| ▲ | teruakohatu an hour ago | |
> I can’t say for 100% certain but I struggle to believe what you’re describing is more common than not. This is absolutely common in New Zealand. I think treating people with dignity, respect and part of the community is as important as state financial support. Our government will also subsidise wages in certain industries for people with certain disabilities. So it’s common for people with intellectual disabilities to be working at supermarkets. | ||
| ▲ | nkrisc an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |
New Zealand, probably among the bottom half of countries based on population, so quite likely what you’re describing is not the majority experience. It’s probably rather rare worldwide. | ||
| ▲ | Forgeties79 an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Never questioned if it was common in New Zealand. I’m sure some countries have great support, and others do not. But in the aggregate, most people in the world simply do not have that level of support. So the conversation needs to be calibrated with that in mind. Remember the original context here: someone talked about what they experienced and then you came in questioning it saying how wonderful the support you see is, then said what they experienced is not the majority experience, when the reality is quite the opposite actually. The support you are seeing is what is actually uncommon worldwide. New Zealand is exceptional here. | ||