I was trying to find out more about Mr Seymour.  That article was 
completely lame-brained.

Peter Seymour
Hoboken, 07030-2743

There is part of his address.
He seems to be a big government needs to stay out of people's lives.  He's 
part of an organization called "Separation of State and Schools" or 
something to that effect.

I also found this message post from 1995.
Being a blind "reader" of REASON, I feel especially qualified to respond to 
"Unreasonable Accommodations."

A Buddhist parable tells of an emperor whose servants had been complaining 
about how walking on the stones of the street hurt their feet. The emperor was
about to order all of his cattle slaughtered and their hides used to carpet 
the roads when a wise man suggested slaughtering only a few cattle and 
making shoes
for the servants instead. The emperor took the advice. If our government 
were as wise, it would not try to carpet the ground by, for instance, 
harassing store
and restaurant proprietors to build ramps, nor by forcing publishers to 
produce their print materi als in alternative formats.

Where adaptive technology is the solution, it will ultimately be far 
easier, cheaper, and more satisfactory to supply shoes for the disabled, 
such as wheelchairs
that can climb stairs and electronic reading machines for the blind (both 
of which exist).

Ironically, despite repeated attempts for the last few decades, the federal 
government itself has been completely unwilling to budge and make a "reasonable
accommodation" for the one item that it has exclusive power to produce: the 
legal tender of this nation. An essential character istic of money is that one
denomination can be distinguished from another. The U.S. Treasury insists 
that such a distinction can only be based on a rather subtle visual 
difference in the
bills, which are all the same size, color, and basic design. Almost every 
other country has provided their paper currency with tactile indicators of the
denomination for those who can't see. For our government to make similar 
alterations to its bills would be a small expense, yet the benefits for the 
employability
and general convenience for the blind and visually impaired would be enor 
mous.

Any lawyer who would be interested in representing me in suing the U.S. 
Treasury Depart ment for violating the "reasonable accommodations" 
provision of the
ADA should contact me about this matter.
Peter Seymour
Hoboken, NJ

At 13:41 2002-03-11 -0800, Bill Potts wrote:
>Peter Seymour

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