Tuesday, May 7, 2019

The Kentucky Derby can we trust the finish and what about other horse races

IS KENTUCKY DERBY  RESULT FAIR?  (OR BEATING  A LIVE  HORSE

Well anyone who has  seen the countless replays of the Kentucky Derby probably  has enough  information to form their  own opinion about  the outcome.  Personally I think all these  horses are pretty  much magnificent  animals that can run fast as hell and they are all winners in their own right just to have made it this far.

Do I wish  I had placed a hundred dollar  bet on the winner… well yes (full disclosure).’

However, this isn’t a blog about horse races—-or is it  Day  after day  the news in self-driving gets a little more  competitive  and companies are  touting  how they have a better or best component  that can do one thing or another.  Yet something is still missing and while I guess some horse has to bring up the rear….wellI don’t think it should be the same horse that has been stuck in the shoot  for years—-accessible affordable  transportation for people  with  disabilities .

GM is spending 300 million on electronic and self-driving  cars, toyota jus claimed they  are dumping an additional 100 million into this venture, WAYMO is building a facility in Detroit…and all these good things are  getting splashed  all over the automotive  news.  

and bringing up the rear?  Well we  are not seeing how  these vehicles will be designed to  provide equal access to all possible drivers.  We are not seeing  much movement to get  pople with disabilities involved in the design and building  phases of these efforts.  GM and WAYMO  are bringing  jobs to this industry, but have we seen  any commitment  to an inclusive work force—not in the headlines.  Here’s  a perfect opportunity for  these companies to have  experts on barriers  added to their staffs and yet it seems no movement is being made in that direction.  
What dow see?  Well we see some organizations provide great information about how accessible transportation would be  both socially and economically  advantageous , and yet no perceivable  motion in that direction.  
Right  now  people with disabilities and the senior crowd  are just being left in the dust again.

If you are a reporter- when are you going to begin asking the inclusion questions?

If you are a policy maker when are you going to  read the facts and know access  is a productive and possible  goal?
If you are an advocate when are  you going to hop aboard the car train?

Well there’s the bell —-the race in on lot’s if we can make equality a horse race this time because  some of us are  tired of being left behind cleaning out the stalls

Hey really

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