Disability Voices Heard This Year, Despite Media Resistance
Forest Park, IL (PRWEB) December 19, 2005 -- Disability activists
achieved an almost unprecedented amount of press coverage
this year, largely due to two stories that grabbed media attention
– Million Dollar Baby and Terri Schiavo.
In January and February of 2005, Not Dead Yet kicked off a
public awareness campaign regarding Clint Eastwood’s
use of an inaccurate and stereotypical portrayal of life with
a severe spinal cord injury to enlist audience sympathy for
killing a quadriplegic woman in “Million Dollar Baby.”
The disability critique and protest of Eastwood’s movie
was covered in the London Telegraph, the New York Times, Chicago
Tribune and Associated Press, among others.
Disability activists were also covered in the media circus
surrounding the struggle over the life of Terri Schiavo. In
March of 2005, disability activists joined other protesters
outside the hospice where Terri Schiavo was being starved
and dehydrated to death. In addition, several major national
disability groups endorsed the congressional “Terri’s
Bill” – legislation to provide an avenue of appeal
for Terri Schiavo’s parents in their efforts to save
her life from her guardian’s decision that she must
die. As a result, disability activists were covered in major
papers across the country, and included in televised media
in over 100 news segments.
But that’s not exactly cause for celebration, say disability
activists.
“Terri Schiavo died in that hospice, and guardianship
remains a potential death ship for everyone in it,”
says Diane Coleman, president of Not Dead Yet, a national
disability rights group that organizes opposition to legalized
assisted suicide, non-voluntary euthanasia and other forms
of medical killing. “And of course, “Million Dollar
Baby” all but swept the Oscars.”
Stephen Drake, research analyst for Not Dead Yet, wonders
if the outcomes would have been different if more people had
been aware of the disability perspective in either instance.
In the case of “Million Dollar Baby,” disability
activists were the first and loudest voices protesting the
movie. But they got shoved aside and ignored over time while
the controversy was reframed in terms of the “culture
wars.”
“We fought an uphill battle to be heard all year,”
said Drake. “The media – whether it’s Fox
News or the New York Times – frames these stories as
part of the so-called ‘culture wars.’ There was
little room for liberal disability rights groups with an anti-euthanasia
perspective in that framework. It was even more tragic in
the case of Terri Schiavo. I would bet most people knew where
Howard Dean and Tom Delay stood on the issue, but were unaware
that 26 national disability groups opposed the removal of
her feeding tube.”
Company Name: NOT DEAD YET
Website: http://www.notdeadyet.org