Sunday, February 21, 2010

Actress with Down Syndrome Laughs at Palin

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

8 comments:

Doug B said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

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Taxingwoman said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

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Diane J Standiford said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

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kmilyun said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

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Diane J Standiford said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

Stumble Upon Toolbar
kmilyun said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

Stumble Upon Toolbar
Taxingwoman said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

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rainlillie said...

If you doubt that people with disabilities have a sense of humor, just read some of their blogs---read MY blog! I had a sense of humor before I became disabled due to MS, and I will die with a sense of humor. My mother with Alzheimer's laughs with me at her and at me, and we always have. Being able to laugh at yourself is healthy and healing.

The recent uproar over the uproariously funny Family Guy cartoon series (nominated for an Emmy) is down home, shoot my moose and with an uzi RIDICULOUS. It is not that people with disabilities don't have a sense of humor, it is that Sarah Get-Your-Gun Palin doesn't appreciate that her actions are laughable.

The cartoon episode portrayed a girl with Down Syndrome on a date with the son of the lead character. She takes a dig at how Palin dealt with her own son who has Down Syndrome, in the words of the actress, Andrea Fay Friedman, who voiced the cartoon character (and, yes, she too has Down Syndrome) "My mother did not carry me around under her arm like a loaf of French bread the way former Governor Palin carries her son Trig around looking for sympathy and votes."

People with disabilities don't like being treated like children or victims. And we certainly don't like being used. Thanks to multiple sclerosis, I laugh at myself every day. Every time I reach for a thing, seven other things go flying. And I DON'T KNOW HOW IT HAPPENS! My brain is constantly saying, "What was THAT?" (sensations out of nowhere, imaginary bugs zipping around, I long ago entered the Twilight Zone, better known around here as The MS Zone)

Many famous comedians will tell you that their comedy started from being teased as children. Children making fun of each other is the cruelest pebble of humanity. It is based on insecurities, and a need for power where they have none. Those bullies are to be pitied and helped. And yes, Ms. Palin, your son will likely run up against such bullies during his childhood, but are you really so unintelligent as to not recognize the Family Guy episode for what it was?

Family Guy made fun of Sarah Palin's treatment of her son. Family Guy gave a job to an actress with Down Syndrome. The only fool I saw was YOU, Ms. Palin. I suggest you prepare yourself now for South Park. (How long before you decide you might work this into a SNL gig?)

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