A close-up photograph of a laptop screen displaying an online news article. The article's headline reads, "The Trump administration's rhetoric about disability diminishes us all." The page features an image of former U.S. President Donald Trump speaking at a podium, with other smaller images below.

COGNOSCENTI | The Trump administration’s rhetoric about disability diminishes us all

Grateful to write today for Cognoscenti/WBUR, Boston’s NPR station (read the full essay here): “The language we use and the stories we tell shape our behavior, writes Amy Julia Becker. And whether it is the overtly offensive mockery of the R-word or the suggestion that disability threatens our collective health and safety, this administration is telling a misleading and inaccurate story of disability as defect.”

This rhetoric sets up a hierarchy of human value in which the disabled fall to the bottom of a competitive heap. The Trump administration is telling a false story not only about disability, but about who we are as humans.

I’m particularly attuned to the language surrounding disability because our 19-year-old daughter Penny has Down syndrome. When she was diagnosed at birth, doctors and nurses gave us words like birth defect, chromosomal abnormality and intellectual disability to describe her condition. The initial story I was told about our daughter was framed in the language of deficit and problem.

Over time, our family learned a different way of understanding Down syndrome, which began with getting to know our daughter…

The Trump administration’s use of accusatory and demeaning language for people with disabilities creates a narrative that calls their worth into question. The language of defect leads easily to divisive and dehumanizing policies.

Keep Reading: The Trump administration’s rhetoric about disability diminishes us all 


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