First I want to start by saying how worried I was that yesterdays protest would somehow damage the reputation of the new disabled peoples movements and create headlines and stories off message and distracting to the main cause. I am really glad that this hasn't been the case, as I have seen some really great stories and coverage of the day yesterday (it was only twitter that seemed to get a bit negative).
I was really impressed that everyone decided to move off in a peaceful way and that there were no arrests or any disturbances. I LOLed at the police vans not being able to take wheelchairs and I am really amazed and in awe of those who took part. As with any protest, the participants take a great risk to their health and the personal sacrifice for a greater cause is appreciated.
However, and I say this tentatively because I don't want to hurt feelings or create tension, I am concerned. I speak from a disability studies angle, and I hope you appreciate that with this degree I am being taught to be critically aware of issues surrounding disability and to 'look beyond' the surface.
Yesterdays protest in my opinion was all about the wheelchairs blocking the road. Although many other disabled people were involved in this protest and stood alongside non disabled ukuncut activists there was little focus on them. It is a little bit of a bugbear of mine (which I apologise for) that people (IE society) sees disability as people in wheelchairs. Yesterdays protest, in my opinion only perpetuated that belief. There appeared to be no equality with other disabled people, and in my opinion they were the ones who took the greater risk. If the police were to start clearing the protest they would have started with the standing protestors under the assumption that these people were not disabled and part of ukuncut.
Thats what I really liked about the hardest hit march that I went on in october, and the internet based campaigning on twitter. There is equality of participation. In October the slowest walkers went at the front of the march and it was at a slow pace for everyone to feel involved. Everyone felt a part of it and had equal role to play.
On twitter, and on the internet, no one knows whose in a wheelchair and whose got what impairment, or even if they are impaired. The internet doesn't discriminate on the grounds of disability. Again everyone was able to take part equally and contribute equally to the action.
Now, as I have said before I have great admiration for yesterdays protest. It was daring and it was an amazing thing to have pulled off. I am just thinking that in future things like this could be less focused on using wheelchairs as barricades and focusing more on a way for all disabled people to participate equally?
Sunday, 29 January 2012
Saturday, 28 January 2012
26,000 pounds and all that jazz
I wrote this blog earlier. http://allbigideas.blogspot.com/2012/01/my-fake-family.html In it I used the figure that has been claimed to be the average uk wage. Or so I thought? Since posting, people have catergorically stated to me that 26k is the average HOUSEHOLD income.
Heres a summary of my findings below. The average british family income is 40,000 pounds according to the BBC (based on 2 adults working). The average salary for a UK worker (full time) is 26,244 gross (BEfORE tax) about 20 K after tax.
And the UK government is expecting whole familys to live on the gross earnings of one full time worker (who would be entitled to benefits to top up their income in my calculation above) regardless of their size or household rent or mortgage? Shouldn't the government be looking to the BBC article that clearly demonstrates that even on 40,000 pounds the average family struggles?
-----
my train of thought and sources...
So, I got twitter to help me after I did some digging and found this: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15197860
which clearly states
"The average income for a British family with two adults working is £40,000 a year. But while there are people who feel well-off living on this, for others it is a daily struggle."
Obviously I got confused and so asked for a source of the 26,000 figure. Which thansk to Queerpup I got. http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2011/nov/23/uk-household-earnings-fall
from the link:
"The median salary for a full-time worker in the UK rose 1.4% in 2011 to £26,244, "
so again, is that net or gross?
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/ashe/annual-survey-of-hours-and-earnings/ashe-results-2011/ashe-statistical-bulletin-2011.html
"Median gross annual earnings for full-time employees (including those whose pay was affected by absence) were £26,200, an increase of 1.4 per cent from 2010 "
so its gross...
Heres a summary of my findings below. The average british family income is 40,000 pounds according to the BBC (based on 2 adults working). The average salary for a UK worker (full time) is 26,244 gross (BEfORE tax) about 20 K after tax.
And the UK government is expecting whole familys to live on the gross earnings of one full time worker (who would be entitled to benefits to top up their income in my calculation above) regardless of their size or household rent or mortgage? Shouldn't the government be looking to the BBC article that clearly demonstrates that even on 40,000 pounds the average family struggles?
-----
my train of thought and sources...
So, I got twitter to help me after I did some digging and found this: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15197860
which clearly states
"The average income for a British family with two adults working is £40,000 a year. But while there are people who feel well-off living on this, for others it is a daily struggle."
Obviously I got confused and so asked for a source of the 26,000 figure. Which thansk to Queerpup I got. http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2011/nov/23/uk-household-earnings-fall
from the link:
"The median salary for a full-time worker in the UK rose 1.4% in 2011 to £26,244, "
so again, is that net or gross?
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/ashe/annual-survey-of-hours-and-earnings/ashe-results-2011/ashe-statistical-bulletin-2011.html
"Median gross annual earnings for full-time employees (including those whose pay was affected by absence) were £26,200, an increase of 1.4 per cent from 2010 "
so its gross...
my fake family...
It concerns me that the government caps benefits at 26,000. They argue that this is the average wage in the UK and no one should earn more on benefits. Fair enough you say? Apart from the obvious problem that the cap is being applied per household and not per person (as the average pay is for one person not a household). I wanted to see whether a person earning 26k after tax would be entitled to benefits. As the government deems it enough to live on for one group, surely the answer would be no?
meet my fake family. A single parent, earning 35k a year (26k after tax) with 3 children. They live in this house in sheffield. I chose the cheapest rental 3 bedroom house on in sheffield. They pay 495 pcm. As the parent works I have estimated 100 pounds a week is spent on childcare (say 2 children need childcare, 5 pounds an hour for 10 hours a week). Council tax band A in sheffield is: £983.49 a year. They have no other income.
So, putting all this into http://www.turn2us.org.uk/benefits_search.aspx
So, my fake family would be better off in work. 33,268 pounds would be their income if they were in work, and if they are out of work this drops to only 21,168.37.
Even on 26,000 pounds a single parent would be entitled to benefits. There is a big difference in the income you receive if you are not working.
meet my fake family. A single parent, earning 35k a year (26k after tax) with 3 children. They live in this house in sheffield. I chose the cheapest rental 3 bedroom house on in sheffield. They pay 495 pcm. As the parent works I have estimated 100 pounds a week is spent on childcare (say 2 children need childcare, 5 pounds an hour for 10 hours a week). Council tax band A in sheffield is: £983.49 a year. They have no other income.
So, putting all this into http://www.turn2us.org.uk/benefits_search.aspx
That is a total of 7,300 pounds of benefit entitlement. Ok, so lets say this single parent looses their job? They'd get more, or the same right? Thats what the government says, the government is cracking down on benefit entitlement being too high. Wrong...
Even on 26,000 pounds a single parent would be entitled to benefits. There is a big difference in the income you receive if you are not working.
Friday, 27 January 2012
article from pulse...
http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/comment-blogs/-/blogs/13347229/working-without-enthusiasm-is-the-best-we-ve-been-able-to-come-up-with
to save you registering il put it here:
to save you registering il put it here:
'Working without enthusiasm is the best we've been able to come up with'
4.00PM 26 January 2012
As the British Medical Association draws up plans for industrial action
over pension reforms it remains far from clear exactly what form this
action should take.
A BMA representative says: 'Working without enthusiasm is the best we’ve been able to come up with. Forget banner-waving and looting Asda, we’ve decided that the best thing we can do to send the government a clear and consistent message is to behave in exactly the same way that you do every Monday morning.'
'Refuse to smile, sign scripts really slowly with a pencil, tut at patients when they ask for a sick line because their knee is a bit tingly and just let those forms for disability living allowance gather dust in the depths of your pigeon hole. In fact we suggest that you do what every member of the working British public does on a Monday morning and Friday afternoon.'
In order to get some feedback about working without enthusiasm, which is a concept unheard of in the medical profession, the BMA consulted Julie who works part time at the Croydon branch of Topshop.
Julie won the Working Without Enthusiasm award for three years in a row and last year she spent half of her shift smoking fags out the back which is a branch record.
Julie says: 'Working without enthusiasm is really very simple if you get the basics right. First of all, you need a slack expression ... like this ... then you need to chew gum like it’s going out of fashion and then you need to perfect the art of wrinkling up your nose in disbelief if anyone asks you to do anything.
'The next step is to develop an overwhelming addiction to Facebook, and show more interest in Katy Perry than kidney cancer. That last one might be difficult for doctors but it’s amazing what you can do if you just apply yourself.'
We also tried to contact the Professor of Procrastination studies for his views, but he replied: 'I’m out for lunch, call me back sometime.'
A BMA representative says: 'Working without enthusiasm is the best we’ve been able to come up with. Forget banner-waving and looting Asda, we’ve decided that the best thing we can do to send the government a clear and consistent message is to behave in exactly the same way that you do every Monday morning.'
'Refuse to smile, sign scripts really slowly with a pencil, tut at patients when they ask for a sick line because their knee is a bit tingly and just let those forms for disability living allowance gather dust in the depths of your pigeon hole. In fact we suggest that you do what every member of the working British public does on a Monday morning and Friday afternoon.'
In order to get some feedback about working without enthusiasm, which is a concept unheard of in the medical profession, the BMA consulted Julie who works part time at the Croydon branch of Topshop.
Julie won the Working Without Enthusiasm award for three years in a row and last year she spent half of her shift smoking fags out the back which is a branch record.
Julie says: 'Working without enthusiasm is really very simple if you get the basics right. First of all, you need a slack expression ... like this ... then you need to chew gum like it’s going out of fashion and then you need to perfect the art of wrinkling up your nose in disbelief if anyone asks you to do anything.
'The next step is to develop an overwhelming addiction to Facebook, and show more interest in Katy Perry than kidney cancer. That last one might be difficult for doctors but it’s amazing what you can do if you just apply yourself.'
We also tried to contact the Professor of Procrastination studies for his views, but he replied: 'I’m out for lunch, call me back sometime.'
Thursday, 26 January 2012
normal people are really sick...
My new years resolution for 2012 was to become
well.
Nothing too serious though, I don’t want to be
an out and out normie or anything, perhaps just a touch of ableness, so perhaps
I could work or something?
I hear theres a lot of money to be made from being
normal. Aparantly you can even get a job, you know a proper one, not just one
of those workfare ones. One that pays tax and everything.
And it is far easier to be seen as normal these
days than was ever the case, just go and see ATOS and you’l be instantly cured,
fit for work!
Also, I am nothing if not a creature of fashion,
a cool and with-it hipster, daddy-o, who is always up to date with the latest
trends.
And being normal is incredibly fashionable. The
number of people who claim to be normal has doubled in the past ten years.
(again, thanks to ATOS for that)
And who can blame them? Not only do you get a
hell of a lot more money from working than being on benefits- but if you play
your cards right you might even be able to afford a brand new car of your own
and perhaps even a week or two in the sun. You could even afford to park
wherever you want and not have to go home if there are no spaces near the
shops.
Ahh, the shops, if I was normal I might be able
to actually buy things in them, you know, with real money? And I could use a
normal toilet, without having to wait for the only disabled loo that’s usually
taken up with a parent changing her kid or a wayward MP. And no guilt either!
Amazing!
The latest figures regarding employment and
being normal came out this week. It is now estimated that the majority of the
population are normal, and are fit to work. What’s more, almost all of them
have been able to do so for more than a decade! WOW shocker!
When you suggest this is a public scandal, the
government get very cross and accusing you of victimizing the normals.
But I’m not. I’m vicitimising the people who are
normal in order to claim handouts from employers. Disgusting behaviour, is
working.
Or at least, I’m trying to: I don’t suppose it
will have much effect. Just water off their supposedly straight backs.
Then the right wingers will say- hang on a
minute, you fat old leftie, more money is lost to the country through sickness
benefits than from tax avoidance. And then I would point them in the direction
of the facts…
And the Government should deal with that
misleading statement with a bit more vigour than they do right now.
But it still doesn’t make normals ok does it?
Its like saying we shouldn’t get worked up about
not being able to work, because working is so much worse.
It’s a silly argument, we all know normals have
it too good.
More
than anything, though, the people who find that people are normal are doing a
disservice to their country, ATOS are denying people who are truly disabled or
ill, and forcing them out into the workplace. It has become easier for ATOS to
do this, partly as a consequence of the government who, out of their own
self-interest, insist that an ever-greater proportion of the population is normal.
I
think we should all try and be disabled for a month or so, try and claim
benefits and see how hard it really is. Then hopefully it might persuade the government
to sort out the mess.
http://www.freezepage.com/1327578079WVBGACETGC (a parody of this article)
Wednesday, 25 January 2012
who would you demonise?
I am desperately trying to think of another real life example to prove how ludicrous the idea of attacking tenants for the cost of their rents that landlords have set. I think it would be akin to having a go at the passengers of an airplane for the cost of the plane tickets.
You wouldn't have a go at the passengers. After all they didn't chose the price of their ticket and its set by the airline. Equally you wouldn't have a go at the air stewardess for the price, but perhaps the government for the ammount of taxes and charges but mainly the airline itself.
In the same way, a tenant very often has little choice over their acomondation, the ammount they pay for it etc etc. it is set by local rates and landlords out to make a profit. It should always be the fault of the landlord and perhaps the government for allowing this to continue.
You wouldn't have a go at the passengers. After all they didn't chose the price of their ticket and its set by the airline. Equally you wouldn't have a go at the air stewardess for the price, but perhaps the government for the ammount of taxes and charges but mainly the airline itself.
In the same way, a tenant very often has little choice over their acomondation, the ammount they pay for it etc etc. it is set by local rates and landlords out to make a profit. It should always be the fault of the landlord and perhaps the government for allowing this to continue.
Monday, 23 January 2012
not in my name.
Since seeing that disabled people are planning an act of civil disobedience on Saturday I have been thinking a lot about this.
Disabled people have been fighting very hard recently to be recognised as having a legitimate and valued voice, and I dare say we have been successful in this. As Sue Marsh said in her blog, we are no longer considered scroungers and dole scum. Thanks to the Spartacusreport we have raised disabled peoples profile in the national media, wider society and more importantly within the houses of power at westminister.
As I said on twitter the other day, the spartacusreport managed to get inside the HoL in an amendment and not just standing outside with a placard. Its success was in my opinion soley down to one thing. Accessibility. It meant that, for the first time the majority of disabled people could all unite together with one voice, one message using the same means. The internet has become one of the best tools for disabled people to communicate. There weren't any practical issues of traditional protesting and people were able to contribute in their own small way to make a big difference.
My fear for saturday is that all this good work will get undone. disabled people have been fighting for the front pages of newspapers with a legitimate, factual and reasoned argument with the spartacusreport, but unfortunately this might hit the headlines for all the wrong reasons.
It might shove spartacus report into the sidelines and change the public's new perception of disabled people once again into a negative and scrounging stereotype.
I know I would prefer disabled people to be known for the calm, reasoned, thoughtful, intellectual and factual arguements within the spartacus report than for some stunt in central london.
Disabled people have been fighting very hard recently to be recognised as having a legitimate and valued voice, and I dare say we have been successful in this. As Sue Marsh said in her blog, we are no longer considered scroungers and dole scum. Thanks to the Spartacusreport we have raised disabled peoples profile in the national media, wider society and more importantly within the houses of power at westminister.
As I said on twitter the other day, the spartacusreport managed to get inside the HoL in an amendment and not just standing outside with a placard. Its success was in my opinion soley down to one thing. Accessibility. It meant that, for the first time the majority of disabled people could all unite together with one voice, one message using the same means. The internet has become one of the best tools for disabled people to communicate. There weren't any practical issues of traditional protesting and people were able to contribute in their own small way to make a big difference.
My fear for saturday is that all this good work will get undone. disabled people have been fighting for the front pages of newspapers with a legitimate, factual and reasoned argument with the spartacusreport, but unfortunately this might hit the headlines for all the wrong reasons.
It might shove spartacus report into the sidelines and change the public's new perception of disabled people once again into a negative and scrounging stereotype.
I know I would prefer disabled people to be known for the calm, reasoned, thoughtful, intellectual and factual arguements within the spartacus report than for some stunt in central london.
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