Listen to Steve on "The Exchange" with Ben Kieffer on Iowa Public Radio

View the Iowa Public Radio "WSUI" Program Schedule and you’ll find this listing for tomorrow:

               

               

                  

                  

February
                    2008

                   
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                      Fri 02/22/08
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An interview with University of Iowa Professor Steve Kuusisto. He’s an author, educator and advocate for people with disabilities. Blind since birth he says sometimes even those working to help people with disabilities consign the disabled person to a second-class, defective status. That thinking is something Kuusisto is working to change.

Why We Can’t Say Certain Words Anymore. Like "civil rights".

William Peace has written a compelling post about “wheelchair dumping” over at Counterpunch.

He wonders why Americans don’t see abuses against people with
disabilities or crimes against the poor or the elderly as civil rights
issues.

The answer is essentially economic: Ronald Reagan taught Americans
that anything having to do with “minorities” costs money. If a thing
costs money, why by God it must be coming out of the pockets of the
middle class.

(The analogy with Fascist Germany’s public insistence that people
with disabilities were “useless eaters” who cost the ordinary German
pocket money isn’t terribly far fetched.)

In turn, after three decades of this commonplace Reganite
sensibility, Americans can no longer afford to use the term “civil
rights” because the very utterance is a disavowal of the comfortable
assumption that social equity costs too much and will rob the suburbs.

This is why Americans only use the term “civil rights” in a
historical context. We only required civil rights in the “old days”
before the GOP fixed everything.

That’s my “take” but have a look at William Peace’s excellent essay.

S.K.

fyi: featuring Steve and guide dog Nira

The University of Iowa has a great news magazine for faculty and staff called "fyi" and this month features Steve and "Nira" in an article and "picture show"!  This is very nicely done if you ask me.

~ Connie

Read article: Blind professor helps others see another side to disability
Photo feature: Steve and Nira’s first day of class
Audio slide show: Professor, Nira get acquainted with UI campus, each other

More Proof: Disability Doesn't Exist!

We received the following online news story this morning and want to share it.

S.K.

NEW YORK CITY

Theatre Breaks Barriers for Disabled Actors
February 14, 2008 By Lauren Horwitch

Director Ike Schambelan had a problem. The founder of Theater by the Blind in Manhattan wanted to cast company regular Ann Marie Morelli as Tatiana and Hermia in his production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream last year.

However, Morelli’s multiple sclerosis kept her in a wheelchair.

Even after 29 years of working with blind actors, Schambelan hesitated. He wondered how he would direct her. Would the audience accept her in the roles? How would she get on stage?

Continue reading “More Proof: Disability Doesn't Exist!”

More of Everything

The news about the tragic shootings at Northern Illinois University the other day will, I’m afraid, have the effect of reigniting the call for permitting students and professors to carry guns on campus.

Americans are the people of excess in all areas of life. Faced with the horrific occasion of terrible violence we call for more of the ingredients that make violence possible.

I am not a social psychologist and I never took a Sociology course in college. Yet I know that the abstract process of emulation depends in no small measure on the absence of revulsion.

The call for more gun toting people at our nation’s colleges is of course a product of fear.

But it’s also a proposition that’s made possible only if one accepts violence as a signature circumstance.

I am repulsed by the industry and machinery of violence.

I don’t accept the proposition that carrying a gun makes a man or woman safer.

I’m not alone by virtue of having this view. I hold no moral compass.

I think that more guns in more stray hands is no solution to our nation’s evident epidemic of mental illness.   

Still it’s the abstract admission of violence as a necessary component of civil life that most troubles me.

More! Let’s have more!

Or to paraphrase Orwell: “perpetual violence for permanent peaceful co-existence.”

S.K.

Our heart goes out to the family and friends of those whose lives were lost by this terrible act of violence.

How to Fend Off Despair

The world has so many problems that some days merely getting out of bed is one of the labors of Hercules. I personally take an hour to put on my fawn skin these days.

My old black Labrador "Roscoe" who is 14 has the right idea. He moves ever so slowly out into the yard and then he eats snow.

I remember as a child in New Hampshire the glory of eating snow.

Okay. I don’t eat snow anymore. For one thing: I can’t identify the yellow patches.

For another thing: it’s unseemly for a grown man to get down on his knees and put his head in a snowdrift.

"Look Mommy! The blind man who lives next door has lost his head!"

Mommy: "It’s not polite to stare Honey."

Yes, and it’s no fun eating snow when you’re wearing a fawn skin.

But Roscoe has the right idea.

Take advantage of the small blessings.

I once had a friend who was an esteemed history professor. He actually looked like an eminent professor–gray hair, glasses, a little slumped from a life at the desk.

Anyway, one night we were both rooming together in a New York City hotel because our flight was canceled, etcetera. And while I was brushing my teeth, Frank went out into the corridor without explanation.

When he came back he had sandwiches, grapes and a bowl of fruit salad.

Frank had taken these items from the room service trays outside various rooms.

"It’s all still good," he said. "People give away all kinds of good things in America."

I told Frank that he was really a poet.

I miss Frank. He’s been gone now for about ten years. Students at the college where he taught will find his vast collection of books in the library. They will see some of his margin notes written in pencil. They will profit handsomely from being in the presence of a mind that wrestled ardently with Aristotle.

But they won’t know Frank was a poet.

And I suspect Frank would have eaten snow if it looked clean enough.

S.K.

Meme the Time Away

ohdave.  Sigh. 

*It seems your friends westender, laffy and kirsten don’t have much patience with you.  ohdave, I’m sorry.  Perhaps they think they have more important things to do than respond to the meme you forwarded.  Perhaps they don’t but they just wanted us all to think they do, so they moaned and complained and pretended to resent the whole exercise.  Why? 

**Well dave, I have nothing more important to do. (One could assume you don’t either, or at least you didn’t, since you responded to the meme yourself.) In fact, I’ve been just sitting here wondering what to do with myself, as I so often do.  Then I remembered that you had recently tagged me and I had yet to respond.  Flushed with excitement and a sense of honor (ohdave tagged ME!), I reached for the nearest book….

(*you guys know I’m just kidding, right?)
(**you guys do know I’m just kidding, right?)

Continue reading “Meme the Time Away”

Easter Bunny and St. Valentine “One and the Same” Say Experts

(Associative Press)
By Dudley Dortmund
London, England

Doctors at the Royal London Hospital have discovered papers proving that two of the most beloved figures in western culture are the sameperson. The findings which were announced at a hastily called press conference are likely to cause controversy in the packaged candy industry.

Appearing before the hospital’s famous display of human oddities, Dr. Percival Strunk told reporters that archivists at the venerable British hospital were looking for some newspapers to stop a plumbing leak when they uncovered some lost journal entries by Sir Frederic Treves, the legendary Victorian physician who first brought Joseph Merrick, the so-called “Elephant Man” to public attention.

Dr. Strunk said that Sir Frederic Treves, who was one of the most respected surgeons in Victorian London discovered that St. Valentine and the Easter Bunny were not only “one and the same” but they were also the model for Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”.

“Dr. Treves was called to the queen’s palace in August of 1886 and ordered by a wildly intoxicated Benjamin Disraeli to operate on an enormous comatose rabbit.” said Dr. Strunk.

“While removing the rabbit’s gall bladder, Dr. Treves discovered that it wasn’t a rabbit at all, but an unfortunate furry man with an exceptionally strange backside.”

“After the surgery and the ether,” said Dr. Strunk, “Treves found that the bunny was essentially quite hostile.”

Dr. Treves journal describes the sub-rosa world of the bunny-man as a royall scandal of sorts. “The Queen loves this vicious creature,” wrote Treves. “She adores it when he shoots arrows at stray cats, for this apparently reminds her of her beloved deceased husband, Prince Albert, who enjoyed performing peculiar acts of garden cruelty with candy and arrows.”Cupid

Unlike Joseph Merricks, “The Elephant Man” this creature had no social refinements of any kind.

“It was quite nasty,” wrote Treves, “For it saw no distinction between good and evil. I witnessed it as it shot chocolate dipped arrows at some sleeping old persons.”

Dr. Strunk, who is a podiatrist, said the findings are likely to bring about a renewed interest in the infamous and unsolved crimes of "Jack the Ripper.”

Your Opinion? Disability & Media Consumption Survey

Originally posted on Blog [with]tv

My name is Anna Pakman and I am a first year MBA student at Columbia Business School. I am
conducting a survey as primary research for my paper on Media Consumption &
People with Disabilities for my Consumer Behavior class. I would appreciate it
if you could take a few minutes of your time to answer some questions about
your consumption of television, film, Internet, and radio programming. As you
probably know, the Nielsen ratings track media consumption for just about every
population EXCEPT our community so the only way I can get this data is through
your assistance. All individual survey responses are anonymous and will be kept
strictly confidential.

You’ll find access to the survey on Blog [with]tv


The deadline for filling this out is March 31, 2008. Please feel free to
forward this on to any and all individuals and organizations that may have an
interest in completing the survey or getting their constituents to do so.

Should you have any further questions please feel free to contact me at apakman09@gsb.columbia.edu.
If the survey presents any problems for those using screen reading software
please let me know and I can figure out another way to get it to you.
Unfortunately, I need to use Qualtrics as it is the only surveying
software provided by Columbia University and I have no control as to how
accessible/unaccessible it is. If you have a lot of trouble, please record your
problems and e-mail them to me so I can forward it on to our IT people who can
then relay this feedback to the vendor. 

Thanks in advance for your time.

Regards,

Anna Pakman
MBA Class of 2009