This week in people of interest: Marta Russell
Marta Russell proposes a theory of disability that rejects arguments about culture and identity, instead charging that specific systems and values embedded within capitalism are the primary driver of (and justification for) legal frameworks sanctioning the institutionalization and economic exclusion of disabled people. A key question for Russell was: What do systems of production and wealth accumulation gain from the way in which disability certification frameworks are constructed and public benefits allocated? Centered in an analysis of means-testing, war spending, administrative burdens, and underfunded social safety net supports, Russell’s work showed how a society obsessed with optimization, efficiency, and cost-benefit analysis had created a vast network of laws and institutions that worked together to perpetuate what she called “the money model of disablement,” better known as “the money model.”
The money model, best articulated in Russell’s 1998 book, Beyond Ramps: Disability at the End of the Social Contract, posits that disabled people are not, as they are often framed in dominant culture, a “burden to society,” but are actually a valuable resource. As Russell explains: “…persons who do not offer a body which will enhance profitmaking as laborers are used to shore up US capitalism by other means.” Disabled people are a nexus around which the capacity for surplus labor power can be built (often financed in part by federal money)—whole sectors of our economy have sprung forth from the money model, which has normalized the commodification of things, systems, and places that maintain disabled bodies in pursuit of squeezing profit from the money which passes through disabled people towards their survival and care. For example, nursing homes, Russell argued, are not places of rest and comfort, but a strategy for commodifying the “least productive” so that they can both be “made of use to the economic order” and free up the labor supply of those who love and wish to care for them. This system benefits neither the workers nor disabled people, only what Russell called the “owning class.” US disability policy, instead of being oriented around supporting the needs of disabled people, sanctions and facilitates the capitalist capture of nearly all aspects of disablement, impairment, chronic illness, and disability, including the way that “reasonable accommodations” are commodified (as explored by Ruth Colker in her essay for this symposium).
Russell was not just a theorist but also was a long-time disability rights activist. Throughout the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s she was involved in disability advocacy and organizing with ADAPT, Not Dead Yet, and the ACLU. Her efforts focused on policy interventions like assisted suicide laws and SSDI cuts, campaigns that challenged the many stigmatizing portrayals of disabled people sold to the public via the charity industrial complex, and more formal organizing and direct action with ADAPT agitating for home and community-based services as alternatives to nursing homes and other institutions of warehousing. As Nate Holdren argues in his piece for this symposium, Russell’s significant contributions to both disability theory and Marxism were crucially informed by her work in social movements. This connection between theory and praxis is reflected not just in the subject matter of her work, or in her citational practices, but also in the empathy, clarity, and rage with which she argues for the need for the left to begin to engage in a broad refusal of the economic valuation of life.
Russell’s political writing was extensive, covering the topics she organized around as well as more explicit political economic analysis of US policy and critique of the disabling effects of the then-expanding criminal justice system. Russell’s work was also highly critical of the liberal disability rights movement, arguing that disability rights discourse would benefit from embracing leftist thought and political economic analysis. Russell’s approach rejected the court-oriented civil rights strategy that was widely celebrated by liberal disability organizations and activists in the post-ADA era. This strategy, she argued, only sought to tamp down the violence caused by the ways that the state interacted with disabled people; instead, she focused on the political economic, not merely the “cultural” forces, driving systemic oppression of disabled people—an approach on which Jules Gill-Peterson expands in her essay for this symposium.
The lack of exposure that Russell’s small yet incredibly powerful body of work has had cannot be overstated. Her books are hard to find, there is one major printed collection of her essays, and one important book of essays about or incorporating her work. Until Capitalism and Disability: Selected Writings by Marta Russell was published by Haymarket Books in 2019, no comprehensive volume of her collected writings existed, nor was there broad citation of them within disability studies or law. Three years prior, when legal scholar and her former collaborator Ravi Malhotra edited Disability Politics in a Global Economy, an important anthology dedicated to Marta Russell’s memory, it was one of the first times Russell’s work was broadly celebrated within a purely academic context.
— from The Law and Political Economy Project.
As always, we ask that in order to participate in the weekly megathread, one self-identifies as some form of disabled, which is broadly defined in the community sidebar:
“Disability” is an umbrella term which encompasses physical disabilities, emotional/psychiatric disabilities, neurodivergence, intellectual/developmental disabilities, sensory disabilities, invisible disabilities, and more. You do not have to have an official diagnosis to consider yourself disabled.
Mask up, love one another, and stay alive for one more week.
Based OpenBSD user :3 Just like me frfr, I also fight the daemons in the computer
I saw your post in the other mega, tried to reach your server, I can reach SOME computer at your address, but it refuses the connection on port 1965 where Gemini usually lives. Am here to give OpenBSD-specific advice (I’m speaking to you from an OpenBSD-running machine rn :3)
First, I would try temporarily turning off the packet filter (OpenBSD’s firewall). Don’t know if you even needed to touch it in the course of setting up ofc, but you know for sure something’s wrong in the firewall rules when you turn it off with
pfctl -d
and it starts working. You can reenable withpfctl -e
My guess is that the routing is okay cuz I can reach a machine which tells me to go away lol (my vibes from what you said are suggesting to me that you have a router doing NAT at the inlet of your local network, which you told to do port forwarding (NAT is more demonic than any Unix daemon btw)) and it’s either a problem with the packet filter or the Gemini server. You can actually test this directly. OpenBSD has a very nice program called netcat (it is actually like cat but for networks :3) for stuff like this. You can run
nc -l 1965
(make sure the Gemini server isn’t running ofc, cuz 2 programs can’t bind to same address and port at once) and netcat will listen on TCP port 1965 and show any incoming traffic. Then you can use a phone’s web browser or netcat on another machine or legit like anything that can use TCP port 1965 to connect to an arbitrary host and if the packets actually come through and show up on the terminal when you connect to the listening netcat then you know the routing and firewalling is okay lol.Also check the output of
netstat -p tcp -l
(netstat shows active internet connections on the machine,-p tcp
says only show me connections using TCP,-l
means only show me things that are listening for connections (like servers)). Assuming you told the Gemini server to listen on all addresses that the machine has, you should see a line like:in the output of netstat. If you don’t, it means your Gemini server isn’t running or isn’t listening for some reason. If you do see something like that and it still doesn’t work, take note of the “Local Address” field (and for some reason dots mean like colons in the modern sense to netstat, so like what comes after the last dot in the address is actually the port something is listening on). If it says something like “localhost.1965” it means that the server is only listening for connections on the local machine (so it doesn’t get any from the internet)
Am on Matrix if you want live help possibly :3
Or make netcat listen at port 1965, reply to me, and I’ll connect with my netcat and we can have a chat over TCP directly lmao (this is basically how ancient Unix instant messengers worked btw lol)
Ah! tysm for all of this. I cut my teeth on linux for many years but I have never bothered with self-hosting or much of anything to do with sysadmin & networking until very recently and this shit is a nightmare! I have been trying out some BSDs on my laptop and figured I might as well use it for the server too. I would absolutely be open to some guidance over matrix if you wouldn’t mind…you are super knowledgeable about this shit and I am a babe in the woods. My goals are to have http, gemini, and email on this box and I am super overwhelmed.
I will DM you my matrix :3
Most computer stuff is way harder than it should be tbh. Arcane knowledge is one thing but BSD sockets (this whole “socket” model of talking to other machines on a network) are legit just kinda bad lol, we just keep using them like everything else people hacked into Unix cuz it’s easier to keep using them (at least for capital, which is still in control of dominant computer technology, have been finding out for years just how compatible open source is with capitalism :/) than to break from the old ways and make a system where internet stuff is easier, idk something like that
Like the whole reason we even have to say
netstat -p tcp
when we wanna see listening internet servers is cuz they also hacked a local-only (not internet related lmao) interprocess communication mechanism into the BSD sockets thing lol (Unix domain sockets). And people don’t even wanna use that anymore, they use D-Bus or whatever which uses that somewhere deep down but the Linux desktop programmers donut care lol, they just wannagrillexchange messages between their apps, so now we have yet another layer on top. It just becomes so confusing eventually :/ for programmers and especially users who haven’t melted their brains with this stuff for many years lolIt rly is a nightmare, will try to help