By Ouyang Dan on 1 November, 2009
Moderatix note: This post will be United States Military centric, as that is the perspective I offer, and the broken system within which I currently exist and attempt to navigate. Other voices are welcome and experiences appreciated within the context of the conversation, since I can not pretend to know every thing about every military [...]
Posted in accessibility, military, Uncategorized | Tagged drugs are bad mmm'kay, military, TRICARE
By Ouyang Dan on 23 October, 2009
Moderatix note: This post will be United States Military centric, as that is the perspective I offer, and the broken system within which I currently exist and attempt to navigate. Other voices are welcome and experiences appreciated within the context of the conversation, since I can not pretend to know every thing about every military [...]
Posted in accessibility, medical practice, military | Tagged drugs are bad mmm'kay, medical care, military, TRICARE
By kaninchenzero on 23 October, 2009
Welcome to Ableist Word Profile, a (probably intermittent) series in which staffers will profile various ableist words, talk about how they are used, and talk about how to stop using them. Ableism is not feminism, so it’s important to talk about how to eradicate ableist language from our vocabularies. This post is marked 101, which [...]
Posted in 101, Ableist Word Profile, activism, blaming, class issues, feminism, identity, intersectionality, justice, language, mental health, military, normality, shaming, social attitudes | Tagged ableism, exclusion, intersectionality, justice, language, privilege, racism, word use
By Ouyang Dan on 22 October, 2009
Moderatix note: This post will be United States Military centric, as that is the perspective I offer, and the broken system within which I currently exist and attempt to navigate. Other voices are welcome and experiences appreciated within the context of the conversation, since I can not pretend to know every thing about every military [...]
Posted in intersectionality, justice, military, Uncategorized | Tagged invisible disability, justice, medical care, military, Veteran's Affairs, women in uniform
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