A Canadian advocacy group for people with Down syndrome is
getting backlash over an admittedly “edgy” campaign that compares people with
the condition to animals.
The Canadian Down Syndrome Society wants the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature to add people with Down syndrome to its
endangered species list. They would be the first humans on the list, which
classifies endangered, threatened and vulnerable animal species around the
globe.
A video from the advocacy group makes its point
in part by dressing individuals with Down syndrome in costumes resembling such
endangered, threatened and vulnerable species as polar bears, lions and rhinos.
The campaign is a reaction to the fact that genetic
screening has led to a significant decrease in people born with Down syndrome.
Since the prenatal tests were introduced in Iceland in the
early 2000s, for example, almost 100 percent of women who received a positive
test for Down syndrome opted for an abortion, according to CBS. As a result,
the condition has been almost completely disappeared from Iceland’s younger
population.
Some people may believe that eradicating the condition is a
good thing. But advocates argue that this kind of attitude contributes to a
stigma that people with Down Syndrome are lesser humans. And that kind of
thinking impacts societal awareness, funding and job opportunities for those
who have Down syndrome and desperately need aid — hence the campaign.
“Whether it’s underfunded support programs for education,
higher rates of unemployment, extended waitlists for appropriate housing, or
even just negative public perception and stigma, the challenges faced by people
with Down syndrome aren’t decreasing — they’re increasing,” Laura LaChance, the
board chair for the Canadian Down Syndrome Society, said in a press release.
The group told HuffPost Canada that by pushing to add people
with Down syndrome to the endangered species list, it’s advocating for the same
kinds of “funding, protections, government intervention and public awareness
that species on the Endangered List receive.”…
Francie Munoz, a woman with Down syndrome who received media
attention in 2017 after footage showed two police officers mocking her during a
traffic stop, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that she is not a fan
of the campaign.
t doesn’t matter who you are ... I don’t like people
comparing me as an animal. It’s not fair,” Munoz told the Toronto-based CBC.
“Love us for who we are, not a character, not an animal.”
Her father, Carlos Munoz, also feels the campaign is sending
the wrong message.
“The parents I have talked to do not appreciate the fact
that our children are being compared to animals,” he told the CBC. “As cute as
a polar bear can be, I don’t think that anybody should be making that
comparison in that sense.”
He also noted that even though the campaign is sparking a
conversation, it’s mostly among people in the Down syndrome community and it’s
focused on the campaign itself.
Some people simply seemed confused by the advocacy group’s
effort…
So while the campaign is certainly fighting for people with
Down syndrome, the “endangered species” gimmick may be turning off more people
than it’s enlightening.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/down-syndrome-endangered-species-canada_us_5be5c35ee4b0769d24ccd03a
Courtesy of: https://www.medpagetoday.com/primarycare/opioids/76277
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