How about nah to this: Simply taking an OTC pain killer is not advisable for me. Years and many doses later, I have an eye issue that is indirectly linked to long-term use of OTC pain killers. Are you certain that dispensing medical advice is appropriate? After all, you are not my personal health care provider and cannot be certain of what is appropriate/inappropriate for me. Are you so certain of what is appropriate medical advice for anyone else? Fortunately, I have been advised by a qualified medical provider not to take so much or so many of the OTC pain killers and have received clear explanation of why this is appropriate for me. Equally fortunately, I do not use the opioids and am free of issues in that way. I just live with a helluva lot of pain and discomfort.
In your second paragraph, you bullied if not threatened the general "you" of the population (unless you were threatening me directly). In your third paragraph-- it might be argued-- you provided the "or else" to the implied bullying or threat from the second paragraph.
Are you certain that threatening people, whether they are potentially or truly disabled, is appropriate? After all, many of them already labor without monetary pay under the constant burden of lives that have been defined by by the particulars of their disabilities. When did you start thinking that they needed to be threatened by you in addition to living as they can with-- or despite-- their conditions?
Another fortunate event in my life happened early in my working years. It provided me with an awareness of how to identify certain inappropriate situations and a way to address those for myself and others. Many years ago, I grossly misinterpreted the visual condition of someone's residence. I complained long and loudly about what should be. Oh, I just knew what the matter was and why was no one fixing it?
Fortunately, my extremely tough and wise supervisor proceeded to rip out my asshat attitude and replace it with some insight and humanity. That fixed me pretty well and taught me to stop thinking that what I thought I saw was what really was. Now that i am disabled, I am using this lesson on behalf of others who need not experience such an attitude or the fallout from such a vociferous antagonist. I am not thrilled that I used to be that way. I am only grateful that I might be able to help someone or prevent some harm because I used to be that way until someone wiser than myself changed me and inspired me to find my own pair.
As it turns out, I have helped myself by walking away from a system that has no provision to protect against a constant onslaught of legitimate and/or spurious reports of fraud. Unless and until the disability system improves itself and provides effective protection against any and all reports of fraud, any disabled person can be burdened and possibly harmed by a never-ending cycle of report/investigate/prove the allegation/demonstrate the ongoing disability. No one deserves to be treated in this shabby way. At the same time, no one should be well-paid or otherwise rewarded for their role in spurious or potentially false reports, including video or photograph submissions. It does not give people a sense of well-being or safety when they realize that absolutely anyone might be reporting information that could utterly ruin their life. Imagine how vulnerable and disabled persons must feel when they are constantly aware that suspicious minds have nothing better to do than gleefully collect money that might better be spent on increased benefit amounts for retired and disabled persons.
If I were an activist sort of soul, I would work in the realm of activism to change the world in favor of inherent protection for disabled persons. Talented activists might take up this good cause, though, and improve this aspect of life for disabled persons. My current activity is merely a mild suggestion. We could compile a list of potential factors in a solution to this glaring error in the distribution of funds. Along the way, we might consider several potential solutions.
One potential solution is to institute fines for constant or repeat reporting offenders. This might abate instances of disabled persons' lives becoming additionally defined by others in the nasty and negative way of being forced to live under constant surveillance instead of being free just to live-- whatever that may mean for each person's situation. The exact legal description will reference the fact that disability factors are private and will not show in much of the collected information. It will acknowledge that all collected information is subject to interpretation, which may or may not reflect the truth of any person's life. You mentioned being well paid for work that might be harming lives. What if the fines system could include restitution? Say, the same amount of money you received from your offensive and harmful work will be paid to the disabled person whose life has been harmed by the cascade of events from your well-paid work?
A longer term potential solution involves education and re-education for persons who have not been taught to consider the possible unwanted effects of their actions.
A third potential solution pertains to the original topic of this thread. Persons who are disabled or on low retirement income should be provided with a more user friendly method of demonstrating how performing the expected civic duty might be possible but inadvisable. Inadvisability might include unnecessarily incurring pain or discomfort that is not to be treated with prescription or OTC medications, loss of income from whatever work the person may perform, unnecessary burden that is associated with transportation, etc.
@ColoKate63 wrote:
Nah. After 40 or so, we’ve all been bumped around a bit by sports, ladder falls, blue-collar jobs - and pain is part of life. Take an OTC painkiller, walk it off, don’t expect a monthly taxpayer handout.
If you are so “disabled” that you legitimately cannot hold a job, then I better not see you crouching around bottom shelves on a Best Buy audit, doing a parking lot audit, or dashing around taking 80 pictures of a Shell station. You better be home, not clogging up the system, sucking taxpayers dry.
If you are going to claim 100% disability due to spinal injury, I’m happy to shoot my covert video of you loading Costco 24-packs of water into your SUV and turn you in for prosecution and fines. I’d do it every single day and twice on a Sunday (and be paid very very well for my work.)
Disability benefits are being abused in the USA. And the abuse causes legitimately disabled people - like my friend with stage 4 metastatic liver cancer or my neighbor with a TBI after a collision - to have to wait in an endless queue, behind the cheaters and the grifters. Some of whom I see here in this forum.
Bach is not noise, Madam. (Robert, in Two's Company)
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/08/2022 03:47AM by Shop-et-al.