Saturday, January 19, 2019

USA news on Youtube Jan 19 2019

>> ANITA CAMERON: Okay, so.

Some of y'all know that my day job is Director of Minority Outreach for Not Dead Yet.

Okay, Not Dead Yet Is a disability rights organization, premier organization, sistering

with ADAPT, that fights against doctor-assisted suicide and euthanasia of people with disabilities.

And next, we have our board member, our board officer Shonda McLaughlin, to say some words

for Not Dead Yet.

[Cheers] >> SHONDA MCLAUGHLIN: First, thank you all

for allowing me to be here today.

It's an honor to be in solidarity here with ADAPT, and especially on behalf of Not Dead

Yet.

[Cheers] Thank you Miss Anita Cameron.

I appreciate everything you are trying to teach me.

Thank you.

I would like to share something personal with you all, about me.

As a teenager, I missed attending a significant part of my sophomore and all of my junior

year of high school.

It was a time of my life where I couldn't do anything for myself.

Leave the house, dress, sit up, speak, bathe, basic things that we all take for granted.

Some thought I was a burden to society, and my family specifically.

Because many are so at ease to write off and devalue the lives of people with disabilities

like mine, suicide is perpetuated as a viable option for the disabled, as opposed to them

exercising their civil rights.

Particularly those from certain communities.

For example, non-disabled who express [a desire for] suicide would be offered prevention services,

while their [disabled] counterparts will be assisted with suicide.

Plus, Black people, brown people, and the elderly are disproportionately impacted.

Still, I somehow believed that I was going to college regardless of my circumstances.

Meaning, everyone was telling me I couldn't go to college.

Why?

Stealing from advocacy efforts from parents, children with disabilities, legislation like

Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act made it possible for me to

attend college.

Most important, however, the vocational rehabilitation program afforded me the opportunity to temporarily

have a personal care attendant, which made it possible for me to choose to participate

in some aspects of my collegiate life.

Since that time, however, I've done other things and I went on to earn my PhD.

[Cheers] Thank you.

[Laughs] Sometimes I go back and say "Nah nah nah nah nah" to those who said I couldn't

do it.

Maybe I didn't say that.

The Disability Integration Act is comprehensive and it ensures full integration of people

with disabilities.

Eligible persons would have access to long-term support services, and a federal right in choosing

how they receive those services.

So Not Dead Yet and ADAPT advocate for policies that promote Life and Liberty for persons

with all disabilities.

Thank you ADAPT for your promotion of the Disability Integration Act.

Not Dead Yet stands firmly in solidarity with you as this Act will give people with disabilities

and the elderly the civil right to receive the attendant services and other support at

home, assisting people to live, not die.

Access to services at home must be available to those who need it.

Not suicide.

Life and liberty.

[Cheers] >> CAMERON: All right, thank you, Shonda.

Thank you so much and for Not Dead Yet's support.

Before I call on our next speaker, okay, I'm gonna go Anita here for a second.

I am going to call on the House to pass the Disability Integration Act by July 26, 2019!

[Cheers] >> CAMERON: We can pass this bill!

Okay, there is support for this bill.

Don't be afraid of this bill.

This is civil rights.

Pass the Disability Integration Act by July 26, 2019.

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