At 2:08 PM -0500 2/28/01, Adam Shostack wrote:
So, this web page doesn't work without javascript. I find that somewhat ironic, because you'd think that the ABA would be aware of the Americans With Disabilities act, which requires a reasonable accomodation; in this case that accomodation would be one less line of html (the meta-equiv refresh line)
The ADA does not require writers, whether lawyers or novelists or whatever, to write their material in ways that the blind can read, that retarded persons can understand, or that the Java-less can process.
(Though I admit that many of these rent-seeking vipers would of course _like_ the ADA to be extended to cover such things, if only to increase the rent they can collect in thousands of lawsuits.)
--Tim May
Gotta get that animal analogy stuff right. A viper is an honest to goodness, fend for yourself, not on the dole, tooth and nail predator. Perfectly respectable by any reasonable standard. The rent-seekers are more accurately portrayed as something from a list of parasites : louse tick flea tapeworm roundworm bilharzia mosquito deerfly botfly giardia. Some of 'em have a pretty ghastly effect on the host - imaging growing grubs under your skin or having your sphincter muscles eaten away permanently from the inside. Yuk! http://www.techlawjournal.com/censor/20000210.htm While I agree in principle that those with disabilities should be able to participate in everything that society has to offer it seems inherently dangerous to have the government mandate how this issue will be addressed. I don't want to see paved roads into great wilderness areas and I don't think an old building that doesn't meet modern accessibility requirements should become a target for multimillion dollar lawsuits. I don't know how to solve this thing and neither do those who wrote the ADA. Mike