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Date: | Wed, 31 Oct 2007 08:29:37 -1000 |
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I am able bodied but I do know that thalidomide was a totally
preventable and horrific limb deformity birth defect. I find being
asked to bowl while missing fingers incredibly harsh and cruel. Had
the company said come and join us for the fun, keep score, drink some
beer, and root for the team that would be different. Or if they
leveled the playing field by taping the other members fingers
together and then seeing who was really last that would be ok with me
too. Case does go bowling and they have a metal contraption that he
sets the ball in and it automatically rolls down the lane. If she had
used that that might be ok as well. Where is the sense of fairness in
this? Don't people use handicapping in golf etc to even the playing field.
At 12:43 AM 10/31/2007, you wrote:
>On Wednesday 31 October 2007 02:05:02 kat wrote:
> > Thanks for setting us straight, Deri! Now you've got me feeling sick
> > that a disabled person can use her disability to "beat the system." Ugh!
> > Gives the rest of us a bad name.
> >
> > Kat
> >
>
>Hi Kat,
>
>I do not know if I'm right, its just that I realised while reading
>that if you
>take away the disability element the things she describes happen to many,
>many people, who do not have the opportunity to sue.
>
>Also, I realised that it seems the whole case revolves around her disability,
>the article says she is actually suing the company for sexual harrassment
>(not discrimination - probably because all her cited instances of
>discrimination occurred outside work in a social setting).
>
>Cheers
>
>Deri
>
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