To everyone who thinks we& #39;re mad at Christopher Nolan not allowing chairs for no reason: disabled actors exist and shouldn& #39;t have to fight for the basic right to sit, which can be immensely helpful in pain management. Disabled actors deserve roles too.
"You& #39;re blowing it out of proportion" come back to me after you have to wear ankle braces and knee braces and leave a job that makes you do heavy lifting because you don& #39;t know if it& #39;ll injure you and you left work every day in tears from the pain of constant standing
high five to my undiagnosed hypermobility crew
I don& #39;t think it& #39;s overreacting to block ableism just like I don& #39;t think it& #39;s overreacting to block aphobia
Oh boy the trolls have found me that& #39;s just peachy https://abs.twimg.com/emoji/v2/... draggable="false" alt="🙃" title="Auf den Kopf gestelltes Gesicht" aria-label="Emoji: Auf den Kopf gestelltes Gesicht">

maybe like, don& #39;t tell a disabled person that we& #39;re exagerrating when we notice and call out ableism k thanks
I& #39;m muting this because at this point it would just be me arguing with people about why this is ableist and I am not in the mood, but real quick:
When disabled people tell you that something disproportionately effects their ability to work at a job or carry out a task and you respond with "you& #39;re blowing things out of proportion" or "It& #39;s not that bad" or anything like that: You are an asshole. Full stop. Bye.
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