Sometimes being inflexible is a good thing, sometimes a bad one. It's often but not always easy to know when to do which. Some NFB rehab centers have been more sensible than others in this department.

I'm normally a guide dog user, but when I use a cane, the NFB straight cane is for me the best by far most of the time. I also use a folding cane from time to time, however, and probably should get one of those with the ball tip.

Then again, maybe I shouldn't have said any of this. This has arisen, sadly, because I followed up a comment complaining about their being two advocacy organizations of the blind by naming twhat I presume to be the two he had in mind. My point had to do with our predictable diversity of needs and viewpoints and useful versus dubious forms of unity. I guess I should have figured things would veer off into whether one or both organizations suck, but it didn't occur to me. I probably should have stuck to guzzling coffee and studying assembly. (another grimace)

Al On 04/25/2017 08:18 PM, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
yeah, they kept trying to make me use "their" brand of cane. One small problem, 
the tips would wear out too fast. Another problem, the fastening screw would fall out.

Somehow, I think their idea of a cane is simply a brand one. Sure, its lightweight, 
but its also a bit too flexible. It also doesn't work well in areas where sidewalks 
are broken. It most decidedly doesn't work in snow. Basically, I had my O&M 
instructor try to navigate a snow packed sidewalk with the NFB cane. Then I had him 
try it with my folding cane with the large ball tip. He kept insisting that I use 
the NFB model, but had to admit that it just wasn't practical to use in all 
circumstances. So, I take it as a valid assumption that the leadership is 
inflexible at the best of times. I know for a fact that a lot of their instructors 
are very inflexible unless presented with facts they can't ignore.

-eric

On Apr 25, 2017, at 4:05 PM, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:

NFB members at a training center alienated me through their rigid
insistence on straight canes and failure to account for the
multiply-disabled or congenitally blind in training methods. I also
couldn't stomach their idea that I should run all my words and actions
through the "how does this make all blind people look" filter, or that
becoming normal should be my ultimate goal. Several of us in here
would have to lose a bunch of IQ points to be considered normal. And,
I hate the Borg.

That was over a decade ago. I'm on some of their mailing lists and I
have some of their folding) canes since those are useful things. I
won't join, but I've met some interesting individual members.

On 4/25/17, Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@redhat.com> wrote:
The ACB's lawsuit against the U.S. Department of the Treasury to make
them make money accessible was already flawed to say the least.
According to the United States Constitution, the power to design money
has been delegated to Congress, and the Department of the Treasury is
only responsible for carrying out the orders of Congress. Therefore, the
best way to make money accessible would have been for any and all
so-called advocacy organizations to lobby Congress and get a bill passed
and signed by the President of the United States that would redesign our
money in an accessible way. Do I think the ACB's lawsuit was a publicity
stunt? Absolutely, as if they wanted us to have accessible money for
sure, they would have gone through the proper channels and we would have
had it by now. Instead, where are we? No closer to truly accessible
currency than we were when this whole sleighride begen nearly 10 years
ago. Thank you, ACB and NFB for being such advocates for the needs of
blind and visually impaired citizens of the United States. Without your
petty bickering and your "We're not them" attitudes, the world would
certainly be a better and more friendly place for all of us.

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