#1

The Baffler posted:

Able-Bodied Until It Kills Us
JUNE THUNDERSTORM
Trigger warning: People who feel it’s their right to never lift a finger may experience pain or discomfort.

My first white-collar job was “coordinator” at my college’s chapter of the Public Interest Research Group—yes, PIRG, mother ship of pie-eyed campus activists. It turned out to be manual labor after all. Nearly all the anticapitalist staff, board members, and volunteers had one or another malady, allergy, or disability that prevented them from fixing the ceiling, running the computer cables, moving the boxes, vacuuming, or cleaning anything. I remember one board member explaining to me how she couldn’t touch the ceiling tiles because she was allergic to fiberglass—it made her itch. Fiberglass makes everyone itch. But with that magic word, “allergy,” she was off the hook.

We endlessly criticized corporate agriculture at the PIRG, but I couldn’t talk about my gardening contracts with my coworkers because images of crawling around in sheep manure, worms, and caterpillars triggered their phobias. So did my stories about plumbing and any carpentry that involved a saw. When I mentioned that I had to drink from garden hoses, a colleague squealed, “Ew! That’s so gross!” She had a “hose phobia.” Allergies exempted this cadre of activists from physical labor. Phobias meant they would never have to hear about it.

As I scrambled up the rungs of the meritocracy, with my supererogatory privilege of four able limbs and all, I noticed ever-newer stylings in the lingo that heavily credentialed people devise to shirk routine labor. It wasn’t only allergies and phobias; it was ADD, ADHD, and PTSD, all of them rampant at my graduate school. There must have been at least six empathy-inducing acronyms for writing is hard, so I refresh my Facebook page all day instead. Meanwhile, every time I walked up the stairs to my new office and passed by the ZAPPY ELECTRIC sticker on the breaker box, I remembered a former lover of mine—an electrician who had rewired the building a few years back—coughing bitterly and complaining about the walls and floors being full of asbestos, which he’d been expected to inhale on a daily basis for eight months.

Installed there as a graduate student, I heard other students in the building complain, whenever workers came in to polish floors, fix radiators, or do electrical work, about the minor amount of dust that they themselves had to inhale—and how the lobby smelled of industrial cleaners. I interrupted one such conversation to say, “This building is full of asbestos; did you know? Just imagine how the guy drilling in the ceiling feels!” Every student in the lobby perked up. “They have us working in a building full of asbestos?!” Ew!

Only those who can imagine escaping their pain bother to complain about it.
And now, with ten years of graduate school under my belt, it’s become my job to guess how to grade papers that come with special slips marked “dyslexia”; those slips mean, basically, that I’m not supposed to judge the writing on the basis of syntax, grammar, or coherence. Of course, the dyslexic papers are always diverse—some have syntactic mix-ups that are clearly symptomatic of the disorder, some do not, some appear simply to be bad papers written by someone who did not read the book, and some are as good as the best papers in the non-dyslexic category. The non-dyslexic category involves a similar spread—a certain proportion have the syntactic mishaps that are the classic signature of dyslexia, most do not, some are terribly bad, and some are great.

What divides students with the special slip from everyone else is not always or only dyslexia. Some students work the system—i.e., have parents who bestow on them a sense of entitlement and access to expensive special health services that it doesn’t even occur to ordinary people to ask for. Disability then turns into class power misrecognized. The rebranding of social and cultural capital via a class-encoded discourse of health allows the privileged student to get ahead with even less merit than before. After all, it is only when pain is the exception rather than the rule that it is noticed; only those who can imagine escaping their pain bother to complain about it, and only those who know the system can have the strength to manipulate it.

Don’t Tell Us Where It Smarts
At the politically correct PIRG, I was said to have “able-bodied privilege” because I did not flinch at the sight of itchy fiberglass. The correlate of such privilege is, of course, “ableism,” a moral disorder akin to racism and sexism that is now a target of efforts to weed out triggering language and expand the definition of trauma on campus. “Triggers are not only relevant to sexual misconduct but also to anything that might cause trauma,” says Oberlin College in guidelines issued to its community. “Be aware of racism, classism, sexism, heterosexism, cissexism, ableism and other issues of privilege and oppression. Realize that all forms of violence are traumatic.”

A doctor’s note that documents a “health issue,” preferably one with a trendy acronym, will save your typically heavily credentialed member of the North American elite from the fatal imputation of harboring a “personal failing.” Like a World Cup striker feigning injuries for competitive advantage, the upper-class disability grifter shamelessly exploits the ideals of fair play for personal gain. This is how all the great games are played at the top. Access to a doctor and willingness to ask for a diagnosis secures for the feint-minded upper-class student the right to stop working (or thinking) when it hurts too much. The sap student who takes the field at face value, meanwhile, will just say fuck it, and drop out.
Such are the privileges of the protected few, hidden even to themselves. My rich colleague at the PIRG thought she had an allergy to fiberglass only because she didn’t know anybody who works with it. The benevolent souls in the office who sneezed during the vacuuming simply didn’t understand that vacuuming makes most of us sneeze. Even if they had understood, it would have been immaterial to them, since they feel entitled to a life without unnecessary sneezing.

To what are the able-bodied entitled? The privilege of lifting heavy objects and inhaling toxic dust? In point of fact, Windex makes everyone dizzy and nauseous, and the PIRG’s rotting ceiling tiles made my lungs burn and my entire body itch. But all this is normal for the able-bodied worker. For years, when I drilled over my head, my shoulder seared with pain, and I would drop my drill from the ladder yelling, “Fuckin’ shoulder!” And then pick it up again. And keep drilling. Bad knees and shoulders were never an excuse to not work; instead of using words like “pain,” we were stuck with euphemisms like “knees are acting up again” and “shoulder’s not cooperating today.”

If the concept of “disability” is to benefit the poor as well as the prosperous, then the word “class” must make a comeback.

Does the gardener complain to her employer that raking leaves blisters her hand? Does the house painter point out that the job ranks in the top five professions for incidence of alcoholism? The job is so goddamned boring, not to mention dehydrating (the drying agent in the paint gets into your system), that drinking or smoking something with a kick all day is the only way to avoid hanging yourself from a scaffold. Who has encountered a special acronym for the tendonitis that afflicts janitors who empty the cardboard coffee cups out of grad students’ trash cans every day? If the janitors do get time off to see a doctor, they are likely to be told they have a bad case of “tennis elbow.”

You see, the assumption behind efforts to eradicate “ableism” seems to be that only some people—people with recognized disabilities, and not, for example, workers routinely in harm’s way—deserve protection from dust, paint, and lifting boxes. Only some people don’t like seeing themselves bleed. Only some people are damaged by inhaling trisodium phosphate. And only some people should get to have their papers graded easy.

If ability is now cast as an unfair advantage, then what is the qualification for academic and professional employment beyond a background of wealth and privilege? When rewarding students on the basis of “ability” is reconceived as a form of oppression, then the only mechanism that prevents the academy from being purely an instrument of class reproduction is made taboo.
I saw a health professional for my bad shoulder for the first time this year, twelve years and four months from the moment I first dropped my drill in agony. I filled out the osteopath’s questionnaire, ticking “no” for every single question—no, I hadn’t had any skiing accidents, for example. The osteopath looked over the intake and wondered, “Where did you get the injury, then?”

I explained that I was a manual laborer for ten years and asked why there were no questions eliciting such information. “Are you sure you haven’t been in a car accident?” he replied. “No,” I said, “gardening and painting will do this to anyone.” He seemed astounded. “Most people with a body this damaged would come in much sooner!” As a matter of fact, most people with such damage never come in at all.

Acronyms for Everyone
It would be a mistake to throw away the concept of “disabled” (or “differently abled”), and with it decades of struggle on the part of disability rights activists—especially now, when differently abled people of all sorts are increasingly marginalized by the dismantling of welfare states. But if the concept of “disability” is to benefit the poor as well as the prosperous, then the word “class” must make a comeback. After all, the license to stop working “when it hurts” and to attribute shortcomings and mistakes to “health issues” (as opposed to “personal failures”) has constituted class privilege for a very long time. Meanwhile, the majority of the world’s people continue to suffer the unhealthful consequences of building, cleaning, scraping, assembling chipboards, painting, and raking leaves, while the university-minted elites sit around pushing paper, organizing anti-oppression workshops, and refreshing their Facebook pages as they complain about the pathological conditions of their own lives. So long as window-cleaners, maids, plumbers, janitors, food-servers, and others on the lower rungs of the occupational hierarchy are expected to perform the tasks required in their jobs, they will be in pain, and so long as they are paid as little as they are, there’s no escaping it.

Once upon a time, the fragile sensibilities of the rich were lampooned, as in Hans Christian Andersen’s famous fairy tale “The Princess and the Pea”—no one except the royal, tremblingly attuned to discomfort, can feel the pea under twenty mattresses. Today, these shrinking violets present themselves as a vanguard in the struggle against oppression. They get away with it—there aren’t enough manual laborers in their midst to give them a swift kick in the behind.


http://www.thebaffler.com/salvos/able-bodied-kills-us
FROM The Baffler No. 26 2014

#2
is this article premised on the idea that the reader has never heard of PIRG, which is a complete joke and not "anti-capitalist"? how would it even be possible that the type of person who ends up reading this trash doesn't know that already
#3
that's a good article, i've noticed the same weeping by the soft in my own life
#4

She had a “hose phobia.”

catchphrase

#5

And now, with ten years of graduate school under my belt,

catchphrase

#6

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

that's a good article, i've noticed the same weeping by the soft in my own life



combat liberalism

#7
i wondered why the baffler censored piketty and graeber, the two people in existence with fully NYT-approved zero-threat pseudo-critiques of capitalism, but now i see they had to prep for their new series on social darwinism where they explain that the pristine meritocracy of grad student liberal fart clubs is being destroyed
#8
graeber's cirtique of capitalism isn't "psuedo"
#9
the problem is that people, regardless of their political affiliations but especially on the young identity-politics left, have near-universally come to the conclusion that plight makes right, so of course they accentuate or make up physical or emotional issues. it gives them a shield against criticism, allows them to feel vicitimized, casts themselves as heroically struggling against adversity. we all know that it's a race to the bottom of weeping assholes, but there's nothing really that can be done about it
#10
is there an official name for the phenomenon of people making up medical or mental problems for pity? like nerds who say they have asperger's, or fat crackers with fibromyalgia, or the trendy office bitches with the pretend gluten allergy? if not i submit Munchausen by Politics
#11
it's called opportunism and it's what founded this blessed country
#12
[account deactivated]
#13
[account deactivated]
#14

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

is there an official name for the phenomenon of people making up medical or mental problems for pity? like nerds who say they have asperger's, or fat crackers with fibromyalgia, or the trendy office bitches with the pretend gluten allergy? if not i submit Munchausen by Politics



i think its just regular Munchausen's bro

#15

tpaine posted:

i always said lf lionized the oppressed and forgave them for even their worst impulses



The Church of Jesus Christ of Laissez-Faire Saints

#16
i guess this is my neopets thread, i cant possibly see how this is a real problem that matters at all
#17
frail grad students who get duped into useless jobs malinger and shirk? whoa whoa whoa, seems like we have a social rupture on our hands
#18
to me this is a gimme for the sort of person who reads the baffler, the person who would not accept a mention of the collapse of capitalism in an interview with an anarchist and needs desperately to prove their own seriousness through red baiting, i mean, the editors have no problem with "anti-capitalist" as long as its a label they can erroneously apply to someone theyre condemning
#19

tpaine posted:

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

the problem is that people, regardless of their political affiliations but especially on the young identity-politics left, have near-universally come to the conclusion that plight makes right, so of course they accentuate or make up physical or emotional issues. it gives them a shield against criticism, allows them to feel vicitimized, casts themselves as heroically struggling against adversity. we all know that it's a race to the bottom of weeping assholes, but there's nothing really that can be done about it

i always said lf lionized the oppressed and forgave them for even their worst impulses


aki said on December 26, 2013, 04:47:42 pm :
white ppl enislist like this "AMERICAS ARMY!!! GODSMACK FTW!!!!!! MURK A HAJI CHEEZBURG OPERATOR."
black folks enlist likethis "I ahve hit rck bottom due to institutional racism. WIth no familial or social safetynet, this is truly the least odius of my remaining desperate choices to survive."

#20
i thought disability was mostly fake until i experienced it myself. likewise, i thought socialism was fake until i lived in china and saw the miracle of marxism-leninism mao zedong thought, deng xiaoping theory and the important theory of the three represents in action.
#21
its the same kind of question to me as: are the possible negative effects of leftist criticism of tolokonnikova and alyokhina really the issue or is that a total distraction from the real negative effects of the u.s. government and the u.s. press promoting them as rightist propaganda? in this case its: is the problem really people falsely claiming disabilities or is that a total distraction from how the disabled are drastically underserved?

baffler would normally come down on one side but here baffler dont give a fuck because it wants to say, look at these leftists(??, again PIRG is just where the liberal kids go to hit their financial aid reqs) theyre ruining everything and we assume they are above a certain income so their shit is invalid, but us the baggler, we are serious and you can tell because we will bash the disabled to attack those on our left. im not going to play that game
#22
some of the PIRGs in canada do really good work because they were taken over by anarchists who use the sweet student funding to fund their projects like gas mask training or community research or whatever. when i was a student conservative one of our main goals was always to try to defund radical groups on campus and starve student media and research. it's hard to do though. every few years a conservative group can take over the student council but they can't do much once they are in there other than sabotage student demands on the government and ruin the finances of the student government. but the radical orgs usually persist in their niches.
#23
ive dealt with PIRG on different campuses in the u.s. and the overlap to the democratic party campaign workers was pretty much 1:1, the best thing they ever did on a campus i know about was when they helped organize umich grad students but that wasnt really them. in general those i knew were definitely chakra and organic cereal people and they were about as radical as howard dean, who theywanted to kiss and marry
#24
trigger warnings will always be irreparably bourgeois. i hate privileged millennials and the elevation of minor discomfort to the same status as oppression and discrimination. and i'll never forgive them since thinking this puts me in the same camp as conservatives & other reactionaries.
#25
imo using the word millennial puts you in the camp of people who need to stop describing people with arbitrary fake marketing terms, which is everybody so nothing personal
#26
the motives of this article are just so pathetically blatant, no editor would accept a story about how grad students call in sick to work, the necessary angle for it to even exist is to bash the left
#27
bash... Or discipline???
#28
if we're assuming good faith on the part of thomas frank's magazine i have to stay here on planet earth
#29
maybe it isn't bashing the legitimately disabled, just whining crybabies with faked ailments
#30
[account deactivated]
#31
this is exactly what i said, they are staking their claim suddenly on, holy shit, fake ailments, weird hypochondriacs, working the system, students working jobs have it easy? that seems kind of weird for the baffler, doesn't it?
#32
like why are they publishing goatstein posts??
#33
is this the outgrowth of the line that the republicans are right about cutting suspiciously unpatriotic college departments? now students are driving cadillacs around with their PIRG welfare checks?
#34

daddyholes posted:

the motives of this article are just so pathetically blatant, no editor would accept a story about how grad students call in sick to work, the necessary angle for it to even exist is to bash the left


You're not being fair here though, because the article isn't about grad students shirking and malingering, it's about how shirking and malingering among the academic elite is (successfully) rebranded as a serious political identity defined by disability and mental health.

#35
It's hard for me to not be at least a little sympathetic to the article because the diagnosis is largely correct. Left-leaning student organizations (and the NGOs these students are eventually fed into) are open and considerate to a fault when it comes identity politics categories but largely silent and frankly ignorant when it comes to social class, which plays second fiddle to gluten sensitivity and hose phobias. You're probably right that this isn't a "real problem" but it's emblematic and almost certainly symptomatic of a much more significant academic turn where what's considered important is narratives, communities, bodies, voices, lived experience and Tane, while political economy gets ignored and class is given lip service at best. This exercises a profound impact on student orgs since it's shoved down their throats, but also has a, heh heh heh, shall we say, problematic influence on the larger left, and when it comes down to it I'm always happy to see people point out how retarded this is even if it's from the mouth of fellow retards who write for Teh Baffeler.
#36
yeah i mean i thought it was a p good article aside from the obvious lack of call for immediate revolution and full communism
#37

aerdil posted:

trigger warnings will always be irreparably bourgeois.

because PTSD doesn't exist? wtf.

#38
Trigger warnings aren't solely or even primarily on descriptions of graphic violence, they're slapped on anything that might make any soft basket case feel uncomfortable, from differing opinions to pictures of creepy houses. This is what the article is talking about, BTW. These useless crybabies hide behind and exploit our sympathy so you can't even criticize their catepillar phobia without some well-intentioned person getting upset that we're heartless towards gang rape victims
#39
#40

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

Trigger warnings aren't solely or even primarily on descriptions of graphic violence, they're slapped on anything that might make any soft basket case feel uncomfortable, from differing opinions to pictures of creepy houses. This is what the article is talking about, BTW. These useless crybabies hide behind and exploit our sympathy so you can't even criticize their catepillar phobia without some well-intentioned person getting upset that we're heartless towards gang rape victims

thanks for clearing that up i guess.

the fact that TWs are overused doesn't make all of them worthless.