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“Inclusive community arts festival!” “Everybody welcome!” “Events for all!”
No access info for any of the venues
Box office is inaccessible
Google “[festival name] accessibility”; get info on their “accessible pricing” (pay £1 less if you want to). No mention of free tickets for essential carers
Do a lot of disability detective work; most venues don’t have wheelchair access
One claims to be accessible, look inside: “we’re an accessible venue. There are three steps to get in, but we can help you with those”.
If it's okay for me to add, my favourite (aka most rage inducing):
We have people who can carry you up the stairs
Even worse than "3 steps but we can help you!" what do you mean you're going to carry someone up the 1 to 2 FLIGHTS of stairs? What?
and also you just KNOW they wouldn't. They're imagining someone who can't go up stairs being a waifish 90 pound grandma or child cancer patient. Most wheelchair users I see are heavy enough that it's absurd and frankly offensive to say that they can "just carry you up the stairs."
I had this at uni. The LGBT society had inaccessible events and when I pointed it out they told me that they could carry me up the flight of stairs.
So I carefully explained how I have a manual handling plan that sets out how I can safely be moved and that I cannot just be lifted by a random stranger who isn’t familiar with my disability. And that even if they got me up the stairs, my wheelchair is twice as heavy and there is no way they’d get it up the stairs.
I asked them, knowing that, what was their plan once I was upstairs, just lay me in a corner somewhere and hope I didn’t get stepped on*? Cause that doesn’t sound like a good party
It didn’t change anything. Events continued to be in the same venue, and they stopped trying to include me at all.
*other risks include: suffocation, pressure sores, infections and muscular skeletal injuries but I figured that was a bit too complex to explain.
and let's pretend it's entirely possible to lift a wheelchair user up stairs.... so many wheelchairs are extremely fragile and most people only have one. repairs take months and replacements can take years. that's time where, for many people, someone can't leave their bed.
so. you want to bring a heavy, fragile powerchair upstairs? a powerchair that, if you drop it, could mean... failing out of school, losing a job (and unemployment for months-years), dying of pressure sores? it's not low stakes.
even custom manual wheelchairs can be very fragile. my manual wheelchair might not survive being dropped down a few stairs depending on how it's dropped.
This is so true. It’s been a while since I’ve had a manual chair, but Complex Rehab Technology powerchairs are like endangered animals that die of stress if you look at them funny. Day to day use in their natural habitat and they’re mostly fine, but if you drop anything that’s a very expensive mistake (the controller alone on my chair costs £3000, it’s not unheard of for a whole wheelchair to cost upwards of £20,000)
Because of that price tag, in the UK most people who rely on NHS funding for a CRT powerchair don’t have access to funding for a backup chair. I’d imagine this is similar in other places. Without my chair I’m completely housebound with no independent mobility.
That means if you drop and break my chair I can’t get to my workplace, can’t access healthcare, do my shopping, sit in the garden, visit my elderly relatives or housebound friends, or anything at all that means leaving the flat.
It can take so long to get new parts for a powerchair and even longer to get assessed for a whole new chair. Where I live if you can’t get to the wheelchair clinic (say because someone threw your only means of mobility down a flight of stairs) you’re waiting even longer for the assessment to get prescribed a new chair and the wait for any new part to be fitted is also longer because there are only so many engineers, OTs and physios and making house calls takes much longer per visit.
Also like… if you trip and drop a 200kg powerchair on yourself then you’ll probably get experience first hand just how shitty the world is to wheelchair users. Because ouch.
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no one from outside australia is going to post about it but!!!!! happy NAIDOC week to the longest enduring culture in the world, and fuck this chud racist government ✌️
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I have a fabulous lasagna recipe that calls for either make your own marinara or Classico (brand name specific because the flavor profile is known + it's gluten-free).
do you ever find something that is so funny and you want to share it with everyone but it also requires 18 layers of context spanning things like. 90s anime. aviation history. europop. canada. in order to even remotely understand why it is so funny
Demand Sick Days. By Jefferson Pierce. Introduction The restaurant industry stands at the frontlines of a new labor movement. A recent repor
Restaurant Worker Manifesto
Posted on September 18, 2025September 18, 2025 by IU640 Members of SE Michigan
(Demand Sick Days. By Jefferson Pierce.)
Introduction
The restaurant industry stands at the frontlines of a new labor movement. A recent report reveals that the highest concentration of strikes in recent years has come from the food service sector. From fast food counters to fine dining kitchens, workers are rising up. These struggles are not isolated incidents but signs of a broader transformation — a wave of unionism sweeping through the food service sector.
Why Organize Restaurants?
Most restaurants are small shops, a structure that presents unique opportunities for dynamic and decentralized organizing. Within a framework of solidarity unionism — where workers take collective action independently of formal recognition or contracts — restaurant workers can take swift and effective action on their own terms.
The labor movement doesn’t just need a revival; it needs more and better organizers. The food sector is rich soil for growing new leaders. Many workers enter food service at young ages and often transition to other industries over time, spreading the skills and experiences gained through organizing. This makes restaurants training grounds for a new generation of militant, thoughtful, and strategic unionists.
Building a Diverse and Powerful Coalition
Restaurant work is disproportionately held by marginalized communities — immigrants, LGBTQ+ individuals, BIPOC workers, women, and others. This makes the food industry a vital terrain for building a multiracial, gender-inclusive, and intersectional labor movement. Organizing here can empower communities that have long borne the brunt of exploitation, exclusion, and precarity.
Restaurants as Sites of Resistance
Restaurants have also become battlegrounds in the fight for immigrant rights. ICE raids target these workplaces more frequently than many other sectors, threatening workers and communities. Organizing in these spaces is a form of resistance against the criminalization of immigrants.
Moreover, airports — where food service workers are often employed — are sites of deportation. Organizing airport food workers opens a strategic front in the struggle against immigrant deportation and state violence. Workers can use their power on the job to disrupt these operations and stand in solidarity with those targeted by the state.
Restaurants as Revolutionary Social Spaces
Restaurants, cafes, pubs, and similar establishments are not just workplaces — they are social hubs where people come together to share meals, ideas, and experiences. These spaces play a vital role in the cultural and political fabric of our communities. When we organize these workplaces, we aren’t just building a revolutionary movement among workers; we are also claiming and transforming these spaces into centers of social and political life.
By holding space for others to gather, converse, and organize, food service workers extend the reach of our movements beyond the shop floor. We turn everyday places into sites of resistance, mutual aid, and collective imagination.
(Assh**e Chef. By Jefferson Pierce.)
A History of Resistance
The food service industry has long been a flashpoint in broader social and political struggles. Historic job actions in restaurants have helped reshape society:
Sit-downs at segregated lunch counters during the Civil Rights Movement played a pivotal role in dismantling racial segregation.
The Stonewall Rebellion, often cited as a turning point in the fight for LGBTQ+ rights, erupted at a pub where workers and patrons resisted police violence.
Hiring halls were used as a tool to desegregate waitstaff in Detroit restaurants.
Boycotts and pickets were leveraged to desegregate workplaces and build equitable employment systems.
Restaurant workers have engaged in direct action by refusing service to police officers as a protest against police brutality.
Workers have fought for and won the right to express their religious beliefs on the job, asserting their dignity and autonomy in the workplace.
These examples show that food service jobs are not just sites of economic struggle — they are arenas for broader social transformation.
Conclusion
The food service sector is not just ripe for organizing — it is essential. It holds the potential to revitalize the labor movement, diversify its leadership, and root it in communities that face intersecting oppressions. It is time for restaurant workers to take the lead in shaping a new era of labor power.
Militant and democratic shopfloor committees are the building blocks for a new social and economic order. Organize with your co-workers. Link your struggle to others. And together, let’s lay the foundation for revolutionary industrial unions that can transform the food service industry — and society as a whole.
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the ruler is hosting festivities in the capital while the nation collapses, and heretics have caused a schism in the catholic church. i love living in the middle ages.
TikTok is a fundamentally evil app however the reason i use it is because you occasionally stumble across gems like the Chinese power transformer manufacturer who posts kawaii edits of their power transformers
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