Can somebody really be born disabled? 06 26 2022
To be disabled first you have to have ability.
Ability is something that is learned?
The ability to speak. The ability to drink from a cup. The ability to listen. The ability to learn. And right there we are going in a circle with it aren't we? If we define ability as something that is learned and then state that an ability is to learn.
Disabled also is thought of more in terms of working years? Or is more relevant from that perspective?
If somebody is born without the ability to see where they born disabled? Born not "~abeled" to see? Does that fact that it isn't a word tell us something?
With the ed on it is there a past tense to it?
What am I getting at? A mother is wealthy. She drinks like a fish. And she has Down's Syndrome children and proudly she states that they were born disabled? As if...
And then you have people like that who climb up and a hand comes down to help them and they are propped up on the Supreme Court and also proudly declaring that there may be no abortions at all. "Drink like a fish all you want while pregnant honey sweet pea, you won't have to raise that disabled child, we got the key to the purse strings here to help you."
I got wrap this up. Got more stuff to do.
I suppose you would have to graduate from college, pass the CPA exam and then be tormented with voices saying jealous things about you before you could understand this. "Doctor are you trying to say that the reason I hear these jealous comment about me is because I am jealous of myself?"
So there has to be a hem and a haw answer to that in the next line of dialog.
Which brings up the philosophical point, "Doctor if it isn't me who is jealous of myself then perhaps could there be someone else or other people that are in this world and somehow that strongly manifested itself upon graduation from college?
Anyone else see the two sides of the coin here?
© 2022 Thomas Murphy
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