American comedian breaches BBC TV show code with ‘retarded’ comment

The BBC considers the “r” Word offensive enough to fine an American comedian for the use of it on their cable network.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/bbc-show-breached-code-over-retarded-comment-1057590.html

http://welcometoillinois.wordpress.com/2008/12/09/bbc-breached-code-over-use-of-the-r-word/

Here is the comedian’s comment:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8hlj_UFi-g

Here is the comedian’s MySpace page if you would like to leave HIM a comment;
http://www.myspace.com/dougstanhope

Commentary: The word ‘retarded’ is hurtful and needs to be cut from our vocabulary

Commentary: The word ‘retarded’ is hurtful and needs to be cut from our vocabulary

By Becky Pings / Teen Press Corps
http://www.fresnobee.com/lifestyle/teens/v-printerfriendly/story/1014430.html

‘Once upon a time … there was a retard.”You think that’s funny?

I don’t.

Neither do the millions of Americans who are joining the growing movement to eradicate the word “retarded” from the modern vocabulary.

Simply defined, “retarded” means “delayed.” While it was once a clinical term used to describe individuals with developmental disabilities, it is now an archaic term, a part of modern slang which equates to anything substandard or “stupid.”

The word in its modern sense dates back to the 1950s, an insult thrown on school campuses and in sandlots across the nation. It was never as widely used as it is today, however, where one can hardly walk down a street without hearing it or seeing its impact.

I would know.

My brother has autism and Down syndrome. He loves the simple things: baseball, swimming, books and music. And just like every other person, he has feelings. When he hears the word “retard,” even if it’s not meant as a direct insult, it’s not only a slap in the face to him, but to all disabled persons everywhere.

The fact remains that the word “retard” and all its derivatives is a hate word which, even in the most benign context, belittles and segregates the disabled. It promotes bigotry and intolerance in a society that claims “all men are created equal.”

The argument to this has been heard time and time again: “But you know I didn’t mean it like that. Stop being so sensitive.” It is not the intent of a word, but rather its effect and connotation, that has the greatest effect.

Ben Stiller’s blockbuster “Tropic Thunder” is a poignant example of the effects of the “R” word versus intention: Moviemakers claimed the liberal use of “retard” jokes was satire, while critics called the humor tasteless and offensive. Because the “satirical” humor didn’t stay in context, the word found new popularity, thereby perpetuating discrimination.

Innocent humor. Satire. Whatever you call it, the word “retarded” is a hate word and should be regarded as such.

Just ask my brother, the retard.

Doesn’t quite have the same ring that it did in the movie, does it?

Becky Pings attends Edison High School.

The “retarded” renaissance

The “retarded” renaissance

“Never go full retard” was the catchphrase of the summer. Activist groups aren’t laughing. Should you be?

By Lynn Harris
http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2008/09/18/lynn_harris/

Sep. 18, 2008 | When I was in fourth grade, someone you liked was a “good kid.” Someone you didn’t like was a “retard.” (Or, in the colorful patois of my native Boston, a “wicked retahd.” That, or this withering shorthand: “a wicked re.”) We did not use the term for the special-needs kids. They were “the special-needs kids.”

Basically, we used the word to describe any annoying person (or rule or homework assignment). There was also the timeless “loser,” of course, and the more ephemeral “dink” — “douche bag,” for its part, came later — but “retard,” and “retarded,” with all their variations, packed the most playground punch.

And today, pop culture and the Twitterati, tirelessly mining those formative years for irony pay dirt, have spurred — for descriptive better or for derogatory worse, depending on whom you ask — a “retard” renaissance.

You’ve probably read, heard or even said the word (and/or its “‘tard”-based spinoffs) if you watched this year’s MTV Video Music Awards; saw “Napoleon Dynamite,” “House Bunny” or the trailer for the new Michael Cera movie (“I love you so much it’s retarded”); listened to the Black Eyed Peas; heard Howard Stern on Gov. Sarah Palin and work-family balance (according to a listener, he said, “For the sake of that retarded baby, I’m not going to vote for her”); discussed John McCain’s plan for health insurance reform; or visited, like, any blog comments section ever.

Oh, or if you’ve read word one about the most recent Stiller-tacular, “Tropic Thunder,” whose vast coalition of detractors — including the Special Olympics, the National Down Syndrome Society and the American Association of People with Disabilities — are currently leading the “for worse” troops, protesting the use, and use and use of the word “retard” in the movie. The coalition has also objected to the portrayal of the “retard” in question, Simple Jack, played by Stiller’s Tugg Speedman in a film-within-a-film, which itself spawned the straight-to-novelty-tee catchphrase of the summer. “You went full retard, man,” Robert Downey Jr.’s character — in blackfaceadmonishes a deflated Speedman. “Never go full retard.”

The catchphrase factor is part of what has advocates up in arms. Yes, they say, wearily, we know the bit, in context, is satire. (And clearly it is: Not of Simple Jack, but of movies like “I Am Sam” — that is, of maudlin, “serious,” Oscar-bait film portrayals of the intellectually challenged.) But the thing about catchwords, coalition members note, is that they don’t stay in context.

“When kids see the movie and then use that word to tease someone — or call someone ‘Simple Jack’ — they’re not making fun of Hollywood,” says Alex Plank, founder of WrongPlanet.net, a prominent online forum for people with autism and other neurological differences, and a member organization of the “Tropic Thunder” protest coalition. Or, in the words of one blogger whose son has Down syndrome, “When we award tacit acceptance to a term such as ‘retard’ or ‘retarded’ in casual conversation — or worse, when millions of people watch a movie that also awards that tacit acceptance — it most certainly will gain even more acceptance,” she wrote last month. “My son will be going back to school in a couple of weeks. And all around him — I guarantee it — kids will be telling other kids not to go ‘full retard.’ And everyone will think it’s OK to say ‘retard,’ or that this or that is ‘retarded.’ And my son will walk through the halls, and more people will think of Nick as a ‘retard’ than did a few months ago. Nick deserves better than that.”

But do we need to ban the word entirely? Not necessarily, says Gail Williamson, mother of a working actor with Down syndrome and executive director of the Down Sydrome Association of Los Angeles (which also successfully hounded Fox to pull “Napoleon Dynamite” pens that said, “You guys are retarded”). “But we do have moral and societal guidelines that limit the use of other derogatory words. We’re just saying this word needs to be added to that list. It is hate speech.”

So it’s because of “Tropic Thunder” that the current “hate speech” vs. “irony!” controversy has exploded. But in the broader view of this particular culture war, Stiller & Co. were hardly the first to have dropped the R-bomb. Todd Solondz trivia experts may note that the working title of his 1995 outcast-fest “Welcome to the Dollhouse” reportedly was “Faggots and Retards.” And back in 2000, Tina Fey said she had to haggle for permission to use the word on “SNL” — in a Sully-and-Denise-from-Boston sketch, natch. The final word from NBC’s standards and practices division: Yes in late night, no in earlier promos. “The network is very skittish about the word — and rightfully so,” Fey told the New York Observer.

So what’s behind the R-word’s most recent surge — in visibility and, depending on where you look, acceptability? And, really, should it go away for good?

As for pinpointing the term’s reemergence, there’s certain linguistic detective work that just cannot be done. No one can say for sure which cheeky blogger first thought, for instance, “Hmm. ‘Idiot’? No. ‘Loser’? No, too soft. ‘Tool’? Close. But I need something more pungent, more staccato, even more deliberately juvenile. Oh, look, someone from fourth grade just found me on Facebook. Man, I always thought that kid was such a … [light bulb] RETARD.”

But it’s not hard to hypothesize about the term’s recent proliferation, or its unique descriptive appeal. It is at least a safe bet that — as feminist blogger Amanda Marcotte suggested to me in a separate analysis of the term “douche bag” — the full-on deployment of “retard” and (perhaps even more so) “retarded” was at least accelerated in the online snarkosphere, where so many jillions of people complaining about so many jillions of things are, at the end of the day, just going to need some more words. (Cf. “asshat,” “douchetard.”)

So, then, why “retard”? For one thing, “retard” and “retarded” have that retro, old-skool styling that is not only in vogue but also handy when that puerile, playgroundy connotation is precisely what’s needed. Retarded, its fans insist, steps in where, say, “lame” (also an offensive term, if you think about it) leaves off. “I always thought ‘retard,’ which means slows and pretty in music, was actually a kind of nice way to express the condition. So I’m sorry it got a bad rap,” says my friend Dixie, whom I called to find out if the teen TV network where she works would allow the R-word on air. (Answer: No way.) “It got a bad rap precisely because people used the term to mean lame. So now that we don’t use it for the developmentally disabled, can we please use it to mean lame, stupid, way stupid? None of these have the punch that retard does. Some things are more than lame. They are retarded. The true essence of a poor, poor decision isn’t conveyed well enough with lame. Or with gay, for that matter.”

Ah, yes. About “gay.” It’s also made quite a comeback, from the fourth grade, as an insult — but not against actual homosexuals. Even if you find that objectionable, there’s still a difference. Gays — unlike “retards” (See? You just can’t say that!) — have been using that term to describe themselves for decades. So the word itself, however you use it, just doesn’t have the same thudding impact. And unless I missed them somehow, I haven’t heard many murmurs about a radical political strategy to reclaim, à la “queer,” the R-word.

In fact, perhaps not surprisingly, things seem to be going in the opposite direction. Just last year, the American Association for Mental Retardation changed its name to the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, on the grounds that, while the term was still useful in certain legal and medical contexts, it had become dated at best, stigmatizing at worst. As one proponent of the name change argued, “It is in the process of dying its own death, of becoming an archaic term as others have before it.”

That observation, in a way, bolsters the boosters’ central defense: To the degree that “retard” is hate speech, well, we use it to speak of our hate for Paris Hilton. Or people who “go green” … by private jet. Or certain politicians. Or any display, really, of eye-rolling dumbassery. Not the special-needs kids.

In fact, at least one person very close to the issue says she has no trouble separating the epithet, in this way, from its original meaning. “My sister has Down syndrome and I am most definitely an advocate for her and any developmentally disabled people. That said, I am in no way offended when I hear the word ‘retarded,'” says Angelique Uhlmann, 40, a physician in Boston who was not offended by “Tropic Thunder.” “In my mind it’s just a word. I don’t recall people ever calling her that, even, but I do recall people staring at her, mouths agape. That I find much more offensive than a mere word. Looks can kill, as they say.”

Ari Ne’eman, an Asperger’s autistic who is founding president of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, isn’t buying this argument. “That’s like saying, ‘I’m not really talking about the Jewish people when I say someone’s trying to Jew me out of my money,'” he says. “It’s very disingenuous to say this is not about the rights of people with disabilities, because in many ways reality and actions follow terminology. And if we can’t reach a point where people with disabilities have the same basic rights to respect in public discourse that any other minority community really demands and is generally afforded, then we’re never going to be able to address what is very real and tangible discrimination against people with disabilities.” (Discrimination, he says, and even violence, noting that Sen. Joe Biden, Barack Obama’s pick for V.P., in 2007 introduced legislation that would, among other things, expand the federal definition of a hate crime to include disability.)

Ne’eman and others maintain that disability is one of the last “acceptable” targets of bigotry. He decries this double standard: “There are people who would never practice bigotry against people of a different skin color or religion but are bigoted in their language or actions against people with disabilities all the time.” I’d argue that no one’s thrown around “cripple” much since Alexander Haig, but point taken. Plenty of racism has swirled around the Obama campaign, for example, but at least in “distinguished” circles, it has had to come at least a little encoded. We can argue all day about whether a particular, and subtle, turn of phrase, or sleight of Photoshop, or glance was anti-Semitic, or gay-bashing or whatever. But people — whatever you may make of this — are going around saying “retard,” “retard,” “retard,” with not a whole lot of frowning in their wake.

Here’s how it plays out in my world. The other day an electrician, not a tall guy, arrived at our fourth floor walkup complaining, jokingly, about all the stairs. “It’s not easy for me and my midget legs,” he said with a grin. Was he actually making fun of my sister-in-law, who is an achondroplastic dwarf? Of course not. Would he have said this to her face? No way. He probably didn’t even know that the word “midget” is considered deeply offensive by many people with dwarfism. And yet, I cringed.

Ultimately, anti-“retard” activists are trying to do what I didn’t do while that fellow fixed our ceiling fan: Say something. Or at least to get people, perhaps especially people like me — who found the Simple Jack business hilarious precisely because we’re so offended by “respectful” films like “Rain Man,” and who are deeply aware of the power of words both to pinpoint and to prick — to at least think twice about the insult’s real-life impact.

“People are comfortable using ‘retard’ as a dis because in the past no one has stood up and said anything in numbers worth counting. Most marginalized groups come from places of family pride and tradition. They are able to stand strong together out of their heritage and make a statement. But people with intellectual disabilities, scattered through different families, are not part of a celebrated culture,” says Williamson, who saw “Tropic Thunder” as equal parts outrage and opportunity. “I think today’s high-tech world has finally allowed us to take a stand. Perhaps the word has continued to grow in popularity, since there has been no public pressure against it,” she suggests. “Until now.”

 

— By Lynn Harris

Blind activists plan protest of movie ‘Blindness’

By BEN NUCKOLS, Associated Press Writer Tue Sep 30, 7:28 PM ET
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080930/ap_en_mo/film_blindness_protests

BALTIMORE – Blind people quarantined in a mental asylum, attacking each other, soiling themselves, trading sex for food. For Marc Maurer, who’s blind, such a scenario — as shown in the movie “Blindness” — is not a clever allegory for a breakdown in society.

Instead, it’s an offensive and chilling depiction that Maurer fears could undermine efforts to integrate blind people into the mainstream.
“The movie portrays blind people as monsters, and I believe it to be a lie,” said Maurer, president of the Baltimore-based National Federation of the Blind. “Blindness doesn’t turn decent people into monsters.”

The organization plans to protest the movie, released by Miramax Films, at 75 theaters around the country when it’s released Friday. Blind people and their allies will hand out fliers and carry signs. Among the slogans: “I’m not an actor. But I play a blind person in real life.”

The movie reinforces inaccurate stereotypes, including that the blind cannot care for themselves and are perpetually disoriented, according to the NFB.

“We face a 70 percent unemployment rate and other social problems because people don’t think we can do anything, and this movie is not going to help — at all,” said Christopher Danielsen, a spokesman for the organization.

“Blindness” director Fernando Meirelles, an Academy Award nominee for “City of God,” was shooting on location Thursday and unavailable for comment, according to Miramax. The studio released a statement that read, in part, “We are saddened to learn that the National Federation of the Blind plans to protest the film `Blindness.'”

The NFB began planning the protests after seven staffers, including Danielsen, attended a screening of the movie in Baltimore last week. The group included three sighted employees.

“Everybody was offended,” Danielsen said.

Based on the 1995 novel by Nobel Prize winner Jose Saramago, “Blindness” imagines a mysterious epidemic that causes people to see nothing but fuzzy white light — resulting in a collapse of the social order in an unnamed city. Julianne Moore stars as the wife of an eye doctor (Mark Ruffalo) who loses his sight; she feigns blindness to stay with her husband and eventually leads a revolt of the quarantined patients.

The book was praised for its use of blindness as a metaphor for the lack of clear communication and respect for human dignity in modern society.

Miramax said in its statement that Meirelles had “worked diligently to preserve the intent and resonance of the acclaimed book,” which it described as “a courageous parable about the triumph of the human spirit when civilization breaks down.”

Maurer will have none of it.

“I think that failing to understand each other is a significant problem,” he said. “I think that portraying it as associated with blindness is just incorrect.”

The protest will include pickets at theaters in at least 21 states, some with dozens of participants, timed to coincide with evening showtimes. Maurer said it would be the largest protest in the 68-year history of the NFB, which has 50,000 members and works to improve blind people’s lives through advocacy, education and other ways.

The film was the opening-night entry at the Cannes Film Festival, where many critics were unimpressed.

After Cannes, Meirelles retooled the film, removing a voice-over that some critics felt spelled out its themes too explicitly.

Meirelles told The Associated Press at Cannes that the film draws parallels to such disasters as Hurricane Katrina, the global food shortage and the cyclone in Myanmar.

“There are different kinds of blindness. There’s 2 billion people that are starving in the world,” Meirelles said. “This is happening. It doesn’t need a catastrophe. It’s happening, and because there isn’t an event like Katrina, we don’t see.”

‘Tropic Thunder’: We get it. Do they?

‘Tropic Thunder’: We get it. Do they?
Monday, September 08, 2008 The Oregonian
http://www.oregonlive.com/commentary/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/editorial/1220657121285620.xml&coll=7

“Tropic Thunder,” a sendup of the Hollywood action-film industry, opened in August. The movie, produced and directed by Ben Stiller, uses the word “retard” to describe people with intellectual disabilities. One particular scene is extremely offensive because in addition to using the “R-word” it coins the phrase “never go full retard.” The film has spawned protests by folks in the disability community, many of whom have been accused of censorship, political correctness and of missing the point of the satire.

Here’s what I’d like to say to the film industry.

We do get the point: “Tropic Thunder” is a satiric assault on the film industry and was not intended to be an attack on people with intellectual disabilities. We know what satire is. That’s not the issue. The real question is, do you get our point? Do you get that the word “retard” is offensive to a significant portion of the population and causes real harm to real people?

What I have not heard from the film industry is some recognition of the trade-off involved. What I have not heard from any of the principals in this film is any acknowledgement of the harm done. This represents a profound ignorance about the environment in which intellectually disabled people must live.

I’d like to hear this from Ben Stiller: “I get it. I get that words can hurt. I get that the use of the word ‘retard’ will cause pain and anguish for real people. I get that ‘Tropic Thunder’ may give rise to taunts on the playground, that the phrase ‘never go full retard’ may show up on T-shirts that will be worn in public. I get that that will hurt. But I think that the artistic purpose of using the ‘retard’ riff in the film more than balances the harm done.”

I’m not trying to censor anyone. I strongly believe in our right to free speech. Stiller and company have the right to make their movie, including dialogue that may be objectionable to me. I also have the right to criticize it, to raise my objections to that dialogue, to urge people not to see the film. Through that criticism I’m not trying to censor Stiller. I am, however, trying to change the social climate. I’m working to make use of the “R-word” as unacceptable as use of the “N-word.”

It changes the social climate by using such words. Well, I wish to change the social climate by sanctioning their use of it. That’s not censorship; it’s simply a nonviolent clash in the marketplace of language and ideas.

As a special educator, I have been promoting inclusion, equal rights and respect for persons with intellectual disabilities for 35 years. I’ve written letters to the editor, spoken out publicly and worked to educate others about these issues. My complaints about “Tropic Thunder” stem not from political correctness, but from direct knowledge of the harm that’s been inflicted and continues to be inflicted on real people.

Do any of you in the film industry understand the reality of that harm?

Paula J. Stanovich is a professor of special education at Portland State University.

Using the word “retard” to describe me hurts

By John Franklin Stephens

 

What’s the big deal about using the word “retard”?

A lot of people are talking about the movie “Tropic Thunder.” One of the reasons that it is being talked about is that the characters use the term “retard” over and over. They use it the same way that kids do all the time, to jokingly insult one another.

The people who made the movie, DreamWorks and Paramount, and many of the critics who have reviewed it, say that the term is being used by characters who are dumb and shallow themselves.

You see, we are supposed to get the joke that it is only the dumb and shallow people who use a term that means dumb and shallow. My dad tells me that this is called “irony.”

So, what’s the big deal?

Let me try to explain.

I am a 26-year-old man with Down Syndrome. I am very lucky. Even though I was born with this intellectual disability, I do pretty well and have a good life. I live and work in the community. I count as friends the people I went to school with and the people I meet in my job.

Every day I get closer to living a life like yours.

I am a Global Messenger for Special Olympics and make speeches to people all over the country. I once spoke to over 10,000 people at the Richmond Coliseum. I realize that I am a voice for other people with intellectual disabilities who cannot easily speak for themselves. I thank God that he gave me this chance to be someone’s voice.

The hardest thing about having an intellectual disability is the loneliness. We process information slower than everyone else. So even normal conversation is a constant battle for us not to lose touch with what the rest of you are saying. Most of the time the words and thoughts just go too fast for us to keep up, and when we finally say something it seems out of place.

We are aware when all the rest of you stop and just look at us. We are aware when you look at us and just say, “unh huh,” and then move on, talking to each other. You mean no harm, but you have no idea how alone we feel even when we are with you.

That is why I love being a Global Messenger. I work for days telling my dad what I want to talk about and he tries to write it down for me. Then we do it over and over until we have something that says what I mean. We wrote this letter the same way.

So, what’s wrong with “retard”? I can only tell you what it means to me and people like me when we hear it. It means that the rest of you are excluding us from your group. We are something that is not like you and something that none of you would ever want to be. We are something outside the “in” group. We are someone that is not your kind.

I want you to know that it hurts to be left out here, alone. Nothing scares me as much as feeling all alone in a world that moves so much faster than I do.

You don’t mean to make me feel that way. In fact, like I say in some of my speeches, “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers,” and it works out OK most of the time. Still, it hurts and scares me when I am the only person with intellectual disabilities on the bus and young people start making “retard” jokes or references.

Please put yourself on that bus and fill the bus with people who are different from you. Imagine that they start making jokes using a term that describes you. It hurts and it is scary.

Last, I get the joke — the irony — that only dumb and shallow people are using a term that means dumb and shallow. The problem is, it is only funny if you think a “retard” is someone dumb and shallow. I am not those things, but every time the term is used it tells young people that it is OK to think of me that way and to keep me on the outside.

That is why using “retard” is a big deal to people like me.

John Franklin Stephens is a Special Olympics Virginia athlete and Global Messenger who lives in Fairfax, Va.

The Tally – A Comparison of How Far We’ve Come in 34 years

The Tally – A Comparison of How Far We’ve Come

Blazing Saddles – Comedy, 1974
“…uses the ethnic slur “nigger” 17 times (usually used by whites)…”
-from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blazing_Saddles

Tropic Thunder – Comedy, 2008
“Number of repetitions of the word “nigger”: Once, said by a black character criticizing a character pretending to be black.”

“Number of repetitions of the word “retard” or its variations: At least 16 in the “full retard” scene alone, not counting the uses of words like “idiot,” “moron,” “moronical,” “imbecile,” “stupid,” “dumb” and “the dumbest M*****F***** that ever lived.” All are used to describe the character of Simple Jack, who is described in an introductory segment as a “mentally impaired farm hand who can talk to animals.” 
– from: http://www.patriciaebauer.com/2008/08/08/just-the-facts-tropic-thunder/

Would a movie groomed to be a blockbuster in 2008 using the N-Word 17 times cause controversy? Would it spark protests? Would it be a blockbuster?

Why is one slur more acceptable than another?

It’s not about being politically correct.

It’s about respect.

Opinion: The ‘R-word’ is no joke

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/commentary/la-oe-shriver22-2008aug22,0,1982289.story

From the Los Angeles Times

Opinion

The ‘R-word’ is no joke

By Maria Shriver

August 22, 2008

This has been a year filled with teachable political moments. Racism, sexism, ageism and “change” have been debated at kitchen tables and water coolers across America. But this last week, those gathered around my kitchen table have been consumed with another discussion, one that is not Democratic or Republican — it’s the “R-word” debate.

The “R-word” stands for “retard.” For the 6 million to 8 million Americans with intellectual disabilities and their families, this word and its hurtful use is equal to the impact of the “N-word” on an African American.

The reason it’s kitchen-table fodder is because of the Dreamworks film “Tropic Thunder,” which topped the box-office charts when it opened last weekend and which will attract many more moviegoers this weekend. In the R-rated film, which I’ve seen, a character named Simple Jack is a caricature of a person with a developmental disability. In one of the scenes, the character played by Robert Downey Jr. chastises Ben Stiller’s character for “going full retard,” and the “R-word” is repeated many times.

As a journalist, I respect the right to freedom of speech, and my kids will tell you I laugh the loudest when we see a comedy. But as the niece of someone who had a developmental disability, and as a member of the board of directors of Special Olympics International, I know how hurtful the “R-word” is to someone with a disability. I know why “Tropic Thunder’s” opening was met by protests on behalf of the intellectually disabled.

Listen to actor Eddie Barbanell, who serves on the Special Olympics board with me, and he will tell you in very emotional terms how the use of that word has made him feel rejected, stupid, demeaned.

Or you can talk to Special Olympics athlete Loretta Claiborne, who speaks on behalf of millions when she describes how the “R-word” has been used to mock and degrade her. She asks all of us to stop using this word without regard to its effect on the hearts and minds of people with disabilities.

There is an old saying: “Sticks and stones will break my bones but names will never hurt me.” Even when I chanted it as a child, I never believed it. Words do hurt — they break people’s spirits, they break people’s dreams, they break people’s hearts.

Kids will see “Tropic Thunder,” no matter the rating, and when they leave the theater and go out to their schools, their homes and their communities, they’ll call each other the “R-word” because they think it’s funny. They’ll do it without any idea or regard to how it makes a person with a disability feel.

Too many in the intellectually disabled movement cannot speak out for themselves. It is up to their families and those of us who advocate on their behalf to explain that calling someone by the “R-word” is no longer acceptable and is anything but funny.

It’s not acceptable in a movie theater; it’s not acceptable on a playground. It’s not acceptable that college coaches use it to chastise athletes. It’s not OK to use it in a classroom or a boardroom.

“Tropic Thunder” is giving Claiborne, Barbanell and many other individuals and organizations that serve those with special needs — the Special Olympics, the National Down Syndrome Society, the Arc, the American Assn. of People with Disabilities, Parent to Parent-USA — a teachable moment. They are ready to join with the entertainment industry to change minds. Dreamworks’ decision to include a public service announcement with DVDs of “Tropic Thunder” is an important first step, but far more needs to be done.

Just as important, parents must talk to kids at our kitchen tables about how we have felt when someone called us stupid, idiotic or lame. Because once we put ourselves in someone else’s shoes, certain names just aren’t that funny any more.

I often quote the Hopi prayer that tells us not to look outside ourselves for a leader. It tells us that we are the ones we have been waiting for. We can exchange one “R-word” for another: respect. We can teach our children that name-calling hurts.

Let’s makes the “R-word” as unacceptable as the “N-word.” Think of all we can accomplish if we work together.

It’s one thing in this political season that shouldn’t require a water-cooler debate.

Maria Shriver is the first lady of California.

Paralyzed woman ‘too graphic’ for the fair? And MADD?

By Vanessa Brown
http://www.2news.tv/news/local/27212824.html

GARDEN CITY – When Rose Harn was hit by a drunk driver 22 years ago and paralyzed, her husband Michael never gave up.

Rose has brain damage, but Michael swears she knows what’s going on around her. He says what makes her situation even more heartbreaking is seeing the way people treat her.

On Tuesday night, they went to the Western Idaho Fair in Garden City. Michael was volunteering at the ‘Mothers Against Drunk Driving’ booth with Rose nearby. That’s when he says an employee of Spectra Productions, the company that produces the fair, told them to leave.

“I said ‘you’re joking and she says no I’m serious. My boss wants you to leave the fairgrounds and I said tell your boss to come down here and tell me that,” Michael said.

He said they barely gave an explanation.

“They didn’t have any, they said it’s too graphic. They said my wife is too graphic because she’s paralyzed,” Harn said.

Ada County, which owns the fairgrounds, says the fair was approached by MADD to ask Harn to leave just the organization’s booth.

In an email from Ada County, Miren Aburusa, the local MADD director, wrote the fair’s director:

“First, I apologize for the problems and inconvenience our booth has caused you. Second, we removed Mr. Harn from tonight’s schedule as a volunteer and we have vocalized this to him. So should he come to the fair it will not be as a volunteer for MADD.”

A county spokesperson, Rich Wright, says MADD received several complaints regarding Harn’s wife.

Top fair officials were unable to speak Wednesday evening because of a fair emergency. They say the fair had a main power line that went down on the grounds leaving food vendors, the concert main stage, and ticket gates without power and unable to conduct fair business.

People working at surrounding booths said Harn’s presence at the fair was tough to watch. They said families should not have to see people who look like Rose.

“I lost my best friend last year in a car accident and I saw her in that vegetative state a week before she died and it was really offending I actually had to end up leaving work early because I couldn’t handle it,” said Alicia Neuschwanger, who was working near MADD’s booth.

Local MADD officials have declined to comment about the situation until they’ve been able to have a conference call with the MADD national headquarters.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Idaho said it was looking into the incident.

“To our detriment, people with disabilities are still far too often treated as second-class citizens, shunned and segregated by physical barriers and social stereotypes, and this is unconstitutional,” the organization said in a statement.

Can You Imagine?? I Can’t!

TAKE ACTION NOW!
FROM: http://mosaicmoments.today.com/2008/08/17/tropic-thunder-update-and-action-alert/

Cafepress has 56 products listed under the category of “Never Go Full Retard”. They even have MATERNITY shirts! Can you imagine?? I can’t!

ONE BILLION FIVE HUNDRED TWENTY MILLION who are offended by this word and you will not purchase their products and encourage others to do the same until they remove all offensive language that promotes violence towards those with intellectual disabilities.

Their contact information is:

 

Corporate Headquarters
CafePress.com
1850 Gateway Drive, Suite 300
San Mateo, California 94404
Phone: 650-655-3000
Toll Free: 877-809-1659
Fax: 650-655-3002
Email:

URL:
http://www.cafepress.com

………………………………………………
Note: CafePress is just one vendor, how many more places around the Web (EBay, etc.) need to hear the same message?

© 2017, The 'r' Word Campaign ALL RIGHTS RESERVED