“It’s the abilities, not the disabilities, that count.”

Two sayings sum up the “spirit of an organization.” One is the inscription on Andrew Carnegie’s tombstone:

Here lies a manWho knew how to enlistIn his serviceBetter men than himself

The other is the slogan of the drive to find jobs for the physically handicapped: “It’s the abilities, not the disabilities, that count.” A good example was President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s confidential adviser in World War II, Harry Hopkins. A dying, almost a dead man for whom every step was torment, he could work only a few hours every other day or so. This forced him to cut out everything but truly vital matters. He did not lose effectiveness thereby; on the ...

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