- The Guardian,
- Friday July 28 2006
- Article history
The Disability Rights Commission and charities claiming to represent low-income people promote jobs as the answer to poverty and discrimination. DRC chair Bert Massie writes that 84% of mothers of disabled children are "not working" (Letters, March 13). Hasn't he heard of caring? What's to happen to those who need care if we're all out at work?
Disabled adults are
getting poorer as more of us take jobs - the lowest
paid, of course. If mothers don't attend the
work-focused interviews, now more frequent, their
benefits are also threatened. Suicides, destitution,
rape and the exploitation of women forced to depend on
violent men increase with benefit cuts. People are
forced to shoplift or do sex work to survive, leading to
Asbos and prison. We are treated as if society can't
afford us. But the military budget continues to rise,
bringing death and disability to thousands, with little
or no discussion about whether we can afford that.
Claire Glasman
Women with visible and invisible disabilities
Denise Lonsdale
Bolton TUC Unemployed Advice Centre
Tony Greenstein
Brighton Unemployed Workers Centre
Niki Adams
Legal Action for Women
and five others