DeafSCUBA98
Active Member
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2003
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i voted no
I definitely voted No... CI will not kill the deaf culture/community. I still hang around my deaf friends - it is more of the attitude that kills the culture not the technology.
CIs WILL NOT DESTROY DEAF CULTURE! GET USED TO IT! GET OVER IT!
I will agree with you on that. I have a CI but I haven't stopped signing, I still go to deaf events, etc. Why? Simply because I enjoy those things.
same here!!! i just got CI, and yet, i am STILL THE SAME PERSON!
it was my OWN PERSONAL CHOICE to get the CI--- it has NOTHING TO DO WITH THE DEAF CULTURE!!! :roll: -- and i have deaf friends (who can't speak), so why SHOULD I SHUN them???
so, THINK ABOUT IT!!!
That's my girl!I will agree with you on that. I have a CI but I haven't stopped signing, I still go to deaf events, etc. Why? Simply because I enjoy those things.
Lucia, the question isn't whether or not you will change and stop being involved in Deaf culture. Good for you, I'm glad you are still involved. I feel the same way.
But that's the short term picture. What happens when future generations of deaf kids, not just future generations but the ones born in the last ten years, do so well with their cochlear implants that they are mainstreamed and never learn ASL? How do you expect them to carry on the rich culture of ASL and other Deaf customs? Remember, most of that 90% of hearing parents are going to want their kids to be culturally hearing, not culturally Deaf. I was raised mainstreamed. I know what that's all about. I'm lucky enough to have supportive parents, especially since my mom is willing to learn ASL. But from the very beginning the doctors, the speech therapists, the psychologists, everyone was trying to convince my parents that I should be raised oral, mainstreamed, and without exposure to Deaf culture. Expect that to be the norm as the technology improves. It already is the norm.
Have you seen "The Sound and the Fury?" Remember the scene where the Deaf girl meets the girl with a hearing implant who can sing? And how patronizing the hearing parents were, and how large the cultural divide was between the Deaf girl and the deaf girl? You'll have a hard time convincing me that the deaf girl is going to carry on the torch of Deaf culture.
Sure, deafness isn't going anywhere, but this debate is about Deaf culture.
Lucia, the large font and the "get it over it" doesn't really add anything to this debate. If you see a grand plan for how we're going to keep this going not just in our lifetimes, but a century from now, I'd like to see that. Really I would. I want to see ASL and Deaf culture thrive, too.
Lucia, the question isn't whether or not you will change and stop being involved in Deaf culture. Good for you, I'm glad you are still involved. I feel the same way.
But that's the short term picture. What happens when future generations of deaf kids, not just future generations but the ones born in the last ten years, do so well with their cochlear implants that they are mainstreamed and never learn ASL? How do you expect them to carry on the rich culture of ASL and other Deaf customs? Remember, most of that 90% of hearing parents are going to want their kids to be culturally hearing, not culturally Deaf. I was raised mainstreamed. I know what that's all about. I'm lucky enough to have supportive parents, especially since my mom is willing to learn ASL. But from the very beginning the doctors, the speech therapists, the psychologists, everyone was trying to convince my parents that I should be raised oral, mainstreamed, and without exposure to Deaf culture. Expect that to be the norm as the technology improves. It already is the norm.
Have you seen "The Sound and the Fury?" Remember the scene where the Deaf girl meets the girl with a hearing implant who can sing? And how patronizing the hearing parents were, and how large the cultural divide was between the Deaf girl and the deaf girl? You'll have a hard time convincing me that the deaf girl is going to carry on the torch of Deaf culture.
Sure, deafness isn't going anywhere, but this debate is about Deaf culture.
Lucia, the large font and the "get it over it" doesn't really add anything to this debate. If you see a grand plan for how we're going to keep this going not just in our lifetimes, but a century from now, I'd like to see that. Really I would. I want to see ASL and Deaf culture thrive, too.