The fact that glasses aren't considered disability aids is ableist.
Same for people not considering common visual impairments to be disabilities.
Common condition =/= not disabled. Having a disability aid =/= no longer disabled.

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The fact that glasses aren't considered disability aids is ableist.
Same for people not considering common visual impairments to be disabilities.
Common condition =/= not disabled. Having a disability aid =/= no longer disabled.
I recently heard a deaf person who wears glasses refer to themselves as “deafblind.” Now I know this person and they are not considered “blind,” in a legal sense, their vision is that of someone needing a pair of glasses sometimes to read a board.
Legal blindness is having a visual acuity at or less than 20/200 or a visual field of less than 10 degrees. Many blind people use seeing eye canes, seeing eye dogs, braille, large print, magnifiers, audio descriptors, assistive technology, etc.
A lot of people I talked to in the blind community were upset because that person does not receive discrimination for their sight, they do not carry a cane, they do not need to read braille or large print, they just have to wear glasses.
I have been told I am policing terms by some abled people over this. And maybe I am and maybe that is not a bad thing.
Ableism, and specifically, vidism, is something I experience constantly. I am constantly under-estimated and over-looked because I need assistive tools to be at the level of my peers. My vision is closing in on itself and I am expected to deal with it and function as sighted people do.
My partner is Hard of Hearing, but he is not Deaf. Because, culturally he does not use ASL and he is not active in the community. And he has no problem not being considered Deaf because he respects their customs. My partner is also Blind. He uses a cane, he needs large print, he has been discriminated against and viewed differently because he is Blind.
What I don’t get is why is it that certain deaf people expect the blind community to not have the same standard and expect the same respect?
Audvidism in the Signing Community
Audvidism (the oppression/marginalization of DeafBlind people) is such a real thing in our community/ies. We sighted Deaf people do not spend enough time unpacking and unlearning our audvidism, vidism, audableism, and ableism. examples: - the neglect and minimization of Tactile ASL; not honoring it as a dialect of ASL. - not providing visual culture facilitation and interpretation. - not obtaining CDIs for events; when CDIs *are* present at events, overrelying on them and not 1) honoring Tactile ASL as a dialect and 2) not providing visual culture facilitation/interpretation during classes, workshops/presentations, and conversations. - avoidant behavior of DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind individuals. many of us in the Signing community tend to say "ASL so visual WOW WOW" "People of the Eye, that that" but then provide NO visual culture facilitation for DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind folks. we dont provide image descriptions and interpretations during presentations/workshops, visual cues and facilitations during conversations and in the classroom; many of us dont provide image descriptions on social media. a lot of us don't bother to learn Tactile ASL, and to unpack why we avoid interacting with DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind individuals. (note: and yes, hearing Blind people can learn ASL and Tactile ASL and become interpreters- yes they can- and it's up to us to unpack our audism and audvidism and audableism and ableism.) and then we often get confused/bothered/annoyed when DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind folks ask questions that we assume means that they didnt pay attention, that they're being lazy and not working hard enough to follow along, that the CDIs are lousy and not doing their job-- all because WE didnt provide visual culture facilitation by explaining the MEANING of images or live action events or environmental cues!!! we sighted Deaf people dont accept it when our ASL interpreters don't give us full information access- then why do we do this to DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind folks in our communities??? remember that CDIs cant provide visual cultural information and interpretation- that would create such HUGE lag times in the interpretation process. that's why it's up to US sighted Signing and hearing people to CULTURALLY FACILITATE visual culture information. and this requires us to create connections and build bridges with DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind individuals. a lot of us sighted Deaf folks know the pain of isolation and social exclusion. why do this to our communities members?? something for us sighted people to work on- remembering that we have the *responsibility* to be visual culture facilitators and interpreters for our DeafBlind/Low Vision/Blind communities members.
-Elena Figueroa-Ruiz
multi-mestiza xicanx sorda queer femme profesora/writer, 2014.
#91
Abled privilege is...believing, as a sighted-hearing orientation and mobility instructor, that your Deaf-Blind client can't travel independently, period. Abled privilege is...not considering that the real problem is with your lack of training in Deaf-Blind orientation and mobility techniques. Abled privilege is...thinking that abled people are more qualified to teach Disabled people independent living skills than other Disabled people themselves.
#24
content: mention of intersecting ableism and vidism*/linguicism * vidism: vid = videre, to see. similiar to audism: aud = audire, to hear. Abled privilege is...assumng that *all* folks in the Deaf community will be able to understand your non-captioned and/or non-transcripted ASL vlog because you don't have to take into account the needs of Blind and Disabled people in your Deaf community.