As Olympics gives way to Paralympics, the enthusiasm of the
media has apparently carried over, with much coverage given to yesterday’s
medal winners. While that’s only to be expected, the contrast between the
sports coverage and those same papers’ attitude towards the disabled generally
could not be more stark. For starters, there’s
that cycling gold won by Sarah Storey.
Ms Storey doesn’t have a functioning left hand. This is
something you can clearly see close up, but if you saw her out and about in
town doing her shopping, you might well miss. She has a disability, and many
others live with this kind of condition. But in a society where the same
newspapers that
are now heaping on the praise are often heaping on abuse instead, this can
get forgotten.
It should not be forgotten that the Mail and Sun, two papers
that are extracting as much in sales as they can from the Paralympics, have the
most shameful record when it comes to demonising the disabled. These were,
after all, the two titles that went
after the Motability scheme last year, giving their readers the
impression that it was a £1.4 billion “vast
scam” and gave out “free cars”.
And what's f***ing wrong with shopping them, c***?!?
This all hardened attitudes towards disabled people, with
many suffering abuse just because they “didn’t
look to be really disabled”. Just because those using reserved parking
spaces don’t have to use a wheelchair, don’t have a guide dog, or don’t need a
walking stick or frame doesn’t mean they don’t merit using them. But the
constant barrage of “disabled cheat”
stories fuels
prejudice against them.
That barrage included the wilful misinformation by the Mail – reinforced by a
largely fictitious column from the Million Pound Pundit Richard Littlejohn –
about Motability cars being “given” to
sufferers of AD/HD disorder, which was held to be nothing more than naughty
children who could not keep still in class. Yes, don’t
bother finding out the facts, shop those Motability users to
the DWP sharpish.
It didn’t get any better as the new year dawned, with the Sun going
after a retired couple from Nottingham for claiming universal benefit even
after winning the lottery. Their house was pictured too, just to help the
nutters find them, as was their Motability car, which was “shiny and new and handed to them free”. That the Prime Minister has
also claimed universal benefits while well-off did not enter.
But all this is forgotten as the Paralympics bring more
medals and more triumph over adversity. Yes, for a fortnight, the cheaper end
of the Fourth Estate has stopped sending its attack dogs after the most
vulnerable members of society in order to get with the national mood and – to no
surprise at all – flog a few more papers. But after that, woe betide any
Paralympian who crosses the press and then claims benefits.
This hypocrisy shows tabloid hackery in its true light. And it’s not good enough.
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