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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (1059760)3/11/2018 3:40:18 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573924
 
I like this CNN story:

How a cup of coffee becomes a 'human rights movement'

By Kathleen Toner, CNN
Updated 6:54 PM ET, Sun December 17, 2017


When Wright and her husband discovered that 70% of those with intellectual disabilities don't have jobs, they opened the coffee shop to do something about it.

"When Beau was born, we were thrust into the world of special needs. So we've been trying to advocate in different ways since then, and that intensified after (we had) Bitty. But it's so hard to get people to change their perceptions. It felt like we were swimming upstream. People are scared of what they don't know, so that's why we've decided to live out loud and to show people what our lives are like."

The employees at Bitty & Beau's Coffee are what make the place special, customers say. Creating opportunities for them to interact with each other and the public is empowering, Wright contends. "It's more than a cup of coffee," she said. "It's a human rights movement."


Amy Wright, founder and CEO of Bitty & Beau's Coffee, employs 40 people living with intellectual and developmental disabilities ranging from Down syndrome to autism to cerebral palsy. Her efforts landed her on the list of top 10 CNN Heroes for 2017.

Bitty & Beau's Coffee is known as "The Happiest Place in Wilmington," but that's not just because of its mochas and lattes -- at the heart of this North Carolina coffee shop's popularity is its unique staff.

The shop opened in January 2016 and immediately had lines out the door. National press attention followed, and six months later, it had to move to a larger space.

In addition to the 40 employees who live with disabilities, Bitty & Beau's employs two managers who are trained in special education. "Our wait time is no longer than any of our competitors," Wright said. "They've all gotten really good at their jobs and step up if somebody else needs help."

People are scared of what they don't know, so that's why we've decided to live out loud and to show people what our lives are like."

Bitty & Beau's Coffee is known as "The Happiest Place in Wilmington," but that's not just because of its mochas and lattes -- at the heart of this North Carolina coffee shop's popularity is its unique staff.

The shop opened in January 2016 and immediately had lines out the door. National press attention followed, and six months later, it had to move to a larger space.










At the heart of the shop's popularity is its unique staff: Almost everyone who works there has an intellectual or developmental disability, ranging from Down syndrome to autism to cerebral palsy. For many employees, it's their first job, and their joy fills the air.



"It hit me like a lightning bolt: a coffee shop!" Wright said. "I realized it would be the perfect environment for bringing people together. Seeing the staff taking orders, serving coffee -- they'd realize how capable they are."

The shop opened in January 2016 and immediately had lines out the door. National press attention followed, and six months later, it had to move to a larger space.
Today, the Wilmington store employs 40 people with disabilities, as well as two managers who have degrees in special education. The team works like a well-oiled machine.
"Our wait time is no longer than any of our competitors," Wright said. "They've all gotten really good at their jobs and step up if somebody else needs help."
All the profits from the coffee shop go to Wright's nonprofit, Able to Work USA. But she's most proud of the bridges it's built in the community.
"Creating this has given people a way to interact with people with disabilities that (they) never had before," she said. "This is a safe place where people can test the waters and realize how much more alike we are than different. And that's what it's all about."

CNN's Kathleen Toner spoke with Wright about her work. Below is an edited version of their conversation.

CNN: The coffee shop wasn't your first effort. What else have you done to help people with disabilities?

Amy Wright: When Beau was born, we were thrust into the world of special needs. So, we've been trying to advocate in different ways since then, and that intensified after (we had) Bitty. But it's so hard to get people to change their perceptions. It felt like we were swimming upstream. People are scared of what they don't know, so that's why we've decided to live out loud and to show people what our lives are like.
With employment, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities aren't valued the way typically-developed people are. So, Ben hired a few people (with disabilities) at his office and then I started a nonprofit to help (them) find employment. But I had hundreds of people who wanted jobs and could barely find an employer who would even give one of them an interview. Yet, what I have seen is when you just give them a chance, they can do anything you ask them to do.


CNN: How much do these jobs mean to your employees?
Wright: Having a workplace that makes you feel proud of yourself and gives you a sense of community is something we all want. For our employees, I feel like it's the first time they've had that. We figured out what their skill set was and we plugged them in. They're proud to be employed by Bitty and Beau's Coffee, and they will shout it from the rooftops. It's given them purpose and a sense of being valued in ways that we take for granted.
We always say, it's more than a cup of coffee. It's a human rights movement; the coffee shop is just a vehicle for making that happen. It's given our employees the respect that they deserve.
CNN: How do customers respond?
Wright: Every single day, people say, "You made my day. Thank you." There's something so pure about our team. They genuinely are happy that you're there, and they make you feel that way. That's a feeling most people don't get anywhere that they go, and I think it's what draws people back.
We have become a destination. We have a map up on the wall where people can pinpoint where they've come from. We started with a national map, and we have people that have pinpointed all around the border because they've come from outside the country.
CNN: What's your next step?
Wright: Right now, people come to Bitty and Beau's Coffee because they know what we're doing and they want to experience it. We want to take that to a place where people don't know what they're about to step into, which is why we're opening a second location in Charleston, South Carolina. We are hoping to employ 20 more people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
By opening another shop in a real high-tourist area, people (will) think they're going to get a cup of coffee, and they're going to get so much more. It's taking our mission to another level, and we feel like that's when we're really going to start changing hearts and minds.

https://www.cnn.com/2017/06/22/health/cnnheroes-amy-wright-bitty-and-beaus-coffee/index.html





To: Brumar89 who wrote (1059760)3/11/2018 4:26:29 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573924
 
WaPo Columnist: Thank Goodness I Have The Right To Abort A Baby With Down Syndrome

ALLAHPUNDITPosted at 7:01 pm on March 10, 2018



Imagine feeling this way and having so little shame about it that you’d ask a major newspaper to publicize your point of view.

And now imagine that the paper prints it, reasoning that an opinion shared so widely must be “reasonable” and defensible by definition.

The worst part here is her patronizing praise of mothers who carry their children with Down’s to term. How admirable you are to bear the burden of this defective.

I respect — I admire — families that knowingly welcome a baby with Down syndrome into their lives. Certainly, to be a parent is to take the risks that accompany parenting; you love your child for who she is, not what you want her to be.

But accepting that essential truth is different from compelling a woman to give birth to a child whose intellectual capacity will be impaired, whose life choices will be limited, whose health may be compromised. Most children with Down syndrome have mild to moderate cognitive impairment, meaning an IQ between 55 and 70 (mild) or between 35 and 55 (moderate). This means limited capacity for independent living and financial security; Down syndrome is life-altering for the entire family.

I’m going to be blunt here: That was not the child I wanted. That was not the choice I would have made. You can call me selfish, or worse, but I am in good company. The evidence is clear that most women confronted with the same unhappy alternative would make the same decision.

I wouldn’t call it “good company” but she does have a lot of company in her views, particularly in Europe. “What is the purpose of pre-natal testing for Down syndrome?” asked the author, Ruth Marcus, in a tweet afterward, highlighting the fact that even doctors screen for Down’s early to help their patients weed out the “undesirables.” In a better world the answer would be “to help parents start to adjust as soon as possible to the special needs their child will have,” but that’s not the world we live in.

Naturally Marcus is being applauded for the “courage” of her monstrousness by like-minded bien-pensants. I’ll grant her two points. One: The usual pro-life counter to abortion arguments, that adoption is always an option, is a harder sell here precisely because Marcus’s view isn’t fringe. Even among the population of childless couples eager for a baby, some surely don’t want “that kind” of baby and not because they can’t afford it. A woman weighing whether to carry a baby with Down’s to term might reason that its future would be uncertain and potentially difficult in institutions if she surrendered it and it wasn’t adopted, in which case the “humane” thing to do is to, ah, kill it.

Two: She’s ultimately making a legal argument against state laws (like in Ohio and Indiana) that attempt to bar women from aborting if their sole reason is the fact that the baby has Down’s. That makes no sense, Marcus argues, uncorking this humdinger of a line: “Can it be that women have more constitutional freedom to choose to terminate their pregnancies on a whim than for the reason that the fetus has Down syndrome?” You don’t often see abortion supporters frame the right to choose in terms of “whims” — maybe she figured if she’s going to be brutally honest about aborting Down’s babies, she might as well be brutally honest about abortion in general — but she’s right, of course. The point of the Ohio and Indiana laws is to offer special protection for babies at greatly elevated risk of being aborted, but that creates a framework in which it’s okay to have your baby killed so long as it has 46 chromosomes but not if it has 47. If the state can start carving out exceptions from abortion rights for certain kinds of children, that’s a foot in the door to banning the practice entirely. Thus, if you’re pro-choice, you really have no choice but to die on this hill if need be. In the name of making sure that any child can be lawfully killed in the womb, we have to make sure that Down’s children can be too.

Needless to say, she’s hearing it from conservatives today:




Gabriel Malor@gabrielmalor

Monstrous evil unashamedly displayed. You would never say that women need the right to abort, say, a fetus predisposed to be gay, or a fetus predisposed to be alcoholic, or a fetus predisposed to be (*cough*China*cough*) female. t.co



Alexandra DeSanctis
?@xan_desanctis


A 2011 study found that nearly 99% of people with Down syndrome over the age of 12 said they were happy with their lives. 99% said they loved their families. 97% said they liked their brothers and sisters. 86% felt they could make friends easily. t.co

11:32 PM - Mar 9, 2018



Ben Domenech
?@bdomenech


Here is the reality. Here is the truth.

We have been slowly but surely eradicating Down Syndrome in the West by destroying these children before they are born.

History will not leave this without judgment.




Ben Domenech
?@bdomenech


History will judge the eradicators for what they are: eugenicists who transformed a genetic abnormality into a death serntence.

It will not judge them kindly.

Yeah, it’s nice at least to see the eugenic roots of modern abortion policy getting a callback, I suppose. Very old-school. Would that all abortion warriors were as candid as Marcus is.

https://hotair.com/archives/2018/03/10/wapo-columnist-thank-goodness-right-abort-baby-syndrome/