KCTMO – Playing with fire!

kvasrespecter:

commissarchrisman:

It is a truly terrifying thought but the Grenfell Action Group firmly believe that only a catastrophic event will expose the ineptitude and incompetence of our landlord, the KCTMO, and bring an end to the dangerous living conditions and neglect of health and safety legislation that they inflict upon their tenants and leaseholders. We believe that the KCTMO are an evil, unprincipled, mini-mafia who have no business to be charged with the responsibility of looking after the every day management of large scale social housing estates and that their sordid collusion with the RBKC Council is a recipe for a future major disaster.

In the last twenty years and despite the terrifying power surge incident in 2013 and recent fire at Adair Tower, the residents of Grenfell Tower have received no proper fire safety instructions from the KCTMO. Residents were informed by a temporary notice stuck in the lift and one announcement in a recent regeneration newsletter that they should remain in their flats in the event of fire. There are not and never have been any instructions posted in the Grenfell Tower noticeboard or on individual floor as to how residents should act in event of a fire. Anyone who witnessed the recent tower block fire at Shepherds Court, in nearby Shepherd’s Bush, will know that the advice to remain in our properties would have led to certain fatalities and we are calling on our landlord to re-consider the advice that they have so badly circulated.

“The Grenfell Action Group predict that it won’t be long before the words of this blog come back to haunt the KCTMO management and we will do everything in our power to ensure that those in authority know how long and how appallingly our landlord has ignored their responsibility to ensure the heath and safety of their tenants and leaseholders. They can’t say that they haven’t been warned!

Bastards. Blood on their hands. 

punish the landlords big time and also improve building regulations goddamn

KCTMO – Playing with fire!

Why do some fascists identify as socialists?

antifainternational:

That’s a great question.  This goes back to the beginnings of fascism, when fascists were actively competing with socialists and communists to win recruits to their cause.  In his book The Coming of the Third ReichRichard J. Evans describes how Hitler and co. would deliberately make socialist pronouncements in the hopes of luring working-class Germans away from socialist groups and into nazism.  It was no accident that they were called “national socialists.”  Hitler publicly proclaimed that the nazis = socialists. 

But that strategy didn’t really work out for the fascists.  The nazis never enjoyed significant working-class support, despite their con job.  But it did enrage legitimate socialists in Germany and sew confusion among the more gullible.

This pattern was repeated elsewhere.  Alexander Reid Ross notes in Against The Fascist Creep that “Fascism…draws left-wing notions of solidarity and liberation into ultranationalist, right-wing ideology; and, at least in its early stages, fascists often utilize “broad front” strategies, proposing a mass-based, nationalist platform to gain access to mainstream political audiences and key administration positions. 

In any event, the socialist charade never lasts long.  Shortly after gaining power in Germany, the nazis forgot all their socialist positions and promises, murdered thousands of socialists, and laid out its Lebensraum policy, which was absent of any socialism but full of racist colonialism.

In our times, we see fascist groups continuing to adopt socialist or even anarchist trappings in the same attempt to fool people and undermine their strongest opponents.  Fascists have tried to infiltrate the animal rights, anti-globalization, and environmental movements; fascists have adopted black bloc tactics in confrontations with anti-fascists; fascists have attempted to stake space in the anarchist milieu as “national anarchists.”  But it’s always the same tired old con and it will only lead to genocide and misery if we fall for it or fail to stop them.

I’ve only been blind for a little over a year. Since it happened i’ve been living with family, but i’ve been managing. Today I was talking to my mom and she tells me I better not have kids because I can barely take care of myself. I don’t want to admit that i’ve been worryjng about that myself but I thought it was possible eventually for me to have kids, which is something i’ve always wanted. I’ve lost a lot when I lost my eyesight. I don’t want to lose more because of it.

andreashettle:

actuallyblind:

Awwww hey!

So you were right, the answer is yes. You can absolutely have kids as a blind person. There are so many blind people who have kids and raise them just as normally as anybody else every day, and I even know a few of them myself. In fact, the president of the National Federation of the Blind and his wife are both blind, have been since they were young, and have three young and thriving kids, two of which are blind, themselves.

Of course, becoming a blind parent first requires you to be independent enough to take care of yourself first, which usually requires some training, but once you’ve got yourself down, honestly the possibilities are endless. People freak out at the very thought of a blind person in control of a child, but it’s because they have no idea how a blind person could do anything, and it’s because of that very ignorance that drives that fear. They can’t imagine a way to do something without seeing, so they assume that there must not be a way. But there are so, so many ways…

Did you know that a lot of blind parents put bells on the shoelaces of their children’s shoes to keep track of them when out and about or at the playground?

Did you know that a lot of blind parents help the children with their homework by simply having the child read the problem aloud to them?

Did you know that there is technology that allows a blind parent to scan a child’s homework and have immediate access to the text on the sheet on a computer or a cell phone so that they can hear it for themselves or read it with a braille display?

Have you ever noticed that little kids make a whole lot of noise when they go anywhere? When you’re in your own home, it’s pretty difficult not to know where young kids are. From the sound of their bare feet slapping around tile and hardwood and shuffling across the carpet, to the sounds of their breeding that is not quite as silent as they might think it is if they try to hide, to the sound that every toy they play with will make every time they touch it, to all of the sounds and words that will come out of their mouth on an incredibly regular basis, little kids make a whole lot of noise even when they aren’t upset or laughing, and it’s pretty easy to tell where they are. And if you need to leave the room, you make the same judgment call that any sighted parent does and decide if it’s quick enough to leave them unattended for a moment, or you take the child with you to keep track of them and make sure they aren’t getting into things. Little kids are a lot easier to keep track of and people think when they first imagine taking care of a child without eyesight, and it’s almost difficult to NOT know exactly where they are in the room. Even the common so called trump card of a child touching a hot stove is easy to prevent. If you were standing at the stove, you will absolutely noticed the sound of a child coming into the room, and if you don’t, you will definitely notice the feeling of a tiny body standing next to you with that less than discrete breathing. It’s incredibly easy to prevent as long as you’re paying attention as any decent parent is. And even if all else fails, if all of that still somehow doesn’t work, a bird finger is never the end of the world and most kids will do it at some point or another whether their parents are blind or sighted. A little cool water, children’s Motrin, and some kisses and comfort will make them forget it ever happened to weeks later.

Even babies can be easily taken care of by a blind person. A baby too young to crawl certainly can’t get away from you anywhere, so you will almost definitely always know where a baby is because he will probably be holding it or have it sitting in a swing or a cradle or a bouncer. And feeding a baby? Absolutely a no-brainer. It’s pretty easy to find a babies bottom lip and make sure the bottle and is up in the right spot, same thing when they move onto real food. Now, it might mean you have might have to touch a few more dirty faces and get a little more drivel on your fingers, but it’s a small price to pay.

Even taking them places. If you’re a blind person independent enough to have children, clearly you’ve probably already made the move to live somewhere with public transit so that you can support yourself by getting to the grocery store, your job, even the local bar. Plenty of sighted families raise children all the time without cars, and how? Utilizing public transit, of course. Plenty of sighted parents do it all the time and it’s no different for blind parents. The only difference is that some blind parents might be pulling a stroller behind them instead of in front so that they can still easily navigate with their cane in front of them.

And then people ask a whole bunch of questions like “well what if you mix up a child’s medication?” And “how would you even know which jar is the baby food?”

These questions go back to some general blindness skills that have nothing to do with being exclusive to being a parent. Blind people label things all the time and it’s easy to tell a whole bunch of different things apart. Think about it: a can of SpaghettiOs feels a heck of a lot different from a much shorter, wider can of corn that doesn’t have a mechanism on top to open it, right? Blind people also label those things. We have this clear tape with a sticky adhesive on the back that we used to label things in braille. We use braille writers and braille slate and styli to write braille on the line of tape specially designed to fit in the writers and slates, and then we cut the tape at the end of the label and Peele off the backing and stick a label on things. You may be asking, “how did you know what to label the thing in the first place?” Well, there’s an app for that. There are apps for almost everything, and the blindness community is no different. One app in particular is called TapTapSee, and it allows you to take a picture and have that picture sent to a team of sighted people at any hour and receive back a description of what the photo is of, such as a can of corn or a box of Lucky charms. Of course, the subject matter is not restricted to food, but a lot of people use it when they get home from the grocery store to organize the things they can’t recognize by tactile and auditory indicators alone such as a bunch of cans of different things that are all the exact same shape and size and make roughly the same sound when you wiggle them.

Now talking about medicine, since mixing up medication could actually be dangerous. Medicine bottles tend to look fairly similar, but there are always a whole bunch of different kinds. There’s some with those childproof lids, the Motrin bottle that has that very distinct weird lid, that Tylenol bottle that also has a pretty distinct lid, and even the pretty standard prescription medication bottles can come in different heights. But let’s say for the sake of the situation that you have a bunch of those pretty standard prescription medication bottles. How do you know which one is the medicine for your kid? Well, first of all you can label it as soon as you bring it home before it goes into the cabinet with the rest, the rest of which are also probably already labeled. But you can also check out the pill itself. Pills are pretty similar, but are still almost always just a little bit different from every other one you have. Whether it’s much larger, much smaller, has a different texture, is oblong instead of round or vice versa, is circular but thicker or thinner then another circular pill you have, or is oblong but has a seam in the middle that another oblong pill does not or vice versa, or has a smooth glossy texture or something a little more rough, almost every pill is just a little bit different in shape and size and texture. Chances are you will not have two totally different pills that look and feel exactly the same. Sometimes some pills even have little logos or words engraved into them, and while you can’t read it, you can feel that there is an engraving there and that another pill does not have it. So even if labeling doesn’t work, the minute you pull the pill into your hand and pluck it between your fingers, you will notice if something is wrong.

So this is obviously only a vague overview, and I’m not a parent myself so I can’t answer a whole lot more than this, but it really is easily possible and really isn’t any harder than it is for anybody else. There is, in fact, an entire division of the National Federation of the Blind made up of blind parents, specifically for the purpose of advocating for the rights of line parents and educating newer blind parents who need answers, to support those who want to become parents or plan to but still don’t know if they can, and all of those other things. I’m actually going to give you that resource, because it can probably help to comfort you a lot for the future as well as serve as very informational and enlightening on all aspects of blindness, not just to you but to everybody else reading.

Resources for blind parents:
https://nfb.org/blindparents

That page has a ton of information. The organization has many articles and documents and pieces of writing by whole bunch of line parents to give you as much information as they can, it has links to videos from blind parents on how they parent, and even a link to the blind parents email listserv that you can absolutely join to get answers to questions or just to read emails that come through and learn from a distance.

I really hope this helped and that the link above can give you even more comfort that everything you could ever want for the future is more than possible and within reach. Blind parents live every day in this world and I know some of them personally, and it is not because they are extraordinary blind people who beat the odds, but because they are in fact incredibly ordinary blind people who know that they are just as capable of parenting as anybody else.

Thank you for asking and never be afraid to ask more!

Additional resources,

For parents with a range of different disabilities, though focused on the UK: http://disabledparentsnetwork.org.uk/

Again in the UK, for parents who are blind or have low vision: http://www.rnib.org.uk/information-everyday-living-family-friends-and-carers/resources-blind-or-partially-sighted-parents

A few more links for parents with disabilities in general, in the US: http://www.apa.org/monitor/may03/resources.aspx