Every day I learn more about what I am to society. My lessons come from the media, from TV, online, the council, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), professionals, neighbours, the milkman, random strangers in the street. I am made to feel like an ever-flowing drain on the country’s resources and the taxes of “good” people, to stop wasting NHS time and money, the council’s housing stock, the planet’s oxygen. I am made to feel like an affront to everything that is right and decent.
There is something ugly about most forms of government which seeks to use the weakest to justify the actions and politics of the strongest and to gather the so-called forces of good against a common enemy. In order for this to succeed, those in power need to foster anger, hatred, otherness, a sense of being deceived by unworthy criminals who are denying their worthy counterparts a better life.
It’s easy to do. It’s seen as acceptable and justified because it has been used as propaganda. It is being used by successive governments in that way now, it seems as though there is a war campaign here in the UK against the most vulnerable members of society – those claiming sickness benefits and other forms of support who are most easily targeted and least able to fight back.
- DWP’s ‘misleading and unfair’ consultation on disability benefit reforms unlawful, High Court rules
- Labour doubles down on slashing billions from DWP’s disability benefits bill
- Stigma faced by benefit claimants is baseless. It’s like Donald Trump saying immigrants eat pets
I’m a woman in my 50s, on multiple sickness benefits for both physical and mental health conditions. I have multiple diagnoses including complex-PTSD from an emotionally abusive childhood, neurodivergence, severe depression with a history of suicidality and self-harm, osteoarthritis, dystonia, essential tremor, lymphoedema to name but a few.
My diagnoses are documented by specialists and treatments are ongoing decades later, with little chance of significant change. I have worked in the past, paid taxes, gained promotions. I have O and A Levels, an MA, postgraduate qualifications. I didn’t choose this life. No one wakes up in the morning and decides to be viewed as a scourge on society, hated by all. It’s not a way of life. It’s torture and it takes from you the last vestiges of humanity.
My shame and self-disgust are heightened on a daily basis by headlines, opinion pieces, ministerial statements, the increased willingness of the general public to verbally and physically attack people they view as lesser, inferior. There is a direct correlation between public figures being increasingly accusatory, insulting and the number of people who feel emboldened to bring their hatred to the streets.