Page 4 - Mobility Management, June 2019
P. 4

editor’s note
Roll Models
June is a season of graduations, so it’s also time for the mainstream media to gush over a wheelchair user who walks across the stage, often with the help of an exoskeleton, walker or other device. Past news headlines, complete with videos, have said, Man Confined to Wheelchair
Walks at Graduation (CNN) and Teen in Wheelchair Stuns School by Walking at Graduation (Daily Mail). Much social media cele- bration ensues.
Hey, school is hard, and grad- uation is grand. So if graduates want to cartwheel across the stage, I think they should go for it. And if wheelchair users want to walk to get their diplomas, terrific. I’m happy for you.
Still, there is subtle ableism in every standing ovation that happens just because a wheelchair user didn’t have to use a wheelchair to get across the stage. Shouldn’t we really be applauding, you know, the earning of the diploma? Isn’t that the real accomplishment?
Earlier this year, Chuck Aoki, a two-time American Paralympian in wheel- chair rugby who’s working on a Ph.D. in international relations, reTweeted
a video of a wheelchair-using groom who literally Velcro’d himself to a groomsman on either side. The three stood up, the groom’s arms around his groomsmen’s shoulders, and the bride danced with her husband.
A Twitter user said, “It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen” and attached the weeping-face emoji. Aoki (@Aoki5Chuck) said in his reTweet, “Why is standing seen as so critical to one’s identity? The gesture by his friends is nice, certainly, but the reaction to this is just another example of how ableist our society is.”
In other words, it’s nice when people who use wheelchairs can go to school, graduate, make friends, get married and start families, but what we really need to see is them standing up and walking. That’s what we’re truly applauding.
Why? Is it because deep down, despite all the politically correct talk about inclusion these days, people who don’t use wheelchairs are scared silly of people who do? Are they scared of the technology, or scared that people who use wheelchairs are somehow inherently different? Is that why people without disabilities are so often bizarre around people with disabilities?
(Type #abledsareweird into an Internet browser, and let your head-shaking commence.)
Until we as a society get to the point that we equally applaud graduates who walk, roll, and cartwheel while getting their diplomas, we are still being exclu- sionary and pointing out some people’s imagined otherness. Which means we need to go back to school, because we have more learning to do. m
Laurie Watanabe, Editor lwatanabe@1105media.com @CRTeditor
mobilitymgmt.com Volume 18, No. 6
June 2019
Laurie Watanabe
(949) 265-1573
Elisha Bury
Laurie Layman Charles Johnson
Marlin Mowatt Karen Cavallo
(760) 610-0800
Caroline Stover
(323) 605-4398
INFRASTRUCTURE SOLUTIONS GROUP
Editor Contributing Editor
Art Director Production Coordinator
Director of Online Product Development
Group Publisher Integrated Media Consultant
President & Group Publisher Group Publisher Group Circulation Director Group Marketing Director Group Social Media Editor
Kevin O’Grady Karen Cavallo Irene Fincher Susan May Sydny Shepard
Chief Executive Officer Chief Financial Officer Chief Technology Officer
Executive Vice President
REACHING THE STAFF
Rajeev Kapur Sanjay Tanwani Erik A. Lindgren
Michael J. Valenti
Staff may be reached via e-mail, telephone, fax, or mail. A list of editors and contact information is also available online at mobilitymgmt.com.
E-mail: To e-mail any member of the staff, please use the following form: FirstinitialLastname@1105media.com
Dallas Office (weekdays 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. CT) Telephone 972-687-6700; Fax 866-779-9095 14901 Quorum Drive, Suite 425, Dallas, TX 75254
Corporate Office (weekdays, 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. PT) Telephone 818-814-5200; Fax 818-734-1522
6300 Canoga Ave., Suite 1150, Woodland Hills, CA 91367
4 JUNE 2019 | MOBILITY MANAGEMENT
MobilityMgmt.com
MORTAR BOARD: ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/ADAMKAZ


































































































   2   3   4   5   6