Tuesday, 16 February 2016

The Loneliness of the Long-Suffering Autism Parent

It's half-term, but I'm up.

I'm up because T. has an interview and assessment at our local college today.

I'm up, but he isn't.

Once again, his anxieties got the better of him and he's in hiding under his multiple blankets and quilts, the portable air-con machine blowing and buzzing away to create the droning sounds he needs to soothe him.

Once again, my hopes are shattered that he would actually attempt this; but not that shattered, let's face it, I was expecting it. I was hoping to be wrong, I was hoping I was under-estimating him, I was hoping that all the professionals telling me he would be fine with my support were right this time.

But no, as per usual, it turns out that I am yet again the only expert who got it right, no, I wasn't being melodramatic, or over-protective, or dismissive of his abilities. Nope, I had him pegged just right. I knew this would prove too much of an obstacle, I knew this would happen, I knew that I would be left feeling yet again inadequate, unable to get my child to accomplish one of the simplest steps of the day: get out of bed.

Right now, as I can hear the low purring of the machine in the bedroom above my head, I am despondent, but numb to yet again another disappointment. To be honest, I am at the point where I just want to shrug and give up... except I can't, can I? If I give up, then what? What of the future? What will he do? What will become of him?

And so, the cycle continues; I have phoned the college to make his excuses, I am now going to e-mail his school and the Local Authority to let them know that, yet again, they have failed my son in their duty to support him, and I will try very hard not to say: "I told you this was going to happen!" even though I feel that they set him up to fail. Again. And so, we will start the dance again after 1/2 term.

Regrets will be expressed that he couldn't overcome his anxieties, that he isn't seizing the opportunities offered to him, and I will yet again think: But this isn't news! He didn't turn up for his English GCSE last year, because of his anxiety getting the better of him, what made you think that just letting him loose with only mum's support to go to college, a completely unknown quantity, was going to happen? All his life, anxiety has paralysed him from doing things, even things he does want to do, what on Earth made you think this time was going to be different? And more importantly, what are you going to do about it? Because I am out of ideas here.

It feels like a giant game of Jenga here, where they are removing the struts of effective support for my boy, one after the other, and I seem to be the only one to realise that once they remove one piece too many, too early, this human being precariously perched at the top will be left without support whatsoever, long before he is actually stable enough to hold on.

And here I am, writing this in a blog, because those who have the tools to give the support don't seem to understand, whilst those who do understand don't have the tools to give the support, so I am left, yet again alone, to worry about the future...



Friday, 2 January 2015

Saturday, 27 December 2014

So, what has Europe ever done for us, apart from... (March 21, 2007 6:00 PM In The Independent newspaper)

REMINDER: This article is from 2007, BEFORE the US-created, but soon worldwide banking crash which derailed some of the predictions in the article. This explains why some of the economic views are so hugely out of sync with what really happened. By and large, however, most of the list is still very much relevant and accurate. 


**********************************************************

So, what has Europe ever done for us? Apart from...

(March 21, 2007 6:00 PM In The Independent newspaper)

1. The end of war between European nations - While rows between England, France and Germany have been a feature of EU summits, war between Europe's major powers is now unthinkable. The fact that the two world wars that shaped the last century now seem so remote is, in itself, tribute to a visionary project that has permanently changed the landscape. As the EU celebrates the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome it is clear that while the detailed topography will always be difficult to agree, it is an extraordinary achievement that we are standing on common ground.

2. Democracy is flourishing in 27 countries - Spain, Portugal, Greece, and the EU's 10 ex-Communist countries are parliamentary democracies. None of these nations were truly free in the decades following the Second World War. Each is now a democracy anchored within the EU and is unlikely to change course.

3. Once poor countries like Ireland, Greece and Portugal prospering - EU subsidies well spent have been crucial to the lift-off of the Irish economy. Once firmly in Britain's economic shadow, the Celtic tiger has emerged. Gross domestic product per capita in Ireland in 2005 was 137.1 per cent of the EU average, compared to 116.8 per cent in the UK.

4. The creation of the world's largest internal trading market - The 27-nation EU now around 500m people making it the world's largest economic trading bloc. By comparison the US has a population of around 300m. The old EU 25 had 19.2 per cent of the World's exports as compared with 14.4 per cent from the US. This gap is set to grow following the last enlargement in January to 27 member states.

5. Shopping without frontiers has given consumers more power - European consumers can buy goods for their own use in whichever EU country they choose - in person, on the internet, over the telephone, or by mail order - without paying additional taxes. This competition is driving down prices and increasing quality

6. Co-operation on continent-wide immigration policy - Though EU countries set immigration levels the EU is increasingly active in the fight against illegal migration and in trying to match the labour needs of European countries to the supply of migrants. On the downside, the EU is increasingly an impregnable fortress and many lose their lives trying to get here by boat from Africa

7. Crime-busting co-operation, through Europol - This provides a clearing house for EU police forces. The police in EU member states can now use an EU arrest warrant to get suspects moved from one country to another where they will face serious charges without lengthy extradition procedures.

8. Laws which make it easier for British people to buy property in Europe - It may not be good for the environment but access to second homes a short-haul flight away has fulfilled the dreams of millions of Britons. Retirement or regular holidays from the south of Spain to the east of Bulgaria has become a reality for many and a legally safeguarded one at that.

9. Cleaner beaches and rivers throughout Europe - EU law and peer pressure - including annual reports - have forced the UK to clean up its act, for example bringing the once-dirty waters off Blackpool beach up to standard. The first EU legislation was passed in 1976 with two more pieces in 2002 and 2006. Now you can monitor the quality of bathing water by checking on a website.

10. Four weeks statutory paid holiday a year for workers in Europe - The EU Working Time Directive ensures that all Europeans get at least four weeks of paid holiday per year. In the US many workers get a fortnight. The same directive provides for 11 hours rest in every 24 and one day of rest per week plus a rest break if the working day is longer than six hours. Minimum standards are set for paid maternity and paternity leave.

11. No death penalty (incompatible with EU membership) - No EU member state has the death penalty and reintroduction of capital punishment would not be compatible with EU membership. Even countries outside the EU are having to review their policies if they want to be considered for membership of the club, most notably Turkey.

12. Competition means cheaper phone calls - Since the liberalisation of telecommunications in the 1980s loosened the grip of the monopolies, prices have plummeted. The European Commission says the cost of international calls in the EU has fallen by 80 per cent since 1984.

13. Small EU bureaucracy (24,000 employees, fewer than the BBC) - Despite the eurosceptic claims, the number of EU officials is surprisingly small. After the scandal of 1999 when the Brussels based European Commission resigned, strict new rules were imposed on spending.

14. Making the French eat British beef again - When the BSE crisis subsided and British meat was judged safe, the European Court of Justice ordered France to resume imports. France contested the ruling but had no alternative in the end. By contrast, the US retains an embargo.

15. Minority languages, like Irish, Welsh and Catalan recognised and protected - Minority languages are gaining recognition. Be it Irish, Welsh or Catalan, minority languages are getting a greater role thanks to the EU which even has a Commissioner for Multilingualism. Irish became an official language of the EU this year. Catalans have lesser language rights because their tongue is official only in one part of Spain, their member states. The EU - with 23 official languages - is doing more to keep lesser tongues alive than some individual member states.

16. Europe is helping to save the planet with regulatory cuts in CO2 - The EU has announced the most ambitious targets for curbing carbon emissions, promising a cut of at least one-fifth on 1990 levels by 2020. Other parts of the world are being challenged to follow suit. The EU also has blazed a trail with its carbon emissions trading system which, despite teething troubles, is still a model for other parts of the world.

17. One currency from Bantry to Berlin (but not Britain) - The Euro is now the only real alternative to the dollar on the international stage. You can travel throughout 13 countries and use one currency. Slovenia became the 13th and latest nation to join the single currency this year. Several more nations have yet to meet the necessary criteria.

18. Europe wide bans on tyrants like Robert Mugabe - Smart sanctions on the Zimbabwean President and his cronies have been negotiated through the EU and prevent those on a list from visiting all 27 nations. Though countries differ in the way they believe the EU should treat the government in Harare, they all agreed to renew the sanctions for another year.

19. The EU gives twice as much aid to developing countries as the US - The European Union and its member states paid out more than €43bn in 2005 in public aid to developing countries. This is the equivalent of 0.34 per cent of GNP of the 25 member states, and is higher than the per capita aid levels of the United States at around 0.2 per cent. More than €7bn is channelled through the EU.

20. Strict safety standards for aircraft - Airlines deemed to be unsafe are now banned from travelling into any EU country. Recently some of Pakistan's national carrier were barred because of safety fears.

21. Free medical help for tourists - Any citizen of a European country is entitled to free medical treatment if he or she is taken ill or suffers an accident in another member state. So long as you carry the correct form from your national health service, no questions will be asked.

22. EU peace-keepers operate throughout the world - The EU is building its crisis intervention force and has taken over operations in Bosnia from Nato. EU forces have also been in action in Africa helping avert humanitarian crises. In addition the EU has a big policing project.

23. easyJet and Ryanair can fly anywhere without national rules protecting high cost flag carriers due to liberalisation of air travel - easyJet and Ryanair can fly anywhere without the national rules protecting high-cost flag carriers due to liberalisation of air travel. Any airlines granted a licence in an EU country - meeting safety standards and other conditions - can operate services anywhere within the EU. Between 1992 and 2000 prices at the cheaper end of the market fell by 40 per cent.

24. Introduction of pet passports - Since 2004 travelling across borders with pets has been easier. In addition to pet passports with a vaccination certificate pets require permanent identification which can be either a tattooed code on the skin or a microchip which can be read by a special machine. In the future the microchip is likely to be obligatory.

25. It will soon take only two hours from London to Paris by Eurostar - The Channel Tunnel, and high-speed lines in France and now Britain are not, properly speaking, EU projects. However, the tunnel was built partly as a means of reducing the mental barriers between Britain and the Continent. With the opening of the final section of Britain's fast line to St Pancras this year, trains will travel to Paris in two hours.

26. Prospect of EU membership has forced modernisation on Turkey - The presence of an affluent and stable bloc to its west has given the modernisers in Turkey the ally they needed to create a democratic constituency for change. That change has been pushed through with the promise of a European future.

27. Unparalleled rights for European consumers - Any consumer can send back a product if it breaks down within two years of purchase. Manufacturers often claim that they offer only a 12 month guarantee, but EU law states otherwise and consumers are demanding their rights.28. Study programmes and cheap travel means greater mobility for Europe's youth - Through the Erasmus programme, in the 2003-4 academic year, 7,500 UK students spent between three and 12 months at a university in one of the other member states.

29. Food labelling is much clearer - All ingredients used in food products must be listed. Any GM ingredients must be mentioned as must colouring, preservatives and other chemical additives.

30. End of the road for border crossings (apart from in the UK) - Frontier posts have been abandoned between the 15 countries that have implemented the Schengen accords. This agreement means that EU nationals crossing most borders in continental western Europe do not need to show passports. The newer nations plan to join in soon.

31. Compensation for air delays - Passengers must get immediate help if their flight is delayed by more than a few hours, cancelled without notice or if they are denied boarding because the plane is overbooked. The carrier must make alternative travel arrangements unless the passenger asks for their money back instead. Depending on the length of the delay they must provide food and refreshments and accommodation if necessary.

32. Strict ban on animal testing for the cosmetic industry - Since November 2004 the EU has banned animal testing on finished cosmetic products entirely. Remaining safety testing on animals of ingredients for cosmetics will be ended.

33. Greater protection for Europe's wildlife - Tough European laws protect birds, flora and fauna, although the EU bird directive is widely flouted in southern Europe, particularly in Malta where 2m migratory birds are shot each year, including 80 protected species which are shot or trapped by hunters.

34. Regional development fund has aided the deprived parts of Britain - Some of the UK's poorest regions have benefited from massive handouts from the EU which has been used to regenerate some of the country's most run-down areas. Scotland's Highland and Islands have benefited enormously as have the Welsh mining valleys, Cornwall and deprived inner cities like Liverpool.

35. European driving licences recognised - Driving licences issued in one EU country are valid in any other, providing they are modern, EU-standard, ones with a photo identity. This means that the old days of having to gain translations for a UK permit to drive in Italy are over.

36. Britons now feel a lot less insular - A famous newspaper headline (perhaps apocryphal) once read "Fog in Channel; Continent Cut Off". Remember the 1960s, when Ostend seemed like an exotic destination? EU membership has not dried up the English Channel but is has helped to remove the psychological barriers between Britain and the continent.

37. Europe's bananas remain bent, despite sceptics' fears - The suggestion that the EU wanted to impose straight bananas, or blue bananas, or ban all but Caribbean bananas, is one of the oldest of Euro-myths. Obsessive euro-harmonisation of rules is a thing of the past.

38. Strong economic growth - greater than the US last year - The EU's ambition to overtake America economically by 2010 has been ridiculed. The German economy has picked up with the UK and Nordic nations are performing strongly. Even Italy, thought to be in dire straits last year, is clocking up reasonable growth. The European Commission said it expects the economy of the 27-nation European Union to grow 2.7 per cent this year, ahead of the US's estimated 2.5 per cent

39. Single market has brought the best continental footballers to Britain - The Bosman ruling, based on European law, and other decisions, have freed up football transfers. From Eric Cantona to Thierry Henry and Cristiano Ronaldo, British fans have been enjoying watching Europe's finest talent for the past 15 years.

40. Human rights legislation has protected the rights of the individual - The introduction of the Human Rights Acts has provided a legal framework to prevent abuses of power.

41. European parliament provides democratic checks on all EU laws - The European Parliament, directly elected since 1979, has been given increased powers over the years. The parliament has made a significant impact in areas ranging from the environment to animal rights.

42. EU gives more, not less, sovereignty to nation states - Switzerland and Norway, two independent countries have little or no negotiating leverage when they deal with the EU. In fact they have less sovereignty than member states who decide the policy. Britons are more able to control their own destiny - in areas from international trade, to environmental protection, to consumer rights - because they are part of a 27 nation, democratic bloc. Real sovereignty, rather than theoretical sovereignty, is enhanced by EU membership.

43. Maturing EU is a proper counterweight to the power of US and China - As it develops common foreign and defence policies, the EU is finding its voice. Europe's interests and those of America and the emerging powers, such as China and India, will sometimes coincide, sometimes conflict. Could Britain's interests be protected if we stood alone or if we became a junior partner of the US?

44. European immigration has boosted the British economy - Hundreds of thousands of Poles commute between Poland and Britain. More surprisingly the economies of both countries are booming. The UK economy has benefited from a surge of well-qualified, highly motivated workers.

45. EU common research programme - Job opportunities and Europe-wide access to education mean there really are Europeans now who see the need to speak at least three modern languages.

46. Europe has set Britain an example how properly to fund a national health service - Some continental countries have health funding problems but several, the Dutch in particular, provide quality care while keeping down costs. It took the EU to rule that British patients had a right to seek care abroad.

47. British restaurants now much more cosmopolitan because of European influences - Britain has become - let us admit it - a more continental country in the last 34 years. We now care about what we eat. Nowhere has this been more marked than in the quality and variety of food being offered in our restaurants.

48. Mobility for career professionals throughout Europe - Professionals from doctors to architects now have a right to have their national qualifications recognised across the EU. Language and cultural barriers will always remain a problem for professionals but there are can no longer be purely protectionist obstacles to a career in another EU country.

49. Europe has revolutionised British attitudes to food and cooking - Despite major drawbacks, the bloated Common Agricultural Policy has enabled small family farmers to flourish in Europe. Its support has led to the birth of the Slow Food movement and arrival in British towns of farmers markets, growing with quality organics produce. Bon appetit!

50. Lists like this drive Eurosceptics mad - In the Daily Mail-Sun universe, the EU can never do any good. Brussels is an insane bureaucracy, which secretly plots to have all donkeys painted blue (with yellow stars). The 50th birthday of the European project is a time to celebrate the many positive things which the EU has brought us.


NOTE: I did not write this - I wish I had. I do not know the name of the author, I had copied and pasted the contents on a note which I have kept and cherished since. No breach of copyright or appropriation is intended here, if you are the author of the piece or know him or her, please get in touch, I would love to give them the credit they rightly deserve for it. The piece can't even be found on the Independent's website any  more! 

Monday, 3 February 2014

NHS Records for sale, opt-out NOW










Contrary to what the above logo says, the NHS is not only for sale, it has already been sold.  The figures are scary, and it's only the start. If you are interested into what's happening to our Health Services under our very noses, it won't take much of an Internet search to find out.





But this isn't the topic I want to discuss today. Amongst the rest of the dismantling of this august institution, our own data, all of our private information, all our most intimate details, is now going to be sold to private companies for data mining purpose. In theory, it's supposed to be all anonymous and only compiled for statistics, but the reality is somewhat different.


We should have all been sent this leaflet:


through our letterbox, but a lot of people won't even notice it, or if they do, will think it's just another junk mailshot, and even if they read it, how many will realise how sinister its significance? How many will know how to do something about it, or even if they should?

Make no mistake: Under the pernicious Health and Social Care Act 2012, your GP can not refuse to provide the data to these private companies. So, unless YOU tell your GP you do not want your data shared, shared it will be.

              
I strongly recommend people read this here:


then download and print this letter:


Then just take it to your Surgery and hand it to the receptionist. You can do it for all the members of your family.

WARNING: Data extraction is scheduled to start in March 2014.

If you do not want your confidential medical information scattered all over, 

ACT NOW. 

Please feel free to share these links and/or this blog far and wide across the Internet. 
Me, I'm off to my doctor's to hand over the opt-out forms for me and my family.



Saturday, 7 September 2013

Stockholm Syndrome Victim or Judas Goat...?


The Lesser-known Judatos Goat


So, a few weeks ago, I read a puff piece which begged for a rebuttal, and you can find it here, as well as the link to the original story:

Reply to Simon Stevens, author of "Atos Declares Coma Patients Fit' and Other Disability Related Welfare Urban Myths"


I am no hypocrite, and I didn't know Mr Stevens, so I set to educate him, in the hope that he would take on board what I had written, I sent him the link to my blog in the reply section of the Huff, and that was that.

Little could I guess that Mr Stevens would immediately take to his keyboard to write back. I can't say he answered my post, because you would be hard pressed to see the link between my post and his response. I hesitated long and hard before publishing his reply, which he'd sent on G+, because I was ashamed on his behalf, that he could spew such mindless vitriol, and I honestly thought that he may be suffering from some serious mental health issues, so I didn't rush in. If I am being completely honest, I also didn't want to give him the oxygen of publicity. Hey, I have never pretended to be a saint!

Sadly, far from being a one-off, it would appear that Mr Stevens makes a habit of expressing himself in such a reprehensible manner, and after reading his latest outpouring:

Why should disabled people who terrorise ATOS get support?

I have decided that there is no reason why I should stop the man from damning himself in his own words, so here is a copy of his reply to me. (I took a screenshot of it straight away in case he decided to delete it or deny these were his words, so there can be no doubt)


Simon Stevens
9 Aug 2013
Reply
 
You really hate disabled people, don't you?  You want real disabled people locked away and I guess you NEVER met a disabled people considering your ignorant stupid lies. You think pretendng to be disabled means you acan be a total bitch and hate crime as you harass anyone you dared upset your tiny tiny world. What do you want? Shall I kill myself so you can have my money? Have you ever been positive in your like. You rant and rant with  no facts because you are too arrogant in your utter hatred of disabled people to need to. If you represent disabled people, which i guess you never lifted a finger in your life, we should be killed, Hilter must be so proud of what you done to raise hate crime against us. Personal attack is fine as it shows how bitter and twisted and very unhappy are you and how jealious you are on so unimportant you wasted your time demonstrating how nasty you are and you prejudiced you are who think we are unemployable scum.. I hope you achieve your goal to have everyone around you as unhappy as you are.


Well, as you may expect, I was somewhat taken aback by his reply, not least because it seemed so, I don't know, random. But then, I got angry. It seemed to me that there was someone who would stop at nothing to portray himself as the victim even when he was in fact the attacker.

I saw earlier someone commenting on his latest hate piece, wondering he may be suffering from Stockholm Syndrome, where the subject ingratiates himself to his captors in the hope that by creating a bond they will spare him, and even in some case, developing feelings of affection or love for them. It is of course a possibility, but I am inclined to believe that this is too generous a description. I think Mr Stevens is more a Judas Goat, happy to sacrifice everyone like him to his masters as long as he himself is spared.

I replied to Mr Stevens' hateful little rant on G+ and I am posting my response here in the interest of transparency:


Marie Pace
12 Aug 2013
Edit
 
Dear Simon,

Why so much misplaced anger?

Not that it really is any of your business, but I am disabled. I'm also the carer for my 16 year old autistic son. I run a support group for parents and carers of people on the Autistic Spectrum, out of my own pocket. I am a lay-advocate for people who need help with their DLA claims. And I live my life as much to the full as I can under the circumstances.

If you didn't want to appear you were launching a random attack on me, you could have asked, I would have told you this. As it goes, you are now looking really daft, because you see, I am as far away from the stereotype you portrayed in your spiteful little attack above as can be.

You can present yourself as a victim of disabled hate all you like, no-one is going to believe you. You wanted someone to give you facts to counteract the horrible piece of Tory propaganda you got published, I gave you either the facts or the ways to go get the facts. Are you even interested in those facts in the first place, or were you happy to be the token mouthpiece for your employers, I wonder?

One more thing: You can play the disabled card as much as you like, because that is so obviously what you are doing here, but here's a final fact for you - I had no idea you were disabled until you said so in your reply (not that it excuses your petulant behaviour, by the way). 



To date, I haven't had a reply, nor do I expect one. I think Mr Stevens knows he has found me to be someone he can't bully with his hateful words, and therefore prefers to move on to easier victims. I don't care, his opinion has no worth whatsoever and his rhetoric comes straight from DWP/Atos standard narratives, with not an iota of original thinking.


If being at the opposite complete end of the spectrum of Mr Stevens' rationale makes me an extremist, then I shall wear this badge with pride and honour, long may I continue to gather the opprobrium of his ilk.


Friday, 9 August 2013

Reply to Simon Stevens, author of "Atos Declares Coma Patients Fit' and Other Disability Related Welfare Urban Myths"

I wrote this to reply in the comments of the Huffington Post, but they limit the comments to 250 words, and well, I had a lot more than that to say, so here goes...

This is the article in question:

Atos Declares Coma Patients Fit' and Other Disability Related Welfare Urban Myths

And this below is my comment:


So much to debunk in this puff piece, where to start?

"I think we are being led to believe some health professional from ATOS has visited a person in a coma, took one look at them, and said yep, they are fit for work! I mean really?"

>> No-one has suggested that. But it is a fact, not an urban myth, that Atos have declared people fit for work because they didn't turn up for their assessment due to being in a coma or dead. Rather than ridiculing the reports, which are factually correct (no-one is being "led to believe" anything), you could accept that it points to a system which is so rigid, so computer-led, that it gives rise to ridiculous situations like these.

"Atos kills 40 people a week, or whatever it is currently." 

>> It doesn't do much for your credibility that you should be so dismissive of the numbers.
This isn't an urban myth either, although it would be if it were written the way you suggest. The reality is that many, too many people die within 6 weeks of being found fit for work by Atos. In this instance, I agree partly with you that *some* people have chosen to summarise it as you have, and this does do a disservice, IMO, to those who fight against this iniquitous system. However, yet again, it points to the implacability and rigidity of a system dealing with vulnerable humans which decides by clicking on this or that key whether someone is fit for work or not.

"It is clear to me it is not the Government nor the right wing media that ensures the language of benefit scroungers has been kept in the public minds but those who claim to be campaigning on behalf of disabled people, because it suits their agenda of victimhood and tries to close the debate of welfare reforms with emotive guilt tripping."

>> It may be clear to you, but you must live in a very sheltered and selective environment if that is the case. You will find that the scrounger rhetoric is in fact firmly embedded both in Hansard and the popular press, seldom a day passes without the Sun or the Mail (or both) telling the great British public at large that "75% of sick people are found fit for work", that "3 out of 4 disabled are faking" and so on. Please don't take my word for it, search the archives of these papers and see for yourself. These numbers aren't made up by the papers, they are passed to them by the DWP. The problem is that these statistics are false ones, based on manipulating the figures. (Please check the site FullFact for the correct ones, I'm not here to do the research you should have done in the first place before creating your piece of pro-Atos propaganda)

That this in turn should cause an increase in hate crime against disabled people is not something which can be categorically proven, of course. People don't get arrested for beating a guy in a wheelchair and say: "the Sun told me to", of course. However, it is a fact that it is rising, I see someone has already told you where to ask for further information, and it would be disingenuous to the extreme to suggest that there is no correlation between the increase in the attacks on the disabled in the papers and the attacks on the disabled in real life.

"The ILF closing and "The extremist groups would like the public to believe this will result in users ending up in residential care (where they are likely of course to be abused) without any evidence that this will be the case."

>> Your tone of derision towards disabled people shows badly in this paragraph, so let's break it down, shall we?

Which "extremist groups" do you refer to? I am not aware that Al-Qaeda has been bombing Atos buildings on behalf of disabled people. Have anti-Atos people in wheelchairs been setting Atos assessment centres on fire? Spread them with manure? Who are these extremist groups?

Do you perhaps mean groups which have been created out of the fear and despair following their Atos assessments? Groups of disabled people sharing the information to try and fight the system (legally!) when that system is already so skewed against them? Disabled people supporting one another when they get their few resources cut off at the whim of a faceless employee? Are these the extremist groups to which you refer? Yes, because nothing is more frightening than someone in a wheelchair or shuffling on 2 sticks, of course.

The users are likely to end up in residential care, that is a fact, and I fail to see how you can claim this as an urban myth. As the funds dry up and the local authorities have to find the money somehow, it is unavoidable that people will not be able to be supported individually in their homes and will instead be looked after collectively, which means residential care. I am at a loss how you can try to deny this.
Will they "of course be abused"? One hopes not, but your pitiful attempt at sarcasm fails in the evidence of the scandals which have emerged in the last few months. If you are not aware of them, I suggest you get out of your bubble and inform yourself. Or maybe you think Winterbourne is more of the "extremist groups" propaganda?

I wondered why anyone apart from IDS would want to try and dismiss the legitimate worries of vulnerable people, and then I read the comments, pointing out that you are in fact an Atos employee (dare I use the word "stooge"?) and at that point, it all becomes quite clear: This so-called article is in fact nothing more than yet another attempt to discredit disabled people at large, their carers, their support groups, and get them further marginalised and ignored.

I hope they pay you more than 30 pieces of silver for writing this. It will cost more than that to cleanse your soul, I fear.





Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Testing for Atos Miracles page...








Well, it seems to be working ok from here... 

I was just testing the link, but if you come across this post, you might as well go and visit them, they're a cracking page anyway!