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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

about this story in today's Metro?

90 replies

EyelinerQueen · 13/06/2014 09:48

DP sent me this from the bus this morning. An excerpt from a story about the World Cup opening ceremony.

I know it's not exactly The Washington Post and I'm not at all one of the P.O. brigade but I am genuinely baffled at this.

It's not just me is it?

about this story in today's Metro?
OP posts:
tethersend · 13/06/2014 09:49

What does it say? Am on phone and can't read the photo...

gordyslovesheep · 13/06/2014 09:51

I am baffled - can you explain a bit more?

EyelinerQueen · 13/06/2014 09:51

Sorry tethers

"Three doves were released by children and a paraplegic in a robot suit delivered the first ceremonial kick of the competition."

Hmm
OP posts:
Canus · 13/06/2014 10:03

What's wrong with that? Sounds ok to me.

Canthisonebeused · 13/06/2014 10:05

Not very PC to say "a paraplegic" I suppose but nothing particularly baffling

MelanieCheeks · 13/06/2014 10:07

Really? I thought paraplegic was a medical term, I'd never have regarded it as offensive.

EyelinerQueen · 13/06/2014 10:08

Really? Referring to someone as 'a paraplegic' is acceptable?

Willing to accept I'm wrong but that seems rather reductive and disablist to me.

Is it ok to describe a child who had Downs Syndrome as a 'Downs Syndrome'? (Giving this example as I've encountered people doing it before).

OP posts:
SmashleyHop · 13/06/2014 10:09

Paraplegic is a medical term- I thought this thread was going to be about how boring the opening ceremonies were.. I'll go now.

SomethingAboutNothing · 13/06/2014 10:09

Doesn't paraplegic just refer to their level of paralysis? Is quadriplegic also 'not grey PC'? How should we refer to somebody with this condition? (Am I allowed to say disability still?)

SomethingAboutNothing · 13/06/2014 10:10
  • not VERY
Canthisonebeused · 13/06/2014 10:12

Me too melanie, I'm just guessing really and come up with it possibly being labelling? But I'm not sure any other way of wording it. A man who is paraplegic, a paraplegic man. No idea I think there is no other way of phrasing it though.

Andrewofgg · 13/06/2014 10:15

Paraplegic should be used as an adjective, not a noun, but this is an improvement on the days when paraplegic people were hidden from view in case they caused upset, so I think the glass is more than half full.

Nancy66 · 13/06/2014 10:17

Wasn't a paraplegic wearing a negro coloured shirt was it?

NoArmaniNoPunani · 13/06/2014 10:17

I'm hemiplegic and I'd prefer to be referred to as a person with hemiplegia rather than a hemiplegic. My hemi doesn't define me, I'm still a person first.

dawndonnaagain · 13/06/2014 10:18

It is unacceptable. The person with paraplegia is a person. That's all there is too it. I shall be complaining to The Metro.

EyelinerQueen · 13/06/2014 10:20

Paraplegic is a medical term.

The person is not just their medical condition. Presumably they are a human being who exists beyond the description of their illness. To describe them purely as their disability seems incredibly outdated and discriminatory to me.

There are a dozen other ways they could have worded it to describe a person who happens to be paraplegic and their part in the ceremony.

It's The Metro so shitty journalism is order of the day. I'm just surprised so many people think it's ok.

OP posts:
EyelinerQueen · 13/06/2014 10:22

Oh thank feck some sane posters have turned up! Thank you armani and Dawn.

And Grin at Nancy. I did wonder if I am today's Asda/Negro poster!

OP posts:
Canthisonebeused · 13/06/2014 10:23

I don't think anyone is particularly suggesting it is ok. Most posters who didn't see the obvious offence have also questioned weather it is ok, have they not?

bauhausfan · 13/06/2014 10:24

It's not ok - the person is paraplegic not 'a paraplegic' - they have left out the bit where he/she is a human being and much, much more than one aspect of their physical condition.

I feel the same way (as the mother of a child with epilepsy) when I read about people being referred to as 'an epileptic'. Grr! It is dehumanising and language is the first step to eugenics.

dawndonnaagain · 13/06/2014 10:24

to it Apologies!

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 13/06/2014 10:24

You're totally right - yes, paraplegia is what the individual has, not what he is!

Canthisonebeused · 13/06/2014 10:26

I think that's wrong too bahuh. After more consideration Would it not be better to say the person has paraplegia.

fromparistoberlin73 · 13/06/2014 10:27

its a fact, nothing more, nothing less. not an opinion, or a judgement but a fact.

that said "a paraplegic person" might have been better

but presumable there was areason for chossing someone with this condition to do it, hence why its been mentioned?

Deverethemuzzler · 13/06/2014 10:27

Why couldn't they say 'a man'

why do they have to reduce him to a medical term?

My daughter was once called 'a luekemic' by a nurse.

My beautiful 12 year old daughter who has a name was referred to as a cancer.

Maybe think of it that way, apply it to someone you know and love and then reconsider how you feel about this method of labeling people Smile

Nancy66 · 13/06/2014 10:29

There's a chance, as the person was in a robot suit, that you couldn't tell whether a man or woman?

Don't know. didn't watch

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