Temporary fixes are better than no fixes at all. People need to survive.
Example: The Palestinians would like to live wherever they choose in Palestine
and be equal citizens to the Israelis. But they'd take an actual unmilitarized,
pared down separate state if they had to.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Friday, July 07, 2017 5:13 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: how disabled americans are protesting
Some very courageous people. The demonstrations do make a difference, but only
a temporary fix. Real change will only come when the Ruling Class is forced to
care about the needs of others.
Carl Jarvis
On 7/7/17, joe harcz Comcast <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
How Disabled Americans Are Protesting Against the GOP’s Health Care
Plan
Americans with disabilities fear the proposed cuts to Medicaid will
force them into institutions, lead them to poverty, make them sick and worse.
By
Sarah Jaffe |
July 7, 2017
How Disabled Americans Are Protesting [...]
#
Police remove protesters from in front of the office of Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) inside the Russell Senate
Office Building in Washington,
DC on June 22, 2017. Members of a group with disabilities were
protesting the proposed GOP health care plan. (Photo by Mark
Wilson/Getty Images)
This Q&A is part of Sarah Jaffe’s series
Interviews for Resistance,
in which she speaks with organizers, troublemakers and thinkers who
are doing the hard work of fighting back against America’s corporate
and political powers.
Americans with disabilities have been protesting the Republicans’
health care proposals in Washington, DC, at GOP lawmakers offices
around the country and
even at Ivanka Trump’s home. One out of every five adults
has a disability,
according to a 2015 study published by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. In this Q&A, Sarah Jaffe speaks with Bruce Darling, an
organizer
with
ADAPT,
a national group that organizes disability activists, about why
Americans with disabilities are so outraged by the Republicans’ new
health care plan, including
its major cuts to Medicaid, and what they plan to do next.
Sarah Jaffe: ADAPT has done a couple of rather dramatic direct actions
around the new Republican health care proposal. You were part of
the protest last month
in Washington, DC, outside Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s office.
Can you tell us a little bit about it?
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(Photo
By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)
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BY Richard Eskow | June 26, 2017
Bruce Darling: A group of almost 60 of us made the trek to DC with the
intent of letting Congress know exactly how bad this bill is and that
disabled Americans
are not going to just accept it. We feel that, in part, they are
targeting Medicaid
and the services and supports we need because they think that we are
not politically active or weak and they can basically get away with
it. We wanted to
send a message that that was not the case. A group of folks went into
McConnell’s office. We could not all fit in and folks got out of their
wheelchairs.
Everyone got on the ground who could and we were basically dragged out
by the Capitol Police.
SJ: Those photos and videos really got a lot of response. People were
saying that the police dragging people out of their wheelchairs is an
impressive visual
demonstration of what this health care bill would do.
BD: Exactly. Disabled Americans will die, others will be forced into
institutions and that will increase this terrible feedback loop
because institutions
are more expensive. With capped funds it will drive more money to the
institutions, making less money available for health care and services
and supports
in the community. We wanted people to see it as the equivalent of
basically being dragged off; the way they saw it on the news, that is
actually what happens,
even now with the Medicaid program as it is. The Republican health
care plans will just make it far, far, far worse.
SJ: Medicaid is the main way that home health care is funded. That is
the main thing that allows people to stay at home and not be put in an
institution.
Medicaid is the thing that actually pays for and supports our lives
and our liberty in the community.
— Bruce Darling
BD: Right, and we wanted to highlight that using language that we
thought, or hoped, Republicans would understand. There isn’t an
asterisk on the Constitution
that says “except disabled Americans.” We should have a birthright of
life and liberty. Medicaid is the thing that actually pays for and
supports our lives
and our liberty in the community. So cutting that is actually cutting
the lives and liberty of disabled Americans. It is killing disabled Americans.
We
really wanted to drive that point home.
SJ: Can you talk a little bit more about the specific services that
Medicaid funds would decimate with this bill?
BD: The wheelchairs that people use to move around, the ventilators
and feeding tubes that people use for breathing and nutrition. The
assistance — whether
it is home health aides or personal care attendants — that those
people who come into our homes provide, such as helping us in and out
of bed and helping
us into the bathroom. They do our most personal care and allow us to live.
Then, on top of that, basically the medications and medical care that
we rely on. The Senate health care bill proposes cutting Medicaid by
three-quarters of a trillion dollars.
Those things will be cut at the state level, where they make these
decisions. We see now how people who go without assistance get
secondary conditions and
they either end up in an institution or, in some cases, die. We watch
that happen now and we just can’t sit back and let that happen to any
more of our
people.
SJ: Talk a little bit about the history of ADAPT and the history of
the independent living movement, the organizing and activism that made
this funding
and consideration happen in the first place.
BD: ADAPT actually began as — and I am old enough to have been
involved in that fight — the
fight for lifts on buses.
It is really interesting when you talk to young people now. They
think, “Wow. Lifts on buses. Duh. Of course they have lifts.” But back
in the 1980s, this
was a controversial topic. People argued about whether or not there
should be lifts on buses and whether disabled people should have
access to public transit.
This includes questions such as, “Do we need a special separate system
so that we weren’t mixed in with the general population?”
We found that people were being denied the basic things that they
needed to live their lives. They had to schedule their transportation
well in advance.
Some people were saying things like, “My aunt didn’t plan to die 14
days ahead of time. I need a way to get to her funeral.”
With that achieved, this part of the Americans with Disabilities Act,
which was tied to the historic
crawl up the steps
[of the US Capitol, demanding passage of the Americans with
Disabilities Act], ADAPT looked at what the next level issue was, and
it was community integration.
We have a lot of people who make money on the fact that we are locked
up in institutions.
— Bruce Darling
We have been fighting that fight now for around 27 years. You would
think, honestly, it seems like it should be a no-brainer. Should
disabled people be
allowed to live in the community? Well, yes, of course. But, we have a
lot of people who make money on the fact that we are locked up in
institutions and
those people make [political] contributions and it has been a real
tough road for us to get that issue through to people.
SJ: In addition to the action in DC, there was a sit-in in
Sen. Cory Gardner’s office
in Colorado. What are some other actions that ADAPT have been involved
in leading up to this health care bill?
BD: We were arrested in the
Capitol Rotunda,
back earlier in the process in March. This has been named “The Summer
of ADAPT,” because we have been arrested so many times and in so many
different places
that our heads are spinning from keeping track of all of the court
dates and the fines and the processing. Then, earlier in the year, we
did a national
action and highlighted these issues at
the White House,
where we were arrested as well. After they were processed out of the
White House a group of women who were arrested went to Ivanka Trump’s
house to carry
a message there.
We have taken our message about community integration everywhere we
can, to say, “These cuts to Medicaid will just reinforce the system
that forces us into
institutions and kills us.”
SJ: Was Ivanka home?
BD: Their son was and that was really actually kind of cool, because I
got a bunch of text messages from folks saying, “The son is waving at us!”
Everyone
was really excited and the response from everyone in the street was
very sweet. The energy of that group could only have been because a
group of women
got together and did this. They did a great job in terms of engaging
the child who was very excited to see them. But Ivanka was not willing
to talk to
them.
SJ: That is disappointing.
BD: It really is, because we think the issue that we are fighting is a
women’s issue, really, when you think about it. Women are the informal
caregivers
and they are the formal caregivers. By and large, they are the folks
who end up in nursing facilities. We are fighting for the rights of
women to live
free.
SJ: What actions do you have coming up?
BD: We are protesting everywhere. It is incredible to watch. We have
had protests from
Fairbanks, Alaska
to
Orlando, Florida
to
Portland, Maine
and right now, as we speak [Wednesday, July 5], there are a group of
people protesting at [Republican]
Sen. Jeff Flake’s office in Phoenix.
We are willing to put our bodies on the line, because our lives and
liberty are on the line.
— Bruce Darling
The message is: They are not leaving until they get a “no” vote, which
is what happened in Portland, Maine. One of the things people should
know is when
Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) said, or her staff said, “No is no,” when
they had a “no” vote, the protesters essentially celebrated their victory and
left.
Sen. Gardner, on the other hand, wouldn’t actually engage the disabled
protestors, so they ended up staying days in his office and then ended
up being
arrested. We are willing to put our bodies on the line, because our
lives and liberty are on the line.
SJ: Other than Collins, have any other senators engaged with you or
had any sort of useful dialogue with you?
BD: No. We have reached out and we have tried. Even the lack of
dialogue, however, has been useful. It has allowed us to highlight
this issue for people,
the fact that we are being arrested is raising the consciousness of
folks that this is an attack on Medicaid. It has been lost in the
rhetoric about [repealing]
Obamacare, which is in and of itself atrocious; but then, no one had
been talking about these attacks on Medicaid. Word has gotten out to
folks that this
is cutting the basic supports that disabled Americans, as well as
elderly Americans,
need to live. People are pretty appalled by that and even some
ardent Trump voters have said,
“That is not what I voted for.” We are hopeful about the protests.
SJ: How can people keep up with ADAPT and with you?
BD: Follow us on Twitter. We are
@NationalADAPT.
We have the website
www.adapt.org.
The hashtag that we are using is #adaptandresist. You can see
up-to-the-minute information from folks about protests happening all
over the country. This
is going to be a busy week for us, so it is a good time to follow. You
can follow me at @ADAPTerBruce.
Interviews for Resistance
is a project of Sarah Jaffe, with assistance from Laura Feuillebois
and support from the Nation Institute. It is also available as a
podcast
Source:
http://billmoyers.com/story/disabled-americans-protesting-gops-health-
care-plan/