And washington state is ranked as a good state when  it comes to not forcing 
handicapped into nursing homes. What do they have, ghettos?
 
john
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
[email protected]
Sent: Sun, 18 Feb 2007 5:36 PM
Subject: Re: [Norton AntiSpam] Re: [QUAD-L] QUESTION


sweet.  in washington state, you can't bring in more than $2,000/mo.  
rediculous!


On 2/18/07, Mark Jackson < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
Hey Kaye,
I just wanted to point out that in many states you can work full time and not 
lose your health coverage through Medicaid and if you make a lot of money you 
can even buy-in to Medicaid.
I work full time and I'm on Medicaid.
  
 
Mark Jackson
   RollinOn!
-------Original Message-------
 
From: kaye allard
Date: 2/18/2007 2:19:12 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: [Norton AntiSpam] Re: [QUAD-L] QUESTION
 
Please elucidate us on how it pays to be in the minority.

Many people on this list have talked about how in some ways their lives have 
changed for the better after their injury.  There are some interesting things 
that happen after sci that illuminate parts of your life you sort of looked 
over before.  At least for me, it has been an adventure.  Being an actual 
monority- like on a huge college campus- is not easy.  When I was in school I 
got many stares and little conversation.  We are minorities in many ways.  The 
most painful one being that many of us are stuck between the economic confines 
of getting welfare checks and state and/or federal healthcare that keeps us 
relatively healthy and independant, and needing more money and risking losing 
all assistance to get a job that has insurance that will not pay for home 
healthcare.  For some this is harder than others because we depend on the home 
assistance.  Marginalized is another word.  And yes, being marginalized lumps 
us with other groups with which we can work on things together and support each 
other.  I think this is the important part of being in a group- our ability to 
appreciate differences and similarities at the same time.  A form of 
enlightened interdependance, I like to think of it. 

My friend started a disability studies study group at the University of 
Washingtom and finally, after 3 years of the administration saying that we 
don't need a disabilities class or program- a class and a minor in the subject! 
 Yae!  Everyone else has a cultural studies program- why not disability?  We 
have a history, culture, etc.  And unfortunately, being in the minority, we 
must contend with the majority view of who we are and expand these views 
because they do result in public policy and just good old fashioned, everyday 
bigotry and discrimination.  One thing that makes us a minority is dealing with 
those. 

There is no short answer for this question, but it is a good one.


On 2/17/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
In a message dated 2/17/2007 1:42:24 P.M. Central Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] writes:
My question too W.  In comparison to whom?  Women w/SCI/D are a minority.
Amen.  Actually, we are all minorities in the eyes of the majority, what ever 
the category is.
 
Extreme rich is a minority to the very poor.
Male population is a minority to the female population.
Those is jail are a minority to those not confined.
 
 
Sometimes, it pays to be in the minority.  Can you think of the many different 
ways?
W



-- 
Life is 440 horsepower in a 2-cylinder engine. 
-Henry Miller 
 











-- 
Life is 440 horsepower in a 2-cylinder engine. 
-Henry Miller 
________________________________________________________________________
Check out the new AOL.  Most comprehensive set of free safety and security 
tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free 
AOL Mail and more.

Reply via email to