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View Full Version : Another sensible law drawn up by clueless townies!



InsaneApache
11-30-2007, 17:47
Although I live in a city of 1/2 million souls, I can see green fields and moors in every direction. I've commented before on the beautiful countryside in these here parts. The best in England IMO. I love to walk the hills and dales, even in autumn, they are breathtaking at this time of the year.

Then I read this....


Stiles and kissing gates are the latest aspects of country life to fall victim to political correctness.

They have been a familiar feature of the landscape for centuries, but local authorities now believe that installing them along footpaths and rights of way is a breach of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995.

This law requires public services to make “reasonable adjustments” to allow disabled access.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article2971547.ece

I loved this comment.


I'd like to see somone in a wheelchair get up (or down) Jacobs Ladder!

So would I, it's blinking hard enough to get up if your very fit. :laugh4:

Seriously though in over a 1/4 of a century walking in the Dales I've yet to come across any disabled folks up there.

I've no problem with having disabled access implemented in the cities and town, hell I had my last two shops install a ramp, but this is just plain crazy. :dizzy2:

Another facet of the Law of Unintended Consequences methinks.

ICantSpellDawg
11-30-2007, 17:50
Harrison Bergeron (http://instruct.westvalley.edu/lafave/hb.html)

InsaneApache
11-30-2007, 17:54
Harrison Bergeron (http://instruct.westvalley.edu/lafave/hb.html)

Excellent. :2thumbsup:

spmetla
12-01-2007, 06:11
Let's hope political correctness never reaches that level. :no:

JR-
12-01-2007, 11:26
Harrison Bergeron (http://instruct.westvalley.edu/lafave/hb.html)
excellent.

a farmer interviewed about this idiocy asked if he might in future be expected to hard-pave all paths that ran across his fields in case the wheelchair-bound suffered unfairly reduced mobility when the field was muddy. :beam:

Crazed Rabbit
12-01-2007, 17:05
Well I'm sorry, but the crippled and feeble just aren't cut out for walking across the countryside.

Now, we can accept that as simply part of nature or we can pave an asphalt path with a slight grade to the top of every hillock or famous mountain.

CR

Husar
12-01-2007, 18:59
Rubbish, they need elevators.

Tribesman
12-01-2007, 19:00
Oh well The Times has gone all Sun on this one what a surprise .


“reasonable adjustments” what a non-story .

English assassin
12-01-2007, 19:32
Oh well The Times has gone all Sun on this one what a surprise .

what a non-story .

Something tells me you have never had the pleasure of corresponding with the DRC on the subject of reasonable adjustments? Hint: they all seem to have a very specific disability which makes then unable to understand the word "reasonable".

You'd have more luck calling your todger Mohammed in a Sudanese court.

Papewaio
12-02-2007, 21:49
If they can get a wheelchair across a field a stile would be the least of their problems.

Scurvy
12-02-2007, 21:54
it couldn't be too difficult to put disabled access gates on the most frequently used + accessible paths and leave the rest well alone...

:2thumbsup:

KukriKhan
12-02-2007, 22:18
We have a similar law here (Link to wiki article about ADA (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americans_with_Disabilities_Act_of_1990)), although, as far as I know, most accomodations for wheelchairs, etc. get applied to new construction - less so for existing structures, areas, or programs.

Apparently though (according to the article), some lawsuits get filed to force accomodation for older stuff too, anytime any kind of upgrade is contemplated.

Husar
12-03-2007, 00:51
The solution:

https://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i231/husar1985/RedneckWheelchair.jpg

KukriKhan
12-03-2007, 14:31
The solution:

https://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i231/husar1985/RedneckWheelchair.jpg

LoL. Perfect. Add a laptop computer with wireless internet, loaded with a copy of the Disabilities Access Act (so he/she can file lawsuits 'on the fly' when he finds violations), and we're done!

ZombieFriedNuts
12-03-2007, 18:09
I would like to see a wheelchair get down some off the paths where I live, most of them aren’t even wide enough for a chair and they are so uneven that able bodied have a hard time getting down them.

Kralizec
12-03-2007, 18:21
The solution:

https://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i231/husar1985/RedneckWheelchair.jpg

That's awesome, I almost wish I was disabled!

*knocks on wood*

JAG
12-07-2007, 09:59
Heaven forbid we try and make the lives of those not as able as us actually... er, whats the words - equal and of as much value as ours? No, we couldn't possibly, stick them in cages and lets go laugh.

Society eh, forever going in the wrong direction!

InsaneApache
12-07-2007, 18:05
Heaven forbid we try and make the lives of those not as able as us actually... er, whats the words - equal and of as much value as ours? No, we couldn't possibly, stick them in cages and lets go laugh.

Society eh, forever going in the wrong direction!

OK I'll bite.

I wonder how often you've walked up Airedale, Wharfedale etc etc? The clue is in the italic. A lot of 4x4s would find it impossible to get around these places, never mind the physically disabled.

Still, never let common sense get in the way of political diktat. :wall:

Vladimir
12-07-2007, 18:29
Society eh, forever going in the wrong direction!

Forward? :inquisitive:

Tribesman
12-07-2007, 18:58
A lot of 4x4s would find it impossible to get around these places, never mind some of the physically disabled.

Fixed .

InsaneApache
12-07-2007, 19:08
Fixed .

Cheers. :bow:

Crazed Rabbit
12-08-2007, 01:02
Heaven forbid we try and make the lives of those not as able as us actually... er, whats the words - equal and of as much value as ours?

Just what does 'not as able as us' mean, JAG? I'm 'not as able' at playing basketball as a 7 foot tall guy. Does that mean I deserve a shorter hoop for my life to be of equal value?

How, exactly, do we make their lives of equal value by paving over nature so they can go there? Are the values of their lives determined by what they can do?


No, we couldn't possibly, stick them in cages and lets go laugh.
Wow, what an absurd exaggeration.

CR

InsaneApache
12-08-2007, 01:08
Just what does 'not as able as us' mean, tribesyJAG? I'm 'not as able' at playing basketball as a 7 foot tall guy. Does that mean I deserve a shorter hoop for my life to be of equal value?

How, exactly, do we make their lives of equal value by paving over nature so they can go there? Are the values of their lives determined by what they can do?


Wow, what an absurd exaggeration.

CR

Another fix. :sweatdrop:

Crazed Rabbit
12-08-2007, 01:13
Whoops. I guess I haven't debated JAG in a while.

:sweatdrop:

CR

Louis VI the Fat
12-08-2007, 01:33
I have terrible eyesight. Minus six or thereabouts. I've got lenses, so it's no problem, but I can never become a pilot, or join the army, or God knows what else. People have their physical limitations. Sucks, but you have to accept them.

That doesn't mean that we should not have some consideration for the physically less fit in whatever respect.

Most of Britain isn't exactly the Alps or the New Guinea highlands. Just gently rolling hills with nice footpaths. Here (http://www.beenthere-donethat.org.uk/footpaths.html) you can see what we are really talking about. Lots of pictures.

For example:

https://img470.imageshack.us/img470/9715/winchester44nf3.jpg

These are paths that are easily traversable for most people, for all but the most severely physically handicapped, were it not for all those pesky obstacles. All it takes is some common sense and awareness to open up a great deal of England's countryside to a lot of people.

There are cultural, historical and aesthetical values to these whatever-they're-called obstacles that dot the gentle English countryside, but a socially fair and gentle landscape has even more value.

InsaneApache
12-08-2007, 01:41
For example;

http://www.nvmdigital.com/photos/thumbnails/thumbyd.html

Southern Centric. :wall:

Kralizec
12-08-2007, 01:55
The stiles are there for their own protection. If a stile is an obstacle for you, traversing the English countryside would be hazardous for you anyway. Unless you have one of those Redneck Wheelchairs™

Seriously though, the parts of the English countryside that I've been through really aren't suitable for disabled people. I guess it would make sense for the flatter areas to have the stiles replaced with cattle grids, but that's about it.

Crazed Rabbit
12-08-2007, 02:15
All it takes is some common sense and awareness to open up a great deal of England's countryside to a lot of people.

I think the people who can actually navigate the paths but are stopped by such stiles, and the number of paths for which the stile is the only obstacle is small.

More importantly, the gates are set up by farmers and the like for the business of keeping cattle in and letting workers through. It's not an office building or a school.

Basically, though, the idea that the gov't should install paths in nature to make it easier for a small minority is ridiculous. It's ripping out the soul of nature and to let a few more gaze upon the shell.

CR

Papewaio
12-10-2007, 00:51
Heaven forbid we try and make the lives of those not as able as us actually... er, whats the words - equal and of as much value as ours? No, we couldn't possibly, stick them in cages and lets go laugh.

Society eh, forever going in the wrong direction!

If you are going to get rid of stiles to make things wheelchair friendly you are then going to have to concrete the fields so that the wheelchairs can use them. But before doing that you need to grade the hills to a rise of 1 in 8 so that they can easily roll up them. So in the end of the day you will an equality of gray planes that have a slight incline. But there will be no trees left because not everyone can climb them. :2thumbsup:

Myrddraal
12-10-2007, 02:50
Are the values of their lives determined by what they can do?

Neat point, and easy to forget.


EDIT:

Having said that, the enjoyment or satisfaction they can get from life is/might be determined by what they can do. It's that we compensate for. It's not like paying them to console them for their disability, but rather just trying to give them as many avenues of enjoyment as the rest of us take for granted.

I know everyone probably thinks I'm stating the obvious, but I'm just thinking aloud really.