Theme
9:52am August 6, 2013

 So a mage and a cleric walked into a tavern: #192

dannithepurplepenguin:

youneedacat:

karynchaotic:

thisisabledprivilege:

Abled privilege is…the term “slacktivist"

Doing activism online is not slacking when most activist events…

-Are not ASL-interpreted
-Are not audio-described or prepped with alternate-format materials
-Are held at wheelchair-inaccessible venues


I think it’s complicated.

There’s real activism beyond things that can be done in person.

There are also things people call activism. That make them feel good or feel like they’re doing something. But they’re not ever going to accomplish anything, and may even hinder their cause.

And slacktivism sometimes applies to the second thing. Sometimes.

But I’ve heard people say the second kind of thing isn’t activism, and get told “you’re being ableist because I can’t go to protests". Which… Whether it’s ableist would depend on why the person said it. Just saying “that’s not activism" is only ableist in some situations, not others.

(And inability to do protests also affects people based on class, race, trans status, and anything else that can make going to jail more dangerous.)

I see slacktivism sort of like laziness. Except I never use the word slacktivism. But I can tell some of what it refers to.

And like… Laziness exists. It’s real. But it also gets misused against disabled people. Like people with depression, fatigue, motor planning problems, and executive functioning problems.

And some people actually say the entire idea of laziness is ableist. But I think laziness is just a real thing that gets misapplied against disabled people. I suspect the idea of slacktivism is similar.

Also I think there are offline forms of slacktivism not just online forms. Like real activism can be both online and offline, and so can false activism. And there is more kinds of real offline activism than protests.

Not all kinds of activism are obvious either. Like for some disabled people, just existing as ourselves and making the rest of the world deal with us as who we are, can be activism. Including many people who can’t use language.

An example I wouldn’t call activism but many do…

Flaming someone over something where they have no idea what they’re doing wrong or why it’s wrong, they can’t be expected to just know it, and you’re not telling them. 

Like if a parent of an autistic kid says something that many autistic people know can harm autistic people, but would be much harder for a nonautistic parent to know. And an autistic person rips them a new one. And the parent goes WTF and the autistic person refuses to explain or point someone at an explanation, but continues flaming then anyway.

That’d be understandable if the patent was defending murderers or something. But sometimes it’s over something much more subtle and the response they get is extreme.

And the reason it doesn’t work?  To the parent it feels like they’ve been going about their business and someone out of nowhere is screaming at them. They will become either frightened, angry, or confused. They are likely to become defensive. They are unlikely to change for the better. They are likely to develop a highly negative opinion of “those autistic activists" and pass it on to other parents.

The only good result of flaming someone in that context is that it feels good to vent and blow off steam. But venting is not the same thing as activism. Activism involves doing things that are likely to change things for the better. The problem isn’t the anger, and I’m not saying everyone always has to explain everything. But these actions have virtually no likelihood of being effective and creating useful change, so to me they’re not activism.

And like… even if I turn out to be wrong. It’s still important to be able to discuss whether or not I’m right or wrong, without assuming my reading of the situation is ableist.

Like it’s one thing to say “that’s not activism because it’s not going to protests", but it’s another thing to say “that’s not because it doesn’t work".  An activism d in the exact situation described above, I’ve seen someone describe flaming people with no explanation as “being an activist", a second person come in and  say “that’s not activism", and the first person say “that’s a very ableist thing to say because I can’t do offline activism".Which… maybe it was ableist, but maybe it wasn’t, you can’t know just from words like “slacktivism" or “that’s not activism".

So I’d say whether these things are ableist depends on context.  Just like “lazy" and “stupid".  I don’t really like the word slacktivism.  But I think there’s a real thing where people do things that are easy,  satisfying, and ineffective, and call them activism. Even though disabled people get accused of it just for doing  activism online.

I once had to point out that putting “all welcome" on an event doesn’t make it welcoming for all, especially when it’s held upstairs in a building with no lift (I don’t know if it has other access issues as I can’t get there, but that by itself makes it inaccessible to people with mobility problems and if they ignore the most obvious, they’ve probably not thought about anything else either).

I get even more annoyed when it’s an event supposedly for a minority group (I normally see those for disabled people) and they’ve not even made it fully accessible for those in that group- never mind any extra needs individuals may have. And they expect the individual to solve the problem.

Online activism is the only type I can take part in while bedbound, and even then it’s often inaccessible to me if it requires writing stuff or doing something beyond a couple of clicks as my concentration and language ability is impaired. Making people feel bad for not being able to do something isn’t on. 

(One piece of activism I was involved in that was online and accessible to me was the Spartacus Report here in the UK- there were template emails to help those who couldn’t come up with their own and a variety of methods of helping. I was able to donate towards the costs and email my MP. Small things but I think they helped.) 

Yep. Bedbound here too, so you’re not likely to see me doing offline activism anytime soon. Not unless policy changes were created that would definitely kill me… at which point I’d have someone move my bed to the front yard of whoever is making policy.

(I actually did something like that once. I wasn’t bedbound at the time but same idea. Someone was doing something that made my home unusable and refused to relocate me, so I moved into a lean-to in front of city hall until they decided relocating me and another person and cleaning up their construction practices was less embarrassing than protest signs. But I still got permanent lung damage out of the deal. Concrete and wallboard dust don’t play well with lungs.

Notes:
  1. iasg reblogged this from thisisabledprivilege
  2. sailorseitan reblogged this from thisisabledprivilege
  3. sanssavoirpourquoi reblogged this from thisisabledprivilege
  4. beautifullybirdy reblogged this from karynchaotic
  5. lil-miss-choc reblogged this from thisisabledprivilege and added:
    Okay, cool. Thank you!
  6. sadprosciutto reblogged this from thisisabledprivilege and added:
    Abled privilege is…the term “slacktivist” Doing activism online is not slacking when most activist events… -Are not...
  7. thisisabledprivilege reblogged this from lil-miss-choc and added:
    There are a lot of people with PTSD who have trauma around alcohol/drunkenness and a lot of people with history of...
  8. theblooddimmedtide reblogged this from dropkicks
  9. dropkicks reblogged this from cardboardmoose
  10. fitzsimmonsofshield reblogged this from clockworkcrow
  11. clockworkcrow reblogged this from cardboardmoose and added:
    i’m just like, “do you want me to fucking faint and interrupt your ~oh so important~ lecture with a wailing ambulance?”
  12. rattiepuff reblogged this from cardboardmoose
  13. velderia reblogged this from withasmoothroundstone
  14. graculus reblogged this from cardboardmoose
  15. cardboardmoose reblogged this from karynchaotic
  16. withasmoothroundstone reblogged this from madeofpatterns and added:
    Yeah I agree with you on most of that. Another weird ineffective thing I’ve seen is like… People will be having an...
  17. jarmihi reblogged this from myleslikesmiles
  18. upsofloatingmanybellsdown reblogged this from madeofpatterns and added:
    Thinking of the “saying X is bad because shut up” dynamic. Have seen this on Tumblr. Thinking it ties in; but don’t feel...
  19. dragonomatopoeia reblogged this from madeofpatterns