Anna Landre
@annalandre.com
2.5K followers 610 following 83 posts
Part woman, part machine / Disability justice + more / #DisabilityPower100, Vogue #21Under21 💋🦾 Fmr Washington DC Commissioner, now in London📍 annalandre.com
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Reposted by Anna Landre
olufemiotaiwo.bsky.social
"Common decency stigmatizes people that do not participate in it—removes them from voluntary association. We indeed have to live with one another, but terms and conditions apply."

me on why Ezra Klein should be ashamed / why shame is Good Actually

www.bostonreview.net/articles/how...
How Can We Live Together? - Boston Review
Ezra Klein is wrong: shame is essential.
www.bostonreview.net
Reposted by Anna Landre
blondehistorian.bsky.social
As a disabled pregnant woman currently taking paracetamol (tylenol) for back & pelvic pain...

I don't yet have a response for the ableist, eugenicist, evidently pro-life movatived "announcement" from the US President.

But I will say this. If you don't want a disabled child, don't have children.
annalandre.com
Here's to hoping the House of Lords gives the Assisted Dying Bill the scrutiny, safeguarding, & open debate it failed to get in the Commons. Lives -- of disabled and ill people, already under attack in this country -- are quite literally at stake.

Lucy Webster for @theguardian.com ⬇️
Reposted by Anna Landre
disabilityarts.bsky.social
Are we repeating history? @annalandre.com provides a satirical take on today's disability politics.

disabilityarts.online/magazine/opi...
Medieval-style illustration of a group of disabled people being burnt at the stake
annalandre.com
As researchers, scientists, & innovators in the disability space, we at @gdihub.bsky.social wrote an open letter on the UK government's proposed disability cuts:

They lack an evidence base & don't address the employment barriers disabled people face.
cdn.disabilityinnovation.com/uploads/imag...
cdn.disabilityinnovation.com
Reposted by Anna Landre
inclusionlondon.bsky.social
The Assisted Dying Bill will soon be voted on in Parliament.

We need all Disabled people and allies to urgently write to your MP and let them know why this dangerous bill can't go ahead. 📢

Use resources from Not Dead Yet to help you speak out:
TAKE ACTION TO KILL THE BILL | Not Dead Yet UK
Time left to kill the bill
buff.ly
Reposted by Anna Landre
juliametraux.bsky.social
If you're a disabled person whose mobility devices are damaged at anti-ICE protests by the police etc and you have evidence of it, I'm always interested in you contacting me for a potential @motherjones.com story at [email protected] or signal: juliametraux.49.
Reposted by Anna Landre
disasterstrat.bsky.social
Our Global Research & Response Lead, @annalandre.com represented The Partnership this week in Geneva at the United Nations Disaster Risk Reduction Global Platform that brings together leaders from around the world on Disaster Risk Reduction.
annalandre.com
On a train near a man who just said to his friend:

“Like, people can become paralyzed at any time — become a burden to themselves & others. Sometimes it’s better to be dead.”

But yeah, the UK should totally legalize nondisabled people deciding when suicide should be allowed for us. ♿️
annalandre.com
Despite very much NOT being a celebrity (!), I’m proud to be one of the over 100 disabled people undersigning this letter to Keir Starmer as part of the #TakingThePIP campaign against cuts to disability services.

Read the letter & share: takingthepip.co.uk
A Guardian article titled “Disabled celebrities urge Keir Starmer to scrap ‘inhumane’ benefits cuts” by Frances Ryan with text “More than 100 of the UK's most high-profile disabled people, including Liz Carr, Rosie Jones, Ruth Madeley and Cherylee Houston, have called on the prime minister to abandon
"inhumane and catastrophic plans to cut disability benefits". and photos above of Liz Carr, Ruth Madeley, Rosie Jones, and Cherylee Houston.
Reposted by Anna Landre
annalandre.com
I had a lovely bank holiday morning with @GMB today, discussing my unfortunate train access denial from last week — and some tips on enforcing your rights as a disabled person in a political context where they’re rarely granted without a fight.
Anna, a wheelchair user, smiling in front of a wall with the GMB logo and graphics.
annalandre.com
This is SO COOL!!
Reposted by Anna Landre
matteason.me
lifts.matteason.co.uk now shows historical reliability data for almost every station lift in the UK - for example, lifts.matteason.co.uk/HRH/history

I really hope this is useful for people who need to know how accessible local stations are as well as accessibility and disability rights campaigners
Screenshot

Lift reliability for Horsham Station

This page shows the historical reliability of the lifts at Horsham station.


Last 24 hours
Lift 1 Platforms 1&2
Reliability: 30%

Lift 3, station entrance to footbridge
Reliability: 12%

Lift 2 Platforms 3&4
Reliability: 44%

Each lift has a timeline graph showing when it was broken, in red, and working, in green
Reposted by Anna Landre
francesryan.bsky.social
Every minister should read this. 👇 If the government actually cared about disabled people being in work, they would reform the chaos of Access to Work.
touretteshero.bsky.social
I’m profoundly sad to say that as of today, I’ll no longer be able to do my job as co-artistic director of #Touretteshero because of a recent decision by #AccessToWork to cut my support by 61%. Read & share this post, the hardest I've had to write: www.touretteshero.com/2025/05/23/a... 1/4
A photo of Jess Thom, a white, wheelchair using woman looking into the camera with a serious expression. She is wearing a blue and green hoodie, black padded gloves and is pictured in from of a brick wall
annalandre.com
This government *says* it’s here to “get Britain working” — but its actions point to a very different, far more nefarious policy goal when it comes to disabled people.

Jess can’t work now, because her services just got cut. She’s one of many.

@ any media who follow me — this is quite a story!
touretteshero.bsky.social
I’m profoundly sad to say that as of today, I’ll no longer be able to do my job as co-artistic director of #Touretteshero because of a recent decision by #AccessToWork to cut my support by 61%. Read & share this post, the hardest I've had to write: www.touretteshero.com/2025/05/23/a... 1/4
A photo of Jess Thom, a white, wheelchair using woman looking into the camera with a serious expression. She is wearing a blue and green hoodie, black padded gloves and is pictured in from of a brick wall
annalandre.com
The fact is, disabled people reacting with anything other than gratefulness & deference for being granted basic human dignity is often perceived as rudeness. And the power nondisabled people have over our lives to enforce that dynamic is extraordinary.

No trains for me today.
annalandre.com
Standard for denial of ramp assistance. Abusiveness is, and I was certainly not that.

I have asked for any body cam footage of the interaction and to know exactly which words I said resulted in a denial of service. …
annalandre.com
Ramp assistance by any staff due to one’s accusation that I was “rude.”

I do not believe I was rude — I believe this able bodied man did not enjoy a young disabled woman speaking assertively back to him in the same tone he was using. And regardless, “rudeness” is not the …
annalandre.com
staff member (who I assume was a manager) came over to tell me that I was rude and so the staff member would not assist me. I told her I didn’t not believe I was, I simply asked him not to lecture me, but okay.

She left and came back to tell me that I would not be given …
annalandre.com
& did not need a lecture. He continued on and I repeated myself and said I was just looking to the next train since they’d failed to bring the ramp for the original one. He then said I was rude and that he would not be assisting me. I said okay.

Several minutes later, another…
annalandre.com
bring the ramp in time for me to board my train several minutes before. He was telling me that I was a lower priority than those who booked assistance in advance. Very abled-mansplaining.

As I work in accessible transport, I firmly but politely told him that I know the law…
annalandre.com
Was just fully denied the right to travel today at Liverpool St Stn, on any train, because Network Rail staff collectively refused to deploy a ramp for me.

Why? One of them claimed I was “rude” for telling him I didn’t need the lecture he was giving me on why they’d failed to …
Reposted by Anna Landre
erinryanhey.bsky.social
Oh hell yeah. Assisted dying bills are NOT progressive and disability rights organizations overwhelmingly oppose them.
annalandre.com
The assisted dying lobby isn’t being honest with you –

Disabled people are at risk from this bill.

Brilliant piece in the @theguardian.com from @lucywebster.bsky.social.

www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
A photo of disabled protesters with anti assisted dying signs and article text below reads: You’ve been deceived by the campaign for assisted dying. It has told you who the proposed law is for: people on their metaphorical
deathbeds, no hope in sight, desperate to spare themselves and their loved ones the experience of an agonising death. And no wonder - these cases obviously merit sympathy and concern. These are the people campaigners want to talk about; this is the narrative that pushes people into unquestioning support for their cause.
But what of the people the law would include who they don't want you to consider?
Proponents keep saying that the bill is tightly drawn to exclude disabled people, because it limits eligibility to those with only six months to live. But this is patently false. The line between disability and illness - a line this bill relies on - is not a sharp distinction. It is