To everyone who thinks we're mad at Christopher Nolan not allowing chairs for no reason: disabled actors exist and shouldn't have to fight for the basic right to sit, which can be immensely helpful in pain management. Disabled actors deserve roles too.
"You'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't know if it'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't think it's overreacting to block ableism just like I don't think it's overreacting to block aphobia
Oh boy the trolls have found me that's just peachy 🙃

maybe like, don't tell a disabled person that we're exagerrating when we notice and call out ableism k thanks
I'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're blowing things out of proportion" or "It's not that bad" or anything like that: You are an asshole. Full stop. Bye.
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