A brief story.
I saw a documentary about Little People some years back. (Dwarfism, achondroplasia). One gentleman featured in the film described an experience where someone of typical height visited his home. Naturally, many of the features in his residence had been retrofitted to accommodate his height. Including in the bathroom.
When the visitor emerged from “using the facilities” he remarked, with some irritation, “There’s something wrong with your toilet!”
That response has stayed with me for a long time. I am normal, thinks the man. I am of normal height. This toilet doesn’t accommodate me.
There is something wrong with this toilet.
This mindset prevails in too many areas of our lives and it is not only demeaning and limiting (think education and the workplace) but it can also be dangerous.
If humans come in a variety of manifestations, acknowledging that and acting on that should be the goal. Sorting out the “normal” from everyone else and then planning only for that “normal” subgroup comes from such a shallow way of thinking. It is neither efficient nor does it improve anyone’s quality of life.
To be accepted as who you are should not be an “extra.” You should not be treated as an inconvenience.
The horrific shooting of Alex Lamoire by police he had reached out to for help has brought out an appalling number of police apologists. “This is how the police operate,” they lecture us. “If you don’t behave in a way that is congruent with standard operating procedure, you get what you deserve.”
We must accommodate police? Are we here to accommodate the police department?
The Howard County Police Department provides a secure environment for the citizens of Howard County by protecting life and property, reducing the opportunity for crime and disorder, enforcing the law, assisting victims and providing other police-related services as required by the community in a manner consistent with the values of a free society. - - HCPD website
…as required by the community in a manner consistent with the values of a free society.
What does our community require? It says right there that we get to choose. Anyone who tells you that we don’t have the right to choose: 1. doesn’t believe in a free society and 2. is at odds with the mission statement of the Howard County Police Department.
This is what I choose: that the police department must be trained and supported and evaluated and held legally responsible for serving all members of the community. Fact: humans come in a variety of manifestations. All are equally valuable.If our police do not acknowledge that and act accordingly they are not fulfilling their mission.
But our community must require that. In policing, in education, in the workplace, in public facilities and services. It’s not an extra. It’s the whole point.

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