audiobook hate is ableist and i donât give a FUCK what anyone says. you are still getting all the exact same information you get from listening as you do reading you are just using your ears instead of your eyes. people have disabilities that make actually reading really hard sometimes. some people are blind! hating on audiobooks will never not be ableist because they are all for accessibility. acting like it is lesser is ableist!
I do and no itâs not always cheaper đ my roommate was literally just complaining the yesterday about how the kindle version of a book she wanted was the exact same price as a physical book. Audible lets me give myself sales on brand new books and like I said when Iâm working is the only time I actually have where I can listen to a book. People have busy lives we canât all just sit for hours and stare at our phones/kindles/a book as much as weâd like to.
Also u really shouldnât be bragging about being superior youâre gonna give yourself the wrong reputation. Plenty of people listen to books because they HAVE to. My cousin loves books but growing up I had to read them out loud to her because her dyslexia was horrendous. So many disabilities and outside factors cause people to not read books and the internet isnât going to find it funny if u use ablism as a joke regardless of your actual meaning.
I donât know manâŚto me, someone flexing that folks who consume books differently are âlesserâ is a bit of a self-report that theyâre arrogant and need to put others down to feel above them. :( The whole idea of âpeople who could read in the exact way that I read but donât are inferior to meâ is really quite sad. I enjoy reading physically, in fact, primarily! But I also couldnât imagine putting down others who experience joy and learn through listening to the same exact book.
hating on people who use a disability aid regardless of their disability status is still ableism (assuming itâs not a finite resource). you donât know peopleâs situations. unless youâre hating on a nebulous hyper specific person youâre making up in your head in which case, why?
Even after walking it back to sound less ableist, youâre still clinging to this one âcorrectâ way of reading, which is antithetical to the spirit of learning with reading? Between those who a. treat reading as a pursuit of superiority b. and those who treat it as an exercise in empathy, understanding, and connection, I know which group makes the world better & actually honors the spirit of reading. I know who likely makes the world a kinder and warmer place. And for me, itâs not the former.