[blindlaw] National Federation of the Blind Comments on Federal Court Ruling on U.S. Currency
Rod Alcidonis
roddj12 at hotmail.com
Wed Nov 29 21:34:52 CST 2006
As Dennis clearly pointed out, the resolution voted in 2002 was clearly
absurd, illogical, and whatever else you want to add. This is not a quote by
the way.
I also gathered that this is some type of "inner logic" that only those
who voted this nonsensical resolution can understand?
If you take a vote right now, you will get hundreds of blind people who are
just frustrated at this opposition.
Rod
-----Original Message-----
From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of David Andrews
Sent: Wednesday, November 29, 2006 9:37 PM
To: NFBnet Blind Law Mailing List
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] National Federation of the Blind Comments on Federal
Court Ruling on U.S. Currency
While you won't understand, like, or accept it,
many of us agree with the position taken in the
press release. It is NFB policy arrived at by
discussion and vote at our national convention.
It is like liberals and conservatives not
understanding each other, or how we arrived at a
position, you just have to accept that it is.
W
e all don't and won't agree, and I am not wrong,
crazy, illogical for having a position different from yours.
Dave
At 05:31 PM 11/29/2006, you wrote:
>For what it's worth coming from a blind non-NFB member, I think this is a
>ridiculous, counterproductive, short-sighted position for the NFB to take.
>It frustrates me that the article says that this is coming from the "voice
>of the blind". I haven't read, nor can I imagine, anything that would
>remotely justify an organization that advocates for the blind taking this
>position.
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "David Andrews" <dandrews at visi.com>
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>Sent: Wednesday, November 29, 2006 4:53 PM
>Subject: [blindlaw] National Federation of the Blind Comments on Federal
>Court Ruling on U.S. Currency
>
>
> National Federation of the Blind Comments
>
>
>on Federal Court Ruling on U.S. Currency
>
>
>
>
>Views Effort as Dangerously Misguided
>
>
>
>Baltimore, Maryland (November 29, 2006): The
>National Federation of the Blind, the largest
>organization of blind persons in America and
>known as the voice of the nation's blind,
>criticized as dangerously misguided a federal
>court ruling saying that the design of U.S.
>currency discriminates against the blind.
>
>
>
>Dr. Marc Maurer, President of the National
>Federation of the Blind, said: "The blind need
>jobs and real opportunities to earn money, not
>feel-good gimmicks that misinform the public
>about our capabilities. Blind people transact
>business with paper money every day. This ruling
>puts a roadblock in the way of solving the real
>problem, which is the seventy percent
>unemployment rate among working-age blind
>Americans that severely limits our access to
>cash. The ruling will do nothing to alleviate
>that situation; in fact, it seriously endangers
>the ability of the blind to get jobs and
>participate fully in society. It argues that the
>blind cannot handle currency or documents in the
>workplace and that virtually everything must be
>modified for the use of the blind. An employer
>who believes that every piece of printed material
>in the workplace must be specially designed so
>that the blind can read it will have a strong
>incentive not to hire a blind person."
>
>
>
>Maurer went on to enumerate the real needs for
>access to information by the blind and made a
>distinction between those needs and the issue of
>identifying currency. "Access to information of
>all kinds, such as that contained on Internet Web
>sites and in the press, is certainly critical to
>the ability of the blind to become productive
>members of society. Blind students need
>educational materials in Braille and other
>alternative formats so that they can prepare for
>employment and ultimately earn an income for
>themselves and their families. Given the urgent
>need for access to the kind of information that
>is required for success in America's information
>economy, the matter of identifying the
>denominations of paper bills is of relatively little concern."
>
>
>
>Blind people traditionally identify paper
>currency by folding bills of different
>denominations in different ways. "In reality,
>blind people do not routinely find that we have
>been short-changed," Maurer commented. Machines
>are readily available to identify paper money for
>blind people who run businesses or handle large
>amounts of cash. "Essentially, the United States
>Treasury has been ordered by the courts to come
>up with a solution for a nonexistent problem," Maurer said.
>
>
>
>The National Federation of the Blind believes
>that with training and opportunity, blind people
>can compete in the world with only minor
>modifications. The American Council of the
>Blind, which brought the lawsuit against the
>United States Treasury, promotes the view that
>the blind are unable to compete unless the world
>is modified dramatically and specifically for
>blind people, and that the blind must be made
>objects of care and pity rather than equal participants in society.
>
>
>
>John G. Paré Jr.
>Director of Public Relations
>NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BLIND
>1800 Johnson Street
>Baltimore, Maryland 21230
>Telephone: (410) 659-9314, ext. 2371
>Cell phone: (410) 913-3912
>Fax: (410) 685-5653
>Email: jpare at nfb.org
>
>
>
>
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