There are folks who say that Adolf Hitler made some great contributions, especially in his earlier years, to society which was overshadowed and overlooked due the awful things he had inflicted upon the world.
A.G. Bell made some great contributions for the deaf population, really and truly. There are some things that he has done for which we are indebted. However, he is seen as by some of us as our own Hitler. Perhaps it was a reflection of his times and era. Perhaps he had the best intentions at heart. His organization lives on. I am a product of that organization, which is branded on me forever. They promote the "our way or the highway" philosophy of oral education. They blame any failures on the parents or the students themselves but take full credit for the little successes they do have. I've read their literature, watched their CDs/DVDs, and attended their conferences. I've observed the schools that used the organization as a backbone. I found time again and again that their resources were biased and more than half of the time the information was incomplete. For example, they used a girl for one of their promotions of using CI and having wonderful speech. She was one of the success stories. I actually knew her personally. She became deaf after the age of 7, AFTER she had acquired speech. After she had already been exposed to hearing sounds. No wonder she was a success! Whooohoooo! But they NEVER mention this fact, not even once. I've lost count of how many times I as a child was told that I didn't speak good enough because I didn't try hard enough. My parents kneeled down to this organization and took every advice to heart. When I finally learned how to use speech, they used me as some sort of trophy and I had to go around the country reciting the pledge of allegiance. I had to smile when people cried with joy over this "miracle." To this day I cannot bring myself to say or sign the pledge. The price that I paid in order to have good speech today was not worth it. If we could only turn back the clock.
But don't take my word for it. Ask my parents. They, too, will tell you that I learned how to speak really well. And they regret it. Recently my father got ahold of the Volta Review (I subscribe to this magazine (not considered as a journal in my opinion) because like in war, it's best to know what the enemy is saying on the other side) and thumbed through it. Then he looked at me with the saddest eyes. "It's all lies. If we had only known." I didn't know how to respond.