Can we make the world a better place for disabled people write an essay
Answers
Answer: No the world would not be a better place
People dislike disability because it reminds them of imperfection in the body and/or the mind. However, this is not to say that others who have no disabilities are perfect, not to mention that disability is often hidden. You may have a model who is physically beautiful who deals with ADHD or dyslexia. You may have an abled bodied person who is subject to intense rage and beats up their spouse or subject drivers to road rage. Intense, uncontrolled anger is not a disability, but it is a problem. You have other people who walk fine, read fine, and do everything that society expects of the able, yet they are not kind or helpful to others, focusing solely on their own needs.
You may walk by a person in the street and never realize they have a disability, unless they tell you.
The body is the last vestige for accepted discrimination. Obese people are routinely slandered. Their weight problem may be hormonal or caused by medication. Some overeat because they were abused and found food to be their only comfort. Should anyone with a propensity toward obesity never be born? Aren’t they imperfect, even if they are not disabled?
Some people are born without any disability, then get into a car accident. They never walk again. We have soldiers returning from combat who lose limbs because of IEDs, and need prosthetics. Combat veterans and many others deal with PTSD from feeling trapped by a traumatic situation in which they couldn’t help themselves or anyone else. Should they not be born? A person who jumps into their car is not expecting to become disabled at the end of the day. No soldier wants to lose a limb or face a lifetime of flashbacks.
My point is this: you are stuck with disability because life is fickle. Things happen, and people are never the same again. Even if you somehow stopped birth defects or any disabled infant to come into the world, you then have to tackle another problem: the people who develop disability in their lifetimes