Is it time to eat the rich yet?

I have a theory that the only people this will be read by are other disabled people, because we have been so isolated. If you’re an abled person and reading this, can you identify yourself in the comments? Doesn’t have to have your name, or anything, just a +1 or something. I just suspect that I’m preaching to the choir. All other comments are also, of course, welcome. First posts may take a minute to get through moderation though, since I don’t know how to change that setting.

 

Content: Eugenics, financial coercion, tories, politics, homelessness, medical coercion, swearing, food insecurity… The whole lot.

 

I have tried so fucking hard to keep the politics off this blog lately. Partly because I know that other people can say it better than I can and partly because it is so fucking depressing that even writing about it on my own terms makes me think life is not worth living.

Today is the budget. George Osborne declaring how he will make this country fit for “the Next Generation” and from what he’s doing it’s pretty obvious that our Next Generation will not include the disabled.

At first I’d thought it was all an accident, that it just so happened that all the cuts and all sanctions and the worst of the punishment disproportionately affected disabled people. It was very easy for me to imagine that, in the minds of the Tories, disabled people were just acceptable collateral damage in their war against the poor. But with the power of hindsight it’s obvious that the plan all along was eugenic.

 

We start off with the changes to disability living allowance. Suddenly for a disabled person to get an amount of money they could live on the have to be found not just “not fit for work” but they have to promise not to try to find work, or even to try self-employment above a ridiculously low threshold. Meaning that once a disabled person has been declared “not fit for work” it becomes very difficult for them to even try to return to the workforce – would you risk taking self-employment which could ruin your health if you knew that in taking that risk you would have the money taken away which you had been trying to live on, and that if your business failed it would be months or years before that money was restored to you if it was restored at all?

In addition to this, there is a savings cap of £6000. This sounds like a lot of money, but it won’t get you a deposit on a house, it won’t buy you a vehicle (especially not a wheelchair accessible vehicle or a vehicle with adapted controls), it won’t even buy many of the more expensive mobility aids such as tilting beds or maximally-supported powered wheelchairs.

So, in one fell swoop, disabled people are locked out of the workforce and their mobility outside the home is reduced.

At the same time, there have been massive cuts to social care budgets.Never mind the loss of the Independent Living Fund, there are now no councils in England (at least) which provide their own social care provision – the instead rely on private agencies. This in turn means that provision of carers, personal assistants, and other human-based help to disabled people has become more expensive and less available.

That, again, has reduced the mobility of disabled people outside the home. Many of us would describe ourselves not as “living” but as “subsisting”, “surviving”, or even “being kept in storage”.

The sum total of this to begin with has been to reduce the visibility of disabled people in the abled world. Less people now will have a disabled co-worker, less people will know a disabled person down the pub, and less people would describe themselves as having disabled friends. As such, to most abled people, the thought of the systematic persecution of disabled people does not bring to mind the face – a friend – who will be hurt, or even killed, by these policies. It’s tragic, but it’s tragic in the same way that the destruction of the rainforest or a melting ice flow or the extinction of a rare rhinoceros is. It’s a sad, but ultimately natural, result of an unavoidable natural process. Darwin himself tells us that the strong survive and the weak perish.

Also involved in the changes to disability funding has been a particularly cruel piece of legislation which stops disabled people from forming families. Much like housing benefit (landlord greed subsidy) does not allow the poor under-35 to live in anything more than a room in a shared house, if a disabled person lives with someone who is waged (Above a certain, low, point) they become ineligible for ESA. Effectively this means that if an out-of-work disabled person enters into a relationship with either an abled person or a disabled person who is able to work, their partner must financially support them in every way. Food, rent, bills. PIP is, after all, only supposed to cover the “extra costs of disability”.

Unless you are extremely well paid it is basically impossible to support a second adult on one person’s wage whilst maintaining any quality of life.

Thus many disabled adults are forced to either live in shared accommodation or live with their parents, even when it is detrimental to their health.

(Another cruel side-effect of this policy, since the DWP require a long “cooling off” period after a relationship has ended before awarding a disabled person the full allowance which would be granted to them as a single person. This can trap disabled people who live with their partners into staying in sub-optimal or actively abusive relationships long after they would otherwise have ended.)

 

So, disabled people are now;

  1. Living alone, or living with their parents
  2. Not socialising with abled people
  3. Unable to save money to have any kind of personal safety net, thus more totally reliant on the state

 

And then the media campaign began in earnest. 2010’s “when you leave the house at 8 AM, it’s natural to resent the man whose curtains are still closed” looks frankly tame and benign compared to more recent rhetoric.

Disabled people are “scroungers”. Disabled people are “a drain on the state”. Disabled people are “expecting something for nothing”.

Disabled people are getting “special treatment” and “your taxes are paying for it”.

Look at the comments under any article about NHS care or state support of disabled people, and you will see plenty of people who believe that disabled people shouldn’t have nice things, or shouldn’t own property, and should basically be granted the absolute minimum required to survive (something like the diet of porridge whilst living in a three deep shelving system) and that to ask for anything more is greedy.

It’s no coincidence that disability hate crimes are on the rise, and that most disabled people I know live in fear. The tabloid press colludes with the government to paint disabled people as suspicious, dishonest, and not-like-us, not “full members of society”. I’ve been spat on, kicked, had people attempt to take my dog away from me, been denied taxis and buses, been pushed to the back of queues, all the while the familiar litany drones from the crowd; “Cripple”, “Scrounger”, “Faker”, “Freak”, “Kill yourself”, “Spending my money”, “How dare you”, and the worst of them all “I’ll dob you in”.

 

The implications of “I’ll dob you in” are startling. For the blissfully unaware; the Department of Work and Pensions has a hotline which you can call to report disability benefit fraud. The only evidence required is to know a disabled person’s name, and to have seen them doing something suitably un-cripple like. This could be as simple as standing up, opening the door, smiling, going to a nightclub, riding a motorcycle, basically anything other than lying in bed. It doesn’t matter if the person has a fluctuating condition and exhausted themselves for a week in order to get a chance to sit by the canal for an afternoon. If you saw them enjoying the sunshine, and that annoyed you, you can tell the Department of Work and Pensions and their benefits will be immediately stopped pending a reconsideration.

As you can imagine this results in a lot of vexatious calls. Got a grievance with a disabled person? Instead of having an argument you could just get the government to starve them for six months. Much easier. And, best of all, calls to this hotline are anonymous meaning that you can keep making vexatious claims as often as you like with no chance of retribution.

 

Effectively, the government have enshrined the right for the people to armchair-diagnose the disabled, and hold this armchair diagnosis in higher regard than the collective opinions of the disabled person and their own doctors, and even higher than the opinions of their own assessment team.

To add to the count, disabled people are now;

  1. Living alone, or living with their parents
  2. Not socialising with abled people
  3. Unable to save money to have any kind of personal safety net, thus more totally reliant on the state
  4. Living in fear of casual hate crimes, encouraged by the press
  5. Living in fear of “not looking crippled enough” in case a stranger decides to report them

 

And then the cuts began.

First, the privatisation of removal of many NHS services which are largely used by disabled people. Ever tried to get a physio appointment with a long-term condition? How about looked at the length of surgical waiting lists? Never mind guidance on reducing the prescription of needed painkillers and other medications because they are “too expensive”.

 

People believe that. It’s easy to believe that disabled people are just “too expensive” to support – We have all these strange demands, and we make planning things more complicated, and, honestly, who knows any really disabled people anyway? And obviously the ones on painkillers are junkies, and the ones who use a wheelchair part-time are fakers, and anyone who uses a blue badge or a priority seat is taking a lend, so why should we support these horrible, unproductive, useless eaters anyway?

Now, it’s the cuts to ESA (Why should a cripple get more money than any other jobseeker?) and then finally, today, the planned cuts to PIP (Wherein any disabled person who uses an appliance instead of human help will no longer qualify).

 

The result is that many disabled people, possibly even most disabled people, will have no money at all unless they can find and keep work. Which, with some disabilities, will just be impossible – It’s hard to find an employer who will let you take infinite sick days for pain, or to sleep in the afternoons, or work variable shifts, when often you might have only minimal education due to a lack of university provisions for disabled students, and the prohibitive cost of university for most people anyway.

 

The real-world result of this is that disabled people will die. We are already dying. The government is reluctant to release figures about deaths after benefit sanctions, deaths after being found for work, and deaths whilst waiting for benefits to be awarded. That’s even before we look at figures for homelessness, housing vulnerability, morbidity associated with poor diet, poor mental health outcomes due to lack of physical security or social inclusion, and all the other likely outcomes of taking a population who are already very sick and discriminated against and taking away their money and their rights.

 

Recent conversations between myself and other disabled people have tended to all point towards a similar conclusion; that the next step will be something like a workhouse. Now that we are entitled to less monetary compensation, and without the support that has helped us to find work in the past, it might seem like an obvious solution to the problem. House the disabled people in a big Institute somewhere, give them simple work sewing underpants, and in return for that work they will get regulation clothing, and medications, and room in a bunkhouse. They won’t need money; everything they could possibly need will be provided. Asking for choice in what to eat, or the opportunity to socialise, or raise a family, or keep pets, or live where they want, or pursue a hobby or education or a career of their own choosing, will be parsed as greed. And the general populace will say “isn’t that nice? The government have made it so easy to care for those poor people. I remember before the workhouses, they all lived in poverty and alone and afraid.” And, of course, the government will make a tidy profit selling our labour to the kind of multinational corporations that they are so keen to protect and attract to our shores.

 

Considering everything else, this doesn’t feel far-fetched any more. The UN is investigating the UK for grieviously violating the human rights of disabled people. This isn’t just a few frightened people who think the sky is falling.

One of these outcomes could have been an unfortunate accident. Two or three of them, perhaps a thoughtless snowballing of circumstances, which would obviously be rectified as soon as it was noticed. But all of them? This is a campaign. This is eugenics. This is a naked attempt to isolate, scapegoat, weaken and eventually (judging by history) murder an entire sector of the population, whilst blaming them for the sins of the rich.

 

If I don’t survive this government, know at least that I saw it coming.

 

117 thoughts on “Is it time to eat the rich yet?

    • Two! Thank you.

      Current ratio then, assuming that all views are unique, is about 1:60.

      So, if all the disabled viewers were one average-sized person, the abled viewers would be a Dungeons and Dragons miniature.

  1. Hi, I am a very fit and healthy 69 year old female. I am so glad I am not young and disabled in this day and age. I trust that when I become physically /mentally incapable of looking after myself due to old age euthanasia will be around. I’ve had a life . You haven’t. Round up as many people as possible to vote next election so the workhouse doesn’t happen. Love Tricia X

    • Thank you (And hooray, we’re now at 1:48, making the abled views a 1:4 scale toy in a 1:12th scale doll’s house in the disabled person’s room!)

      Definitely rounding up as many people as I can (Remember to register for your postal votes, and vote in the EU referendum in June which is going to be impossibly important!) and yep – Use democracy whilst we still sort-of have it…

    • Thank you 😀

      And this brings us up to 15, making the theoretical abled person (If all the other viewers are disabled) proportionally the size of a 1:20th scale model – So would fit those little F1 car replicas that people have as executive desk toys.

  2. +1, seen on a twitter feed of a different non-disabled friend. Good luck, sounds like you need it with these appalling humans ruining our country.

  3. +1 – though I am one of those people you mention in a relationship with a disabled person, but they didn’t show me this

  4. +1 shared and sending you love. , I know a lot of people who this will affect, directly and indirectly. I do what I can to rage against all of it, working hard on the next generations for a pittance (I received a demand for £985 allegedly for over paid tax credits) I live hand to mouth. But I am able, and not dealing with what you are. I’m sorry, I wish you well x

    • Many thanks, and many good thoughts to you too. We really are “All in this together”, and not in the way that Cameron says it.

      Hope that you manage to pay back the “overpaid” credits – You just know that it’ll have cost them more to admin that than they’ll actually get. And why can’t they do the same to Amazon or Starbucks? “Sorry, it seems you’ve not paid enough tax for basically a decade, cough up you duplicitous shits.”

      Keep up the good fight!

  5. +1

    Thank you for articulating so well the way the government is attacking disabled people. It’s like watching people kick someone repeatedly and when they can’t stand up, complain that it’s because they’re not trying hard enough. It’s horrifying but I don’t know what can be done to stop it.

    • Thank you. Hopefully, as the situation unfolds, solutions will come to light. Grim as it is, the government started starving the poor, so the people made foodbanks – Maybe there’ll be some kind of similar initiative to help the disabled. Or maybe not, who knows?

  6. Urgh. I hadn’t realised how many different dimensions of badness had actually started to occur – most of the ones I know about, you hardly even touched on. I thought it was bad enough without these additional lovely flourishes of utter shit you have just pointed out.

    I’m holding out hope that this government pushes enough people far enough that Labour are voted in, and radical changes in the right direction start to happen. Of course, I am pessimistic that a Labour government would fix as many things as it should (I feel that governments have too much of a tendency to hold on to their predecessors’ nasty little decisions, because they make things easy for the government, and keeping something can be a lot less unpopular than imposing it: power, after all, is the most important thing), but I do feel that this particular leader stands more of a chance of fixing things than anyone we’ve seen since before I remember. Vive la revolution?

    I certainly hope that you do survive this government, although I appreciate that the process of doing so will be a gruelling one.

    I am more-or-less non-disabled, and pass as non-disabled but somewhat annoying, and possibly also lazy. I’ve been reading in an appreciative manner since early May last year, and would comment if only I had anything to say.

    • Hallo, and nice to meet you! Always happy to hear that there’s someone reading.

      Suddenly I’m worried about the things that I missed; And that’s probably the power of this bloody government, isn’t it? It’s like a tidal wave of vomit. I say “Look at all this sweetcorn!” you say “They keep splashing chopped carrots on me!” and a third person gets mysterious lumps – And none of us quite get the full picture of how much vomit there is in-total. So to someone who’s metaphorically standing a bit further up the beach, there’s no vomit at all, and all those people near the waterline are screaming for nothing.

      I too am worried that the next government will just keep the Tories’ current structures – I don’t think I can think of a single time that an incoming government has made a volte-face on anything that the previous one did; Occassionally they’ve modified it to be a bit different or better, but never just “We take it back, lets go back to the system we had before” (Other than possibly the recriminalisation of cannabis? Which, well, not a good thing anyway).

      Onwards and upwards!

      • Oh, you won’t have missed anything that I managed to notice in the field of how the government treats disabled, unemployed, and struggling people somewhat poorly. I’m sure you’ve noticed all of what I knew about, and omitted it for the sake of brevity; the bog-standard, grinding stuff, about all the frequently unnecessary (i.e. it was necessary the first time, in a different format from what it is now, but that’s been said and nothing has changed apart from the humanity of the overlords) form filling and where it gets you, etc..

        I remember that Labour made a positive change for some aspect of education this one time, although I couldn’t promise that it was an actual reversal of what the Tories had already done. I was impressed; it was the first time I had noticed a government making things better. I wish I could remember what the change was. It won’t have stuck.

        I want a government which is actually trying to be kind to its most vulnerable members. I don’t just want people to be left to languish and starve, maybe allowed a spare room if they have a really, really, really good reason; I want there to be enough houses that who cares if a disabled person has a spare bedroom or not. Indeed, why not? Maybe if the person has enough space, or can have a friend to stay sometimes (or a room to rent out, to take advantage of the new tax breaks the government has allowed for people who let out rooms in their houses, thus reducing the amount these hypothetical disabled lodger-havers need in benefits in some select cases), and access not only to all the things necessary to live, but also a few luxuries, some of them might get better and be able to go back to work (how is one supposed to recover from depression when pinned down by circumstances, for example), and others might just feel less like shit. I confess that I would not mind seeing a small amount of actual scrounging in order to allow those who need support to have it.

        People upset me sometimes. How are we, as a nation, managing to act as though this is OK? Why is there no revolution? Me? I have no time/probable executive function issues. I can’t do the washing up every week, apparently (I did it today! Hooray!), let alone write an important letter to a person, or go on a protest march, right now. I can sign an online petition. Wow. Big contribution. My apathy, and that of many like me, is just useless, really. It’s not the fault of apathetic people like me (I did vote, but it made no difference as we are totally a Beast of Bolsover area; but it was nice to be on the winning team, and not to have to spoil my ballot paper) that the government is headed by evil people (can’t comment on the rest, but mutter darkly instead) – they seem worse than everyone predicted. But still, we are silent.

        I should be silent. Enough rambling. Sorry! 🙂

  7. +1, seen shared on facebook; I’m abled, and in well-paid work, so broadly speaking I’m one of the people who “benefit” from this government’s policies. Except that the “benefit” is at best a pathetic uptick in take-home pay, accompanied by the systematic destruction of so much that I hold dear as a citizen of the UK.

    Even were the financial benefit accruing to me personally actually life-changing, I can’t imagine feeling anything towards this government but disgust, anger and hatred.

    This is, by a large margin, the worst government I’ve seen over my entire lifetime, and that includes Thatcher’s, who destroyed so much of our manufacturing industry, pretty much all of our mining industry, and scap-heaped a substantial part of a generation.

    These people, the present government, are, I think, evil. That’s not a word I trot out lightly. It goes substantially beyond greed and incompetence, though they have those qualities in spades; there is a casual, callous, inhuman disregard for life and livelihood, an active delight in causing destruction and misery.

    So I believe you’re right. The workhouses and ghettos are coming.

    History teaches us where this goes. This government are equally aware of history, of course, this is not a mistake, this is something they welcome, and presumably believe they have the ability to manage to their advantage. (You watch Osborne and it’s obvious he has absolutely no idea that he’s basically incompetent – totally lacking self-awareness, despite having the nearby example of the utter imbecile Duncan Smith, that textbook exemplar of the so-called Dunning-Krueger effect.)

    I predict that over the next few years, if the Tories are not stopped, we will see some or other major (or at least heavily publicized) false-flag event or uprising (or perhaps even a genuine one, it’s not like they’re exactly short of enemies by now) leading to “emergency” measures that will be ratcheted up and used ruthlessly to suppress any and all dissent, followed ultimately by some kind of disastrous war, entered into in a desperate attempt to avoid slumping into a North Korea-style state as the economy continues to “thrive” in the “safe hands” of the wreckers-in-chief.

    It is hard to express the depth of my contempt and loathing for this government. The amount that they have managed to wreck in so short a time is breathtaking.

    So yeah. +1.

    Eat the rich? No – at least not the Tory leadership, they are *definitely* not fit for human consumption.

    • Many thanks – And this is exactly the kind of sentiment I’m really glad to see. Confirmation that the people who will “profit” financially from this budget still think that it’s morally reprehensible. (To use a friend’s analogy; “I like liquorice, but I wouldn’t be happy if you punched a small child in the face, stole their sweets, and gave them to me.”)

      I’m just a bit too young to have suffered directly under Thatcher, but I grew up under her heel then under her shadow, and I remember the strikes and then the closures of the shipyards – Some of my first memories are waving to the workers on strike, and bringing them Chelsea buns from the bakery. And then, well, everyone suddenly being redundant, and the house being full of worried people in swarfy parkas and smelling of oil and tab ash all day, desperately passing around the jobs papers and typing up letters of application on the kitchen table. Couldn’t understand at the time how we were ruled by someone so hated and so obviously not doing the best for us – This was long before I knew that people existed that thought of shipyards and steelworks as basically quaint bits of history, rather than the heart of a community.

      And yet, yeah, I think this one is more evil. Actively evil, rather than economically ruthless or just morally crooked. It’s easy to say, and believe, from an ivory tower “Well, we’ll lose industrial jobs – Can’t the miners just go and work somewhere else?” if you don’t really understand how employment works. But nobody really believes “If we starve the disabled, maybe they’ll get less ill.”

      Argh. Thanks for commenting. And spot on there is not enough chili sauce in the world to make the Tories palatable.

  8. +1, and sharing to my “the Tories will look after the economy and keep us right” friend from uni…

    I have autism, but thankfully I am able to work full time as a programmer and my employers have been understanding. My father has worked as a council bin man and a cleaner, but I was good at school and I was able to go to college and then university. I was grateful for some extra support in the form of learning mentors and other provision, which may now not be available for people in similar circumstances.

    I’m lucky that I have skills that are in demand, but I would happily forego any tax cuts and savings schemes if it meant that I lived in a compassionate society where everyone is valued. My mother lived with heart disease for 19 years (I’m 28); she couldn’t work with her condition, yet even her sister occasionally doubted the severity of her mobility impairment. I have friends with mental health disabilities who are constantly pressured to looking for work just to get survival funds. I think the case for Basic Income is strong, although a socialist friend thinks that it would lead to further dismantling of the welfare state.

    Peace, and all the best. Sorry for the rambling, should be asleep!

    • No, thank you – Rambling is good, it shows that there’s more than one experience and perspective. I’m on your side on the idea of delivering a Basic Income – If we could guarantee that, set at a level equivalent to about ESA+PIP+HB for everyone, regardless of disability, the world would be a happier place, and there’d be less pressure on basically everyone.

      Much agreed that the current dismantling of support for disabled/mentally ill/autistic students is a crime; I’ve only got as far as I have since my second university turned out to have amazing flexible support for disabled students (In fact, I am typing this using a laptop and speech-to-text headset that they provided, on a lap desk that they gave me), and the cutting of the Disaled Students’ Allowance is going to wreck that for the generation that comes after us.

      All the best and thank you for a well thought-out reply!

  9. I am recognised disabled by doctors (I have a small brain tumour), but I’m lucky enough to have a sympathetic employer, and with the correct support I’m able to work full time – But I know there are hundreds of thousands that are not as lucky. What this government is doing to disabled people, is what the Victorians did with workhouses – you are absolutely correct; and it’s disgusting, and the outcome – deaths of the underprivileged – is disgusting and downright harmful. These are not the actions of a civilised society. Nobody asks to be born disabled, nobody chooses to be born disabled. It’s unsympathetic and it’s sickening. I wish somehow I could stop giving money to the greedy and corrupt MPs of this government and instead give it directly to the poor, to the suffering, to the disabled.

    • Thank you – You’re right; It’s an absolute crime that our taxes, which most of us would much rather were going to pay for doctors, or to help the disabled or poor or homeless, or even to make the railway and post office run properly, are instead basically going to subsidise the rich.

      If there was a conscience clause that could be ticked, to say “I don’t want my money going to give Starbucks a tax break”, I bet they’d find the guts to start making them pay full UK taxes sharpish.

  10. I’m not disabled, but I read it! I do have friends who are though, and some of what they are going through has become reason for pretty regularly ranting in our house! I hope the UN throw the book at them!

  11. +1

    I have fibromyalgia, but I’m one of the lucky ones. It settled down to a level that allows me to hold down a full time job (although I did make a deliberate change to leave a stressful job), most people who meet me don’t know I have it, and when I do get hit with a flare up, my employer’s sick absence policy doesn’t penalise me (although I did have to jump through distressing OHS hoops to get to that stage).

    It’s hard to look at what’s going on in the UK today and not feel fear for the future. The near future, not some far-distant dystopia. I saw how quickly things could fall apart when my Dad lost successive jobs in the Thatcher era, and how life became about survival and keeping a roof over the family’s heads. Your comment upthread about the house being full of suddenly-unemployed worried people is one I could have written myself.

    Thanks to our experiences in Thatcher’s days, OH and I are financially secure in a small way and cautious about spending money. Theoretically we’re better off as a result of this budget. But we know how quickly things can change, and how that’s when you need the social security safety net.

    • Thank you – Here’s hoping that (as a country) we’ve learned from the lst time around, and won’t end up in the same situation again.

  12. +1 abled reader. Shared on Facebook by another abled friend (although we both struggle with severe anxiety at times).

    My feelings echo a lot of the commenters upthread, lathenovice and trojjer especially. I also am very lucky to be comfortably employed as a programmer, but the ongoing decimation of the welfare state constantly reminds me that my situation doesn’t make me “safe”. I think all abled people should be just as terrified as the disabled in this day and age; life changing accidents and illnesses can happen to anyone.

    Like many others, I find it hard to articulate how disgusted I am by this government. It enormously frustrates me that my taxes help fund this dire excuse for a “fair” society. To make things worse I live in a safe Tory seat, and so, even though I never miss the opportunity to vote, I don’t even feel like my vote makes any difference.

    • Thank you – And my condolences to you living in a Tory area (We’re one of the most contested bits of the country, so if nothing else, I at least have the satisfaction of knowing that my vote matters, at least at the moment).

      Keep up the good work, and here’s hoping that the worst predictions are wrong.

    • And this brings us neatly to 16:1 disabled:abled views… Meaning that if all the disabled people were one person, the abled people would be in-scale to one of those small live-steam garden railways.

      But that means they’re getting bigger, in proportion; Awareness spreading outside of the disability bubble, and on to abled people’s social networks?

  13. +1 I’m currently fit and able but of course, that can change in the blink of an eye. The attitude that you have alluded to about the disabled being scroungers hasn’t changed much in decades but it has become more entrenched. I don’t understand why people who are disabled are not allowed to have the simplest of pleasures. It is often so exhausting going anywhere (what with arranging transport, arranging any kind of help, making sure that where you’re going is accessible, that the washrooms are truly accessible, that there is a way to get there and back without it interfering with any routines that you might have that need to be done in private and on an on) that begrudging that 30 mins sitting by the canal in the sun seems unconscionably cruel.

    I’m going to share this as I think that there are a lot of people that don’t realize that just because they are fit and healthy now doesn’t mean that they will always be fit and healthy and not labelled scroungers by the very people they call friends today.

  14. +1

    Whatever about eating them – I suspect they’d be bitter – I’d say it’s definitely time to erect some guillotines and blocks, sharpen some blades and axes and eye them meaningfully.

  15. +1 and shared. Ablebodied, well-paid and utterly disgusted with what is happening.

    I’m afraid for you all. I don’t know how to help other than by boosting the signal. I couldn’t believe it when the Tories were voted back in. My own echo chamber deceived me into thinking it couldn’t happen.

  16. +1 and shared, great writing. I’m also horrified and actually confused that so much of the population is going along with all this. The idea of society seems to have been so successfully stamped out in only one generation.

  17. +1

    I tend not to follow politics (it just annoys me), but it does seem to me that this government is screwing the majority in order to further their own interests, with those that can least afford it suffering the most which is despicable.

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