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emily - // good for her though for actually being on tv, (not that she's funny or good,), but seeing more disabled people recognised isn't a bad thing when you consider the stigma. //
I think this is the root of the issue.
As I said, if Ms Jones was not a disabled comedian, she would not be a comedian, because she is not funny, and that's something of a handicap (!) to being seen as a funny person.
We have to accept that inclusivity does not mean that everyone can do everything, and do it well.
Blind people can't be pilots, deaf people can't be crossing wardens, wheelchair users can't be sprinters ... the list goes on and on.
We are doing no-one any kind of service by pretending that overlooking someone's disability to the extent that their job title is misplaced.
It's not 'inclusivity', it's being afraid being thought of as insensitive - the very point with which you opened your post.
And no-one should be made to feel like that.
Clearly I do not, as can be seen from my posts, but I think that society is doing itself, and some of its members, any good with this kind of inverse patronising.