Has your leg injury somehow migrated to your brain to diminish your reading comprehension ability? OP is commenting on people in wheelchairs who are not truly handicapped. Not you. |
I am amazed that you can’t think of any disabilities that would make a person able to do some walking, but not a lot of walking. |
Nope, OP was commenting on people she thinks are not truly handicapped. HUGE difference. |
The whole point is that if OP say this person and their leg braces weren’t visible, OP would think they were not handicapped because they walked. You and OP don’t understand how disability works, apparently. |
The nice thing would be a society where people actually care enough about access for people with disabilities to where some minor financial or logistical inefficiency isn't being whined about, a society where everyone has value and people aren't simply "me, me, me" all the time. |
In such a society, people wouldn’t fake a disability to get expedited access. I do think it’s likely a real minority because the current system is really crappy and you often have to wait very long times for a chair…..so I really don’t think many people are using it just for convenience. My mom has interstitial lung disease and can walk short distances but would not be able to walk through an airport. |
People were doing this with Southwest to board early and pick a set. You’d get to the gate and there would be a line of 35 people in wheelchairs and maybe two of them would use one to get off. |
I've never seen this and I fly SW all the time. |
OP doesn't know if they are handicapped or not. She doesn't have the first clue about accessibility, either. |
Exactly. She doesn't get to define handicapped, either. |
DP. Very common on routes from northern states to FLL, especially in the winter. All the patients are age 70+. “Miracle flights” they are called. |
This thread is revolting. Many people with disabilities would give anything to be able to walk to their gate. Being pushed in a wheelchair feels very vulnerable, especially when someone is accustomed to “hiding” their disability due to perceived stigma (as with MS, and other neurological diseases that aren’t always apparent to others). There are many “invisible” disabilities and medical conditions that cause mobility impairment.
Begrudging people this accommodation is a disgrace. I recognize that OP is only referring to people who are faking it, but how could she possibly know? She’s basically saying that she scrutinizes people who are getting the wheelchair, side/eying them and wondering if they are deserving. It would be a very small percentage of the population who would actually be attempting to game the system. I cannot imagine being small-minded enough to spend even a moment thinking about this. But it indicates that OP probably carries around a lot of petty grievances that diminish her well-being, so I should probably be sympathetic. But I’m not. Disability is not uncommon, and any one of us could need that wheelchair at any time. I would focus your energy elsewhere, OP. |
This is me OP. I can walk some, but I can't walk all the way through the airport to the gate without stopping several times to rest. |
Should’ve said that being pushed in a wheelchair *can* feel very vulnerable.^^ |
I can stand and walk for about 10 minutes without any issues. Then my knees lock. That’s why i always ask for a wheelchair at IAD. However seeing me you would think there’s nothing wrong with me. |