It helps the problem in a much more immediate and direct way than concern trolling that redirects the discourse into the driver being the victim does
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Replying to @arthur_affect @EmJaeCaer and
I don’t know there has been massive organizing to try and push back against this predatory business models by literally thousands of people. But that’s a lot harder to do than yell on Twitter so I get it
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @surplusvalmeal @EmJaeCaer and
There's been massive organizing on this specific issue too, which led to the NFB vs Uber lawsuit, which succeeded Maybe you should educate yourself on this history before going off about it
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Replying to @arthur_affect @EmJaeCaer and
And, in fact, the long-term push to have Uber be regarded as an employer and not a mere service provider to drivers has the NFB lawsuit as a milestone It was Uber arguing the plaintiff's demands could be satisfied without opening the question of their core business model
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Replying to @arthur_affect @EmJaeCaer and
If it turns out they can't - and NFB considers enforcement of the settlement an open issue and one of their primary organizing issues, and asks people to submit reports of ADA violations as well as sending out test riders - then it opens again
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Replying to @arthur_affect @EmJaeCaer and
ADA compliance shouldn't be seen as a "wedge issue" to address other concerns, it is a moral priority in its own right But it absolutely is a very powerful such wedge issue More visibility of these violations via viral tweets and videos etc is very very good
1 reply 2 retweets 19 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @EmJaeCaer and
This is insufficient! Because not every disabled person has 20k followers on Twitter! Not every person who gets assaulted in a rideshare gets to have accountability!
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Replying to @surplusvalmeal @arthur_affect and
I'm disabled and I don't have 20K followers on Twitter. Which is why I'm extremely glad people who are disabled and have 20K followers can speak up on issues that affect disabled people and get some things changed. You're arguing disabled people shouldn't use their clout.
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Replying to @WenSchw @arthur_affect and
Why are disabled people different and we shouldn't use our clout? Are you next going to argue that Colin Kaepernick shouldn't use his fame to bring attention to police violence against black people because not every black person is a famous football player?
1 reply 0 retweets 9 likes -
Replying to @WenSchw @arthur_affect and
That’s totally a great way to use your platform if you have it! But most don’t and is an insufficient answer to this problem
2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
Okay, but it's a good thing when they do There's no reason at all to oppose or criticize the original passenger for doing it or other people for cheering them on Which is absolutely what you did and really are still doing
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