Two blog posts were brought to my attention yesterday that really merit a post each, but I don't currently have the
capacity to do that, so they will have to share a space.
Firstly, an
open letter to Brendan Barber, the General Secretary of the
TUC, from
Disabled People Against Cuts.
This letter is appealing to the TUC to work with them to make the
March for the Alternative on the 26th March, more accessible to disabled people. They point out that
At the latest count it was found that disabled people were facing fourteen separate attacks against our lives and living standards as a result of the Coalition government’s policies. What we are witnessing is our human rights, supposedly guaranteed under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Disabled People, being violated by regressive and draconian cuts to benefit and care funding.
and ask that disabled people are as
" fully included in this march and rally as our non-disabled peers would take for granted".
Disabled People Against Cuts have clearly explained the numerous barriers to disabled people's participation in this event, and have as yet failed to get a response from the TUC about their suggestions of ways to improve access.
Given how horrifically the cuts ahead are going to affect disabled people's lives, it seems that we should be at the forefront of planning such protests, not ignored and sidelined.
The second is a post from My Political Ramblings about
Welfare Claimants and the Discourse of Threat, and articulates really well the process of scapegoating, rhetoric and stigmatisation involved in making the cuts to disability benefits acceptable to the public. This is a really insightful and useful post, and is well worth reading.
**Edited to add, as I posted this, Lisa posted simultaneously that
the TUC have now released access information. Please check her post for the most up to date information.**
(Cross posted at
Where's the Benefit?).