Quote:
Originally Posted by Cory W
Sports has commonly been known to accommodate those less fortunate, particularly on the High School level. I am pretty sure it wasn't that long ago that a kid with a disability hit a surge of 3 pointers in the final minutes of the final game of the year. What was he, like a glorified ball boy? He loved the game, they made it happen. USC allowed a blind kid to do rallies for the football team players. Rob Machado still pushes a paraplegic into waves and he is lobbying for him to get into surf competitions. Putting her on that team may well have meant the world to her, of course now she's a news article and a joke by many, including in this thread.
The true essence of sports at that level is character, not as much competition, and I am confident that by teaching that team to accommodate her, they would have instilled leaps and bounds of character in all of them.
I am sure if any of you had a kid with a disability, you'd feel differently. I am fortunate enough to feel that way with or without said scenario.
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Huge LOL 50x @ 'fortunate'.
She's a joke because the whole idea that disabled people are 'the same' is a joke. So putting her in dance lessons "... for ten years, sitting on the floor with shoes placed on her arms so that she could tap rhythms on the floor." is a joke.
Her parents would have done her a far greater service with ten years of useful tutoring.
I don't see anyone laughing at Stephen Hawking.