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ADifferentWayOfThinking

A Different Way Of Thinking

How society approaches disability from the perspective of someone with autism.

Disabled on Big Brother

  • 2 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 05 August 2008

One of the earliest of my recruits on Weakest Link was a blind radio producer from Ayrshire called Michael Hughes. He is now nine weeks into his stay in the Big Brother house

In 2004, while I was working as a researcher on ‘The Weakest Link’, the BBC set itself a target that one in fifty of the contestants on its quiz shows should be disabled.

This low figure suggested a box-ticking exercise but it was certainly better than nothing. I played a role in persuading potential contestants that this promise was not too good to be true and one of the [...]

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You don’t have to be mad to work here…

It is not new for political figures to be affected by mental illness – Winston Churchill was famously manic depressive

In the light of the recent carnage of the local elections, it is easy to forget that the present government is one of the most successful in history. In 10 years as the chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown never experienced the economic problems he currently faces as prime minister. However, in a decade which was undoubtedly good for business, the Tony Blair premiership was characterised by an approach that [...]

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Nowhere to run

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 17 March 2008

James Medhurst points out that the purpose of sport is not to create a level playing field but rather to compare like with like, especially within the context of the Paralympics.

The South African runner Oscar Pistorius has been banned from competing in the Beijing Olympics this summer. The reason given is that the ‘blades’ used by the double-amputee in place of his lower legs will give him an unfair advantage over the other athletes. This seems to be a sensible decision to me but not to Pistorius, who intends to challenge it at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in [...]

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Incitement to Confusion

  • 0 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 23 January 2008

While the government's attitude to disabled people seems contradictory, the media's remains profoundly unsupportive

In a week in which an NHS Trust declined to perform a hysterectomy on a teenage girl with cerebral palsy without her consent, it is tempting to choose as my topic the right to menstruate. The media coverage has been particularly odd with BBC News running the headline “Teenager is refused hysterectomy” as if she had asked for it herself. However, a positive development in Scotland has highlighted another way [...]

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Making perfect babies

  • 0 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 07 December 2007

James Medhurst turns his gaze on the controversial issue of selective abortion

Just over a month ago, the Commons Science and Technology Committee published its report of recommendations about abortion.

One curiosity of the current law is that most foetuses older than 24 weeks must not be aborted, because they are deemed to have rights but this does not apply to disabled foetuses, even with relatively minor impairments such as cleft palates or even club feet.

The committee concluded that [...]

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Scientific illiteracy

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 31 October 2007

Novel educational techniques such as phonics may be trendy but where is the proof that they do any good?

There is currently a television advertisement in which, for reasons that are not entirely clear, the daughter of Suggs from Madness is revising for her exams. Her brother asks her a question about omega-3 and she complains, “That’s not on the curriculum.” It then goes on to make some extremely dubious health claims about, of all things, fish fingers.

It does not mention the obvious reason why omega-3 is not [...]

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Looking for work is hard work

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 24 September 2007

Being disabled means rarely finding the right job, irrespective of one's potential

Disabled people elicit sympathy in many different ways, not all of which make sense. The fact that someone cannot walk may strike others as intolerable but, for a person who is born without legs, it is simply an unremarkable fact of everyday life. Similarly, problems that I have with social interaction can sometimes be frustrating but, if I am honest, I know that most people feel as insecure about making [...]

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No place for tradition

  • 1 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 30 August 2007

Nostalgia for dated public transport systems does not make them any more accessible for those with disabilities

The London Underground is the oldest in the world but this also means that it is the most outdated and other cities learn from its mistakes. For example, no designer of a modern underground system would dream of having a Circle Line on which a single signal failure is capable of bringing down the whole network. Nor would they forget to install any air conditioning.

However, nowhere is this backwardness [...]

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Charities are hamstrung by the law

One would have thought in a liberal democracy the promotion of debate and free speech is inherently beneficial, whether one agrees with its content or not

My last blog entry about carers received an unprecedented response, some of which was rather heated. One of the issues was whether charities set up on behalf of carers reflect the interests of carers themselves.

This is a familiar debate for many groups and, among disabled people, it can be particularly severe, because, rather than the two main charities which exist for carers, there appear to be hundreds.

[...]

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Anyone care about carers?

They talk a good talk, but do the politicians or anyone else for that matter really care about the carers

One of Gordon Brown’s last acts as Chancellor of the Exchequer was to host a reception at Downing Street to celebrate Carers' Week. He described carers as a “remarkable group in society; a lifeline for millions of people who rely on their compassion and dedication,” and few would disagree.

Unlike, say, single mothers or illegal immigrants, even the most virulent right-wing commentator would find it difficult to write a [...]

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Can things only get better?

History isn't necessarily a tale of unremitting progress...

It seems deceptively obvious that the lives of disabled people have improved throughout history. After all, the ancient Spartans killed disabled babies at birth while now there are only a few rogue academics, such as Peter Singer, who advocate this brutality.

However, it is too easy to fall into the ‘Whig’ approach to history, to regard it as a tale of remitting progress leading inexorably to the present day, [...]

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See No Evil, Hear No Evil

When will Hollywood and the rest of the arts world get the message about catering for disabled people?

When the Oscar-winning film ‘Million Dollar Baby’ was released, it was met by protests from disabled people across the world, as a result of its shocking and highly controversial ending.

Many of them boycotted the film and urged others to do the same. Others were aware that they might be criticised for protesting about something they had not seen and so they clenched their stomachs and went to watch [...]

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Designer labels?

  • 0 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 03 April 2007

James Medhurst examines an increasing tendency to seek diagnosis and self-diagnose conditions like autism

In his latest documentary series called ‘The Trap,’ shown on BBC2, Adam Curtis made some remarkable claims about the increasing self-diagnosis of psychological impairments alongside his equally imaginative ones about the benign effects of state bureaucracy.

He suggested that while, in the 1960s, sociologists and self-designated ‘radical’ psychiatrists rejected diagnostic categories as tools of oppression, people in the twenty first century are now oppressing themselves by embracing these labels [...]

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Lies, damned lies etc.

  • 2 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 20 March 2007

How do you measure the progress of disability equality?

The chances are you have never heard of Anne McGuire, who is Minister for Disabled People, in the Department for Work and Pensions. The position has existed for more than thirty years and has been occupied by John Major and William Hague, among others, but has made surprisingly little impact.

The most dramatic event in its history probably came in May 2005, when Liz Blackman was seemingly appointed to [...]

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Disability Kink

  • 2 comments
  • Posted by James Medhurst
  • 01 March 2007

Sex, disability and prostitution

It’s time to talk about sex. I make no apologies for this. One of the problems that arises when discussing disability in relation to sex is that subcultures exist in which members of some impairment groups, such as wheelchair users, amputees, or people with restricted growth, are treated as fetish objects. A common reaction is to be disgusted and hence to regard any attempt to broach the topic of disabled [...]

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A Different Way Of Thinking

James Medhurst

James Medhurst

As a child, I was very successful in my schoolwork but found it difficult to make friends. I went to Cambridge University but dropped out after a year due to severe depression and spent most of the next year in a therapeutic community, before returning to Cambridge to complete my degree. I first identified myself as autistic in 1999 while I was studying psychology in London but I was not officially diagnosed until 2004 because of a year travelling in Australia and a great deal of NHS bureaucracy. I spent four years working for the BBC as a question writer for the Weakest Link but I am now studying law with the intention of training to be a solicitor. My hobbies include online poker and korfball, and I will be running the London Marathon in 2007. I now have many friends and I am rarely depressed but I remain single.

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Recent Posts

Disabled on Big Brother

  • By James Medhurst
  • 05 August 2008

You don’t have to be mad to work here…

  • By James Medhurst
  • 20 May 2008

Nowhere to run

  • By James Medhurst
  • 17 March 2008

Incitement to Confusion

  • By James Medhurst
  • 23 January 2008

Making perfect babies

  • By James Medhurst
  • 07 December 2007

Scientific illiteracy

  • By James Medhurst
  • 31 October 2007

Looking for work is hard work

  • By James Medhurst
  • 24 September 2007