Gelding the Bull or Shoveling the Manure
Gelding the Bull or Shoveling the Manure
Lisa Mauldin
Gelding the Bull or Shoveling the Manure...It just Depends
on your Perspective
by Lisa LaNell Mauldin
From the Editor: Lisa Mauldin is a Federationist
who lives in Alabama. On April 6 she read an editorial in New York Newsday which
annoyed her. She undertook a good deal of research before sitting down to respond.
She first sent her article to the paper, inviting the editorial staff to use
it as an op-ed piece, but to date New York Newsday has exhibited no interest
in setting the record straight. Lisa then circulated her response to a number
of listservs, and the Web site <EnableLink.com> posted it almost immediately.
Here it is as it was posted:
One of the hottest topics inside the Beltway
of our nation's capital these days is the digital divide. A techno-term created
with the advent of the Internet, digital divide describes the ever-widening
chasm that exists between the Internet access haves and have nots. As the debate
becomes more heated, the access issue--like so many others--has fallen victim
to the great legislation versus free-enterprise tug-of-war, which has colored
our political palette from the beginning of time and shows no sign of dissipating
any time soon. The firestorm surrounding this issue got a little hotter last
week, however, as the anti-legislation army launched a major offensive through
a newspaper article to which I would like to respond.
The article in question was entitled "Federal
Gorilla Is Loose in Silicon Valley," which appeared in the April 6, 2000,
edition of the New York Newsday, (notes 1 & 2) written by staff columnist
James P. Pinkerton (note 3.)
Mr. Pinkerton begins by discussing the
Microsoft verdict and its resulting proliferation of federal regulation (in
his opinion) of computer and Internet companies. While this matter will no doubt
be discussed for years in the hallowed, ivy-covered halls of business and law
schools, as well as the mahogany-paneled board rooms of international conglomerates,
I will move on to other issues, but not before I make one observation, the importance
of which will become clear later. Mr. Pinkerton characterizes the federal government's
activities both in the Microsoft matter and throughout the rest of Silicon Valley
as "gratuitous meddling." In the meantime let's look at Mr. Pinkerton's
position on federal legislation of Internet access for people with disabilities
through Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Citing it as an issue that has the potential
to "geld the bull market" (referring to the NASDAQ composite upon
which most technology stocks are listed) Mr. Pinkerton opens his debate about
Section 508 with these words: "Consider just one item: Section 508 of the
federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended in 1998. It requires federal
agencies to make sure that the electronic technology they use is equally accessible
to employees with disabilities. In addition, it requires that members of the
public with disabilities have equal access to public information."
Mr. Pinkerton goes on to add: "That sounds reasonable, but what about
blind employees and computers--and the Internet? Or blind members of the public?
How does one go about making the so-called graphical user interface accessible
to those who can't see graphics?"
It would appear that Mr. Pinkerton might
have pulled a Rip Van Winkle, for his question about how one goes about making
the GUI accessible to people who are blind raises the inescapable inquiry, "Where
has he been for the past twenty years?"
Mr. Pinkerton is asking a question that
the disability technology community has already resoundingly answered. Blind
people have been using screen-reading software to access not only the Internet
but off-the-shelf e-mail, word processing, spread-sheet, and database software
(just to name a few) for years now.
At this point the article takes a nasty
turn as Mr. Pinkerton appeals to the destructive attitude of racism, employing
the see-how-you-got-taken? strategy as he gives the reader his historical perspective
on civil rights enforcement. "But history suggests that civil rights enforcement
starts small, grows big, and then grows burdensome. That process usually begins
with Washington setting model standards, then rippling them out across society."
Burdensome? Civil rights? To whom? ...only
to those card-carrying members of the ruling class whose absolute power is somehow
threatened by the equality of others? Color me enlightened.
The reader will be comforted to know that
Mr. Pinkerton goes on to cite the creation of the Fair Employment Practices
Commission during World War II and its use by the federal government as a springboard
to bring about racial integration and anti-discrimination laws as his supporting
argument for "burdensome."
Having dispensed his racial views, Mr.
Pinkerton demonstrates that he is an equal opportunity discriminator, moving
on to address people who are blind. "But it's one thing to argue that people
of equal abilities ought to enjoy equal opportunity; it's quite another to argue
that those who can't see must somehow be empowered to use an inherently visual
medium."
Blind individuals are not asking to be
"empowered" to drive or perform brain surgery, but rather that Internet
Web site developers use the well-documented Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
created by the Web Accessibility Initiative of the World Wide Web Consortium
(W3C - note 4) in the design phase so that blind "individuals with equal
abilities can enjoy equal opportunities"--guidelines, I might add, that
would benefit non-disabled Internet users as well. Section 508 and other legislation
does not mandate that a solution be created but rather that demonstrated models
of success be used and supported.
Mr. Pinkerton would be shocked (apparently) to know that the Information Technology
industry employs many blind people, who work in all facets of the business--even
as Web-site developers. (You really should get out more, James.) In addition,
the federal government is also a large employer of people with disabilities,
including blind people. Is he now suggesting that blind employees are not entitled
to the same access to information necessary to perform their jobs as their sighted
counterparts?
Even more ironic to me is the fact that
he could ask such a question in such a prominent daily publication. Unfortunately,
this disturbing development is a clear indication of just how pervasive and
politically correct discrimination against people with disabilities has become
in our society. Have we really forgotten this tone so quickly? If Mr. Pinkerton
were asking, "But it's one thing to argue that people of equal abilities
ought to enjoy equal opportunity; it's quite another to argue that those who
are African-American must somehow be empowered to use an inherently white medium,"
the expression of outrage--African-American and white alike--would be overwhelming,
and I would question if his inflammatory rhetoric would even have been printed
in such a mainstream publication as New York Newsday.
Finally we get down to the ultimate purpose
for Mr. Pinkerton's article. (Pay close attention here. things are about to
get political.) Mr. Pinkerton now quotes Walter Olson, senior fellow at the
Manhattan Institute, who asserts that, if these standards are ever enforced,
"hundreds of millions of Web pages would have to be torn down."
Walter Olson must be the foremost authority
on the Internet and accessibility for people with disabilities, wouldn't you
think? I mean, after all, based on the concise and authoritative statements
made here, one gets the distinct impression that he would surely know best.
I certainly did. So I went in search of answers.
Well, according to the Bio page on the
Walter Olson Home Page (note 5), he is...are you sitting down?...an attorney.
And not just an attorney, but an attorney with an agenda.
Investor's Business Daily called Olson
"Perhaps America's leading authority on over-litigation" and the Washington
Post dubbed Olson an "intellectual guru of tort reform." Olson has
authored two books: The Litigation Explosion (reviewed favorably in the New
York Times by the late Chief Justice Warren Burger) and The Excuse Factory,
his book on litigation in the workplace, which has received rave reviews (A.B.A.
Journal, "wittily scathing" and The American Spectator, "devastating
and eloquent"). Do we detect a pattern yet? Hang on; it gets better.
Mr. Olson is the Senior Fellow for the
Manhattan Institute (note 6) which describes itself as "a think tank whose
mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic
choice and individual responsibility,"..."an important force in shaping
American political culture." How, might you ask, is this lofty goal accomplished?
In their own words (note 7) "We have cultivated a staff of senior fellows
and writers who blend intellectual rigor, sound principles, and strong writing
ability. Their provocative books, reviews, interviews, speeches, articles, and
op-ed pieces have been the main vehicle for communicating our message."
Yes, it's true. Walter Olson is hardly
an expert on Internet accessibility for people with disabilities, but rather
he is an unashamed, "cultivated" mouthpiece for a conservative Manhattan
think tank seeking to shape our government's public policy according to their
own principles and standards. (Walks like a lobbyist, talks like a lobbyist...)
I have no problem with that--that's the way our system works, but for Mr. Pinkerton
to base a majority of his article on the propaganda of one individual representing
a special interest group without clearly identifying his agenda is...well, I'll
let you be the judge. It is true that Pinkerton mentions "Senior Fellow...conservative
think tank Manhattan Institute," but this hardly constitutes full disclosure
of the wide-ranging scope of Olson's underlying bias.
Finally, Mr. Pinkerton sinks to the lowest
point in his article, resorting to the tactic of presenting examples of abuses
(in his opinion) of the Americans with Disabilities Act that can only be described
as extreme and isolated circumstances as widespread and commonplace. Again the
writer returns to his favorite source--his only source--Walter Olson, since
this same example has been used by Olson repeatedly to support his position
against Internet legislation (note 8). Citing a February Miami Daily Business
Review article (which is actually a December 21, 1999, article - note 9), Pinkerton
"suggests" that ADA lawsuits have reached epidemic proportions and
represent a real threat to life as we know it. (Oh brother!) Let's take a rational
look at the situation in question.
The Review article opens with, "South
Florida businesses big and small are under siege from a handful of litigious
advocates for the disabled...." It goes on to say, "Plaintiffs, including
a half-dozen non-profit corporations and associated individuals, have filed
more than 600 federal suits in Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach."
Who are these plaintiffs?
Again from the Miami article, "Nearly
all those cases, generally brought by a few disabled people acting as surrogates
for others..." and "At the forefront of this legal assault is a six-lawyer
Miami Beach law firm, Fuller Mallah & Associates. Since May, 1998, state
records show Fuller Mallah helped form a trio of nonprofit companies in Broward,
Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties respectively, the Alliance for ADA Compliance,
Inc.; Advocates for the Disabled, Inc.; and the Boca Access Group. Today those
nonprofits are plaintiffs in more than 300 ADA cases in South Florida. Advocates
for the Disabled brought 276 of those cases." According to the article,
"Advocates for the Disabled was originally incorporated by Ernst Rosenkrantz,
seventy-two, of Miami Beach." The writer goes on to say of Rosenkrantz,
"He is also a plaintiff in 323 cases, some in league with Advocates for
Disabled. The Fuller Mallah law firm represents both Advocates for the Disabled
and Rosenkrantz, a retired architect who has been confined to a wheelchair for
fifty-three years." As it turns out, attorney John D. Mallah is Rosenkrantz's
nephew.
Handful? Half dozen? A few disabled people?
One six-lawyer law firm? A trio of non-profits? One seventy-two-year-old man
and his nephew? Surely Olson and Pinkerton are not holding up this tightly-knit
group--for all practical purposes to be considered as a single entity--as their
proof of widespread over-litifgation? It is widely held that there are about
fifty-four million people with disabilities in the United States, and they are
suggesting that this one example of seemingly bad behavior on the part of less
than twenty individuals constitutes an epidemic? Talk about scare tactics.
Using the high end of his figures ($20,000
per settlement) times even a ten fold exaggeration of 6,000 lawsuits, we have
arrived at the grand total of $12 million. That wouldn't even pay one decent
professional basketball player for a single year or a high-flying dot-com CEO
(not including perks and benefits). For both Olson and Pinkerton even to hint
that in the mind of every disabled person lies a lawsuit waiting to get out,
as well as to raise the issue that maybe our society just can't afford accessibility,
is irresponsible at best and outright deception at worst.
While everyone is examining the bottom
line, let's consider what it costs to support people with disabilities using
tax dollars. With estimates for the blind population of the U.S. around 1.1
million and their unemployment figures estimated to be about 74 percent, that
leaves 814,000 blind and visually impaired individuals without jobs. Figure
conservatively that only half of that number collect some kind of SSI or SSDI
benefit and that that benefit includes a monthly check for $500 (again conservatively),
the U.S. tax-paying citizen is shelling out $203.5 million per month in cash
benefits (not including Medicare and Medicaid.) That's $203,500,000, and that
is only for people who are blind, making no consideration for people with any
other kind of disability. And Pinkerton says we can't afford the Americans with
Disabilities Act?
Now that we have a pretty clear understanding
of Olson's and Pinkerton's political affiliation, you may be more than a little
surprised to learn that I, too, profess ultra-conservative political views,
even going so far as to consider myself a civil libertarian, as do both of these
gentlemen. Back in the beginning of this article, I told you that Mr. Pinkerton
believed that the government's actions against Microsoft were unwarranted, and
I have to confess that--at many levels--I too believe that to be true. I do
not believe that the solution to every problem lies in federal legislation,
and I too am a huge proponent of individual responsibility. However, unlike
Mr. Olson and Mr. Pinkerton, I cannot afford to advocate for lofty ideals which
are not practical in the real world. I guess it would be fair to say that what
separates my civil libertarian views from theirs is the scope. I believe that
civil liberties should be extended to include people with disabilities, while
apparently they do not.
The purist civil libertarian viewpoint
says that accessibility should be voluntary, leaving the market to find and
implement appropriate solutions. This sounds good in a political debate or as
the topic of rousing dinner party conversation among individuals who have never
experienced firsthand the devastating effects of discrimination, but when all
is said and done--unlike Olson and Pinkerton--I have to live my personal politics
and principles day in and day out in a reality that bears little or no resemblance
to theirs.
I am blind. I have been around the block
enough times to know that in a market-driven society concerned almost exclusively
with stock prices and shareholders, doing the right thing isn't always at the
top of everyone's list. In fact, oftentimes it doesn't make the list at all.
Had society in general been willing to do the right thing in the first place,
the Americans with Disabilities Act--celebrating its tenth anniversary this
year--would never have been necessary. The reality is that--like racial integration--Internet
access to people with disabilities isn't going to happen by itself, and--like
racial segregation--denial or delay of access has profound and nearly irrevocable
consequences on the educational and economic opportunities available to people
with disabilities.
Walter Olson recently testified before
the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the House Judiciary Committee in a February
9, 2000, hearing on "The Applicability of the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) to Private Internet Sites" (note 10), where he argued that the
government should not mandate that the Internet be made accessible to people
with disabilities because in his opinion such action would limit or stifle that
which may be enjoyed by other Internet consumers. In effect he was suggesting
that it was okay to trample on the civil rights of one group in order to ensure
that the privileges of another group would not be denied.
If you're older than thirty, this attitude
should sound very familiar. It wasn't all that long ago that segregationists
argued that integration of our public schools would infringe upon the quality
of education for white children and that integration of the work place would
take jobs away from white workers, thereby justifying the continued educational
and economic oppression of African-Americans because to do otherwise just wasn't
convenient for the white establishment. Have we as a nation forgotten this so
quickly?
In closing let me say that reading Pinkerton's
article reminded me of our old family home movies. Within the flash of a single
frame the screen would switch from scenes of us sledding down the neighbor's
steep front yard to building sand castles on the beach, from hunting for Easter
eggs in our back yard to cutting the Thanksgiving turkey, from opening our Christmas
presents to Mother's Day Sunday dinner. He jumped from disjointed subject to
unrelated concept in the blink of an eye, and to follow his misguided logic
from the Microsoft verdict to the Americans with Disabilities Act required some
serious imagination.
In the end my greatest regret is that
many who read Pinkerton's flight of fancy will take it as gospel, never fully
understanding the load of manure they have been dealt, and ultimately, the only
ones who will pay for Pinkerton's actions are people with disabilities, who
only want a chance to pursue our share of the American Dream. Is that too much
to ask? Apparently Mr. Pinkerton thinks so. (note 11)
(Author's Note: Every single Web site
I referenced in researching this article--including the article itself--was
fully accessible to me with no trouble whatsoever. I guess here are at least
ten Web pages out of the "hundreds of millions" that won't have to
be "torn down" in order to comply with emerging federal access legislation.
Special thanks to Gregg and Kelly for
technical and editorial advice and insights without which this article would
not have been possible. My e-mail address is <[email protected]>.
Note 1: Newsday "Federal Gorilla Loose in Silicon Valley" <http://www.newsday.com/coverage/current/columns/thursday/nd3840.htm>
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