Certainly Ms. Gray knows that I have MS. MS Canada has long fought for people with invisible disabilities and how that happens in our society.
I gave the example of my friend Glenda, who, as I say, is non-verbal. The attitudes that people who have communication disabilities face.... Often, first of all, people start to shout at them, because they decide that they're deaf, or they treat them as if they had intellectual disabilities, but, really, she can't speak.
It's very simple that our system has so many things built into it, as I say. The CRA says they can only deal with.... I have this issue myself. They could only deal with a phone call, and the wait time was so long, and I have severe fatigue. Then it went into the time in the day when I go to sleep.
I think, with the DTC and this example, that it sounds like the CRA is in my headlights, which they certainly are, but these attitudes are fundamental to how we approach all barrier removal. I think that the invisible barriers in our society are the most insidious, because people say that they—