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Follow on Google News | End the Use of 'H' Word, Rocky Mountain ADA Center Partners with Disability AdvocatesEmpowerment Campaign to Educate Americans on Negative Impact of Term: Handicapped
By: Rocky Mountain ADA 2015 marked the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) which protects the rights of close to 60 million Americans with disabilities, the nation’s largest minority group. This anniversary helped the ADA gain momentum by providing a window to promote the law’s advancements, and the support it has provided for the millions of our neighbors with disabilities. With this milestone in place, the Rocky Mountain ADA Center and its partners believe it is time to begin a new discussion with the nation about alternatives to a word that is long overdue for replacement. That word is HANDICAPPED. “I should not be defined by my disability,” To be fair, the ‘H’ word began with good intentions, or at least intentions that were not mean-spirited. Changes in language are mostly subtle, but even in the absence of dark motives there can be unintended consequences and words can hurt. As time has gone on, the ‘H’ word, and the phrases that accompany it, became code for second-class citizenship. No one planned it; It was not someone’s agenda. However, now there is a real opportunity to redefine a culture and change the way we as people go forward, TOGETHER. Perhaps the ‘H’ word began as simple semantics but now it carries very real ramifications. Someone with the ‘H’ word tends to be ‘one of them,’ not ‘one of us.’ “Today marks phase one of three in the no ‘H’ word initiative. Over the next year, we will launch additional content, new avenues for everyone to share their stories, and a social media campaign. Hopefully, in a year or more we will gain attention and recruit thought leaders and influencers to join the campaign.” said Rachael Stafford, Project Director for The Rocky Mountain ADA Center. “The campaign’s initial goal is to respond to the use of the ‘H’ word, with respect and empowerment, in social media posts and news articles. We’ll also be offering a large team of advocates to interview on the topic.” Citizens of average intelligence are never referred to as handicapped merely because they do not make the same grades as rocket scientists. The next time you hear someone use the ‘H’ word, remember It is OK but not desirable. People using the ‘H’ word are not trying to be disrespectful. Instead, most people are drawing upon a cultural norm, a by-product of a generation less aware. People who live with disabilities do not define themselves by their disabilities; “I am joining this cause because I want everyone in the country to be seen for their abilities (http://www.nbcbayarea.com/ Once we understand that there are so many people with disabilities, and that anyone could become an individual with a disability in a second – via car crash for example – it may be easier to grasp the notion that a group of almost 60 million citizens are not ‘them’. They’re ‘us’. Who knows… when the nation celebrates the ADA’s next milestone, perhaps one particular word will not be part of the discussion… The Rocky Mountain ADA Center is a member of the National Network of ADA Centers (http://www.adata.org/) End
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