David Paterson’s ascension moment to celebrate for me

By Kathi Wolfe, March 17, 2008

Growing up legally blind, I never imagined that anyone like me would become a top political leader. But now David A. Paterson has been sworn in as this country’s first blind governor.

Paterson has been legally blind since he was an infant. He earned a degree in history from Columbia University and graduated from Hofstra Law School. He has served in the Queens district attorney’s office and in the N.Y. state Senate. In 2002, he became minority leader of that body.

An African-American, Paterson has endured racial discrimination, and he has overcome it. He is the third African-American governor since Reconstruction.

At the same time, he has encountered disability-based prejudice. “Internally, I probably felt myself more discriminated against as a disabled person,” he told the New York Times.

Like many of us with disabilities, Paterson defies the low expectations that this society has of what we can accomplish. (I have had people wonder how I can do everything from cross streets to write articles.)

Some people have said to me, “Paterson sounds like a great guy! But will he be able to do the job?”

Like anyone committed to his or her work, he’ll find a way to get the tasks done. As is the case with we who are disabled, Paterson has adapted. He has highly refined listening skills, he reads by holding materials up close to his face and when needed, he has people act as sighted guides for him.

Every day that he’s in office, Paterson will have the “opportunity to show the world that a blind man can do just as well as a sighted man,” said George Covington, a legally blind writer who was a special assistant for disability policy in the first Bush administration.

I’m hopeful that Paterson will do what he can to combat discrimination against people with disabilities. Seventy-one percent of blind people and 90 percent of deaf people are unemployed, Paterson told NPR. One of them might “cure cancer” if given the chance, he added. “To whatever extent my presence impresses upon employers, or impresses upon young people who are like me … then I would feel very privileged, very proud,” he said.

When I was young, people like me had few career options. People like myself rarely held leadership positions.

Even today, the disabled are largely off our country’s radar screen.

Paterson, in this historic first, will serve as a much needed (and visible) role model for people with disabilities.

This is a moment to celebrate and we should all be proud of David Paterson.

Kathi Wolfe is a writer and poet. Her chapbook “Helen Takes the Stage: The Helen Keller Poems” is just out from Pudding House Press. She can be reached at pmproj@progressive.org.

Why I Don't Like the Fourth of July

Unemployment Figures Underscore Need for New Stimulus

Julie Bolz,

My guest this week is Julie Bolz, a women's rights and human rights activist, who has built or repaired dozens of schools in Afghanistan.
MP3 Download |

Shepard Fairey, Citizen Artist

The maker of the iconic “Hope” poster has turned frustration and anger into inspiration.

Changing Obama's Mindset

Obama has to be pulled in the right direction.

Pete Rose Hits it Around

Want to feel old? Pete Rose just turned sixty-eight. Want to feel young? Talk baseball with Pete Rose.

Naomi Klein Interview

“We don’t have a right to be disappointed” by Obama, says the author of The Shock Doctrine.
Sign up for e-mail updates
Links from the Editors
The United States’ Anti-Democratic Pattern in Honduras [link]
Progressivism is Mainstream [link]
The Banks Own Congress [link]
U.S. Evangelicals join the nuclear-weapon-free world movement [link]
Netanyahu Speaks; The Israel-Palestine Ball Remains in Obama's Court [link]
[link] Why Feingold Opposed McChrystal


About

The Progressive Magazine since 1909. Home of Howard Zinn, Barbara Ehrenreich, Ruth Conniff, radio, video, and Matthew Rothschild's McCarthyism Watch.

Since its founding by Sen. Robert La Follette, The Progressive has steadfastly opposed corporate power and reckless U.S. interventionism and has championed peace, women's rights, civil rights, civil liberties, a preserved environment, an independent media, and real democracy.

Copyright 2009, The Progressive Magazine. All Rights Reserved.