Rope_Wrench, blind people use banks and spend money too. Just because an ATM is a drive through doesn't mean it is impossible for a person who is not in a car to walk or roll up and use, and just because a person who is visually impaired enough to need Braille will not be a driver, he/she very well could be a passenger in a car driven by another person and need cash. As for picture menus, perhaps the sign is there for the benefit of people who can read and tell the person who needs the picture menu, or to remind staff that they are available if anyone asks.
Whether any individual personally believes in it or not, the ADA has been federal law for almost 24 years. It's not going away. Many of us on this board are people with disabilities of some sort and/or family members and/or close friends with people with disabilities/disabling chronic medical conditions, which may well be the reason we/our family members/friends experience incontinence in the first place. In many contexts under the law, incontinence itself can be considered a disability, so this law also protects you and other U.S. residents on this board, even those who do not currently have other disabilities/chronic medical conditions. However, disability is the one minority group that *anyone* can join involuntarily at any time. We all are one accident or one medical condition or one complication of an existing medical condition away from a disability, or more disabilities, if we already have one. Anyone who lives long enough to get old will most likely have some degree of disability, with visual impairment very common.
I am old enough to remember what it was like to live as a person with a disability without the ADA and other disability rights laws, and have spent a lot of my personal and professional life advocating for, educating on and defending such laws. They are not perfect, but they have gone a long way in allowing a large segment of the population a lot more independence, dignity, ability to enjoy active lives in the community, not in institutions, like everybody else without disabilities, and to earn money and spend money on life's necessities and life's pleasures like anyone else. Things like curb cuts and accessible bathrooms are also helpful to people without current disabilities, like parents with kids in strollers. You're entitled to your opinion, but please think again about your potential audience on this message board. Thank you.
|