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Karl Zimmerman's avatar

The thing I've never been able to grok is why the left has such a hard time coming up with a template for thinking about this...when disability rights are sitting right there?

I mean seriously. I know there are are a lot of wacky ends it can go down in terms of repeated invention of new terms to replace older ones deemed offensive. And of course some people (both within the community and outside of it) insist they have no disability whatsoever. But for the most part we have arrived at a consensus that people who are hearing impaired, vision impaired, mobility impaired, etc. do have genuine issues getting around society as it is constructed - issues to some extent immutable, and often there from birth (though sometimes from trauma or disease as well). The onus is on society to make accommodations to become more inclusive of their abilities - to work for everyone. In recent years this has even been extended to mental illness and addiction, with an understanding that it's not the fault of the individual suffering, asking someone to "snap out of it" is not a valid policy solution, and that the affected individual will never be "normal" (recovering alcoholics can't be expected to be causal drinkers, depression will never truly be cured, and so on).

So why can't we in this realm accept that difference exists, and yet insist this does not mean that it consigns some to an inferior life? I think part of it how deeply the poisonous ideology of meritocracy has wheedled its way into the American "left." I remember once making a statement that on average, a doctor is indeed smarter than a janitor, which then caused the individual I was talking with to jump to all sorts of conclusions (that I thought doctors should be paid more than janitors, that I thought doctors were superior people, etc.) Lots of people on the "left" believe they are so committed to the principle of tearing down hierarchies that they will reject out of hand any fact which they believe gives the ruling class a fig leaf of legitimacy. Whereas I see it similarly to you - that given it's totally beyond our control whether we end up smart or dull, it bears about as much moral sense to reward the smart (or punish the dull) as it does to force a paralyzed man to crawl up courtroom steps using their arms for want of a ramp.

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West Coast Philosopher's avatar

You asked whether Quiggan is crazy. I want to take this opportunity to share some stories about a colleague from my philosophy department.

This colleague told me once that the discipline of chemistry is intrinsically white supremacist because it was started by white males. That when we teach the problem of evil to our intro students, we should say that it works against Christian theism but not against Islam, because saying it worked against Christian theism would force Christians to interrogate their privilege, but saying it worked against Islamic theism would marginalize the Muslim students. This colleague also told me that s/he thinks that everyone actually agrees with her/him about politics, they just refuse to admit it. I had another colleague who stopped her/himself because s/he said "trailblazing" and "pioneering", which were "colonialist" words. I know yet another colleague who thinks the word "jungle" is racist, at least when you use it in phrases like "it's a jungle out there".

I bring this up because these colleagues, who say these things, are very smart and successful, in many cases smarter and more successful than I am. But I don't understand how they can believe these things without having lost their minds. I'm being half-literal here. I have lost my ability to simulate these people. I don't know what's going on in their minds anymore, and it's kind of frightening, because I don't feel confident I can predict their behavior anymore.

Am I overreacting? Or is this just how people feel about me when I say that I think Jesus of Nazareth literally died and literally came back to life?

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