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Date: | Thu, 19 Dec 1996 09:17:48 EST |
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Do a web search on George Covington, a blind photographer and gadfly
advocate for "Universal Design" on how to make stuff accessible to the
visually handicapped.
A new book called "Universal Design" by George and Bruce Hannah gives
some wonderful examples of creative design solutions for people with
varying degrees of disabilities.
BTW, one of the quirky things about democracies is that they don't
only respond to the interests of majorities. That, in fact, is why
the Senate is not proportionately representative (2 senators from
Montana and two from New York); and a principal rationale behind the
Supreme Court. Protecting the vital interests of minorities is one of
the brilliant achievements (though only imperfectly realized) of
modern American government.
So, for the minority of Americans who like to go to museums and
non-commercial music and dance concerts; or who value historic
buildings and the meanings they contain; or who think that botanical
gardens and science museums are vital to the well-being of
communities; or who have physical disabilities which need special
accommodation, let's hear it for bending over backwards to help
minorities. If strict majority interest were all that mattered, the
country would be much poorer in diversity (no federal funding for
museums and the arts in general, I would suspect.)
Or, should we prefer Scrooge "Are there not workhouses for the poor?"
Eric Siegel
[log in to unmask]
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