, and that our immigration system was designed to prevent you from standing firm on U.S. soil. But the truth is, we, disabled people, are the largest minority that anyone can become a part of at any time. According to the CDC, an estimated 61 million American adults have disabilities—a quarter of the population. By 2040, the number of Americans over the age of 65 is projected to double, quadrupling the number of people who will have daily care needs. And this does not even account for all those who will experience disabilities as COVID long-haulers. The truth is, we all live in bodies, and our access needs will evolve over time. So why not design a world that is built for all of us and invest in a care economy that protects the dignity and humanity of care workers and care recipients alike? This disability pride month, I offer you these resources to immerse yourselves in disability culture to learn about the beauty and magic that is possible when we center access and inclusivity of all bodies:
And now, I leave you, in love and deep gratitude, with these words from queer feminist, activist, and beacon of the disability justice movement, Audre Lord: “It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences.” What Qudsiya Read This Week
What Everyone Else Read This Week Hitha
Top #5SmartReads Of The Week
The rest of the week’s reads + last week’s (and conversations!) are below: Monday July 11, 2022 Your Questions on Disabilities in America, Answered What advocacy work can we do as we call our reps to be more intersectional in those calls? What are 1-3 things each of us could do to make our homes/ businesses/ communities more accessible to people with physical/mental/invisible disabilities?
Does a child diagnosed with autism qualify for SSI so I as a parent can be compensated for missed work? How best to be an ally, especially for those with less/not visible disabilities? How does disability insurance work? If anyone can become disabled should we invest in it? Thanks again to Hitha for creating this shared space, and for bringing conversations about disability into it. And huge thanks to each and every one of you for bringing your attention and awareness to my reflections on disability pride. I hope you consider subscribing to Down to the Struts; joining us on Facebook (here’s a Facebook live conversation I had this week with Sara Minkara, the Special Advisor for International Disability Rights and the U.S. State Department.); following us on Twitter and Instagram; and subscribing to the Getting Down To It newsletter. If you find our content meaningful, you can also by us a coffee, and of course, share with your friends and loved ones. I also want to give a massive shout-out to my phenomenal audio producer, Ilana Nevins, and my social media manager, Avery Anapol. Without these two exceptional and talented people, this work would not be possible. Be well, and always remember to honor your body and all those around you, in every shape, size, form, and ability. When we do this, we are better able to live in community, kindness, and joy with one another in a world that is accessible and inclusive for all. In solidarity, You’re a weekly subscriber to #5SmartReads. To get the daily newsletter, enter your email here. |
issue #143 - the one on Disability Pride Month
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