Trainwreck Alex Dacy / Alex Dzimtowicz / Wheelchair Rapunzel - 50% wholesome disability influencer, 50% that cash me outside girl

Took a quick look at Ari's instagram page (which is :lunacy: on its own) and many, if not most posts are about as bad as that upskirt one.
And I still don't get why this is new to a lot of you, many parents that I've seen in the past 2 decades are just as clueless and careless, social media just put/provided a big fat lens on/for them.
Maybe many parents do it, but they don't have over a million followers on various social media platforms.
Platforms where men had expressed interest in seeing her child naked.

This is not new to us. We are talking about her doing it in her thread because it's HER thread and we can. Are you trying to minimise her actions because random other parents do it?
 
Alex looks fatter in the face.

When she does roll up the great disability ramp in the sky, what is it likely to be from based on her condition? Just curious if there is likely to be physical markers of her decline.
Pneumonia: Likely to aspirate food. Poor cough. Weak muscles.

She seems to not have any pressure ulcers or anything like that.
 
Pneumonia: Likely to aspirate food. Poor cough. Weak muscles.

She seems to not have any pressure ulcers or anything like that.
Can her lungs/muscles get so weak that she won’t be able to breath? I guess if so they would put her on a vent?

Edit: just did a search about common causes of death in SMA. The article mentioned those with sma are also at elevated risk of metabolic acidosis, the thing Alex had recently where she was hospitalized and it’s suspected it was caused by her drinking. So, she’s at higher risk for this severe condition and continues to drink excessively. Shows some of the severity of her addiction.
 
Can her lungs/muscles get so weak that she won’t be able to breath? I guess if so they would put her on a vent?

Edit: just did a search about common causes of death in SMA. The article mentioned those with sma are also at elevated risk of metabolic acidosis, the thing Alex had recently where she was hospitalized and it’s suspected it was caused by her drinking. So, she’s at higher risk for this severe condition and continues to drink excessively. Shows some of the severity of her addiction.
So respiratory acidosis and metabolic acidosis are often bedfellows, and she's at high risk for both. We already know she needs pressure support at night with breathing, and I believe she's been on bipap in the hospital when she's been tired and sick. That's pretty normal for someone with SMA. It would be pretty expected for someone as they age with SMA to have hospitalizations from respiratory failure that result in intubations. However, the consequence of vents is they often spoil the elastic quality of lungs, ironically making it harder to get off the vent. The drinking I think will contribute to this eventual end, rather than resulting in something different, but hey, I have been wrong about things before.
 
Alex got denied a ride in a helicopter and has uploaded a crying Instagram story about it. Of note: she seems not to have researched this at all and did not let them know that she would be arriving in a very, very, very heavy wheelchair (the wheelchairs like the one she uses weigh many hundreds of pounds).

This is the company, Fly Heli Chicago. The company's website only says that they'll do "their best" to accommodate disabilities. Each ride can carry only 3 passengers, and they're clear about weight limits. I mean, it's a helicopter. There's only so much they can do. And she didn't call ahead to discuss things.

Some comments are supportive, but they overall aren't going her way.

Caption:

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I was poking on their website for information, and it looks like they have what they call an "influencer program." Want to be that's why she was trying to do this

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Can her lungs/muscles get so weak that she won’t be able to breath? I guess if so they would put her on a vent?

Edit: just did a search about common causes of death in SMA. The article mentioned those with sma are also at elevated risk of metabolic acidosis, the thing Alex had recently where she was hospitalized and it’s suspected it was caused by her drinking. So, she’s at higher risk for this severe condition and continues to drink excessively. Shows some of the severity of her addiction.
Yes, I know of two friends, one dead now, with SMA that ended up on ventilators.
One is still alive several years on, they were very clear about it being a last resort to get on the vent and that they'd done everything to avoid it bc once on you can't get off it again.

Ironically this individual is just as much as a narcissistic asshole as Alex is and equally low IQ. It really seems like having this kind of life limiting disability brings out the worst in some people due to way they've been spoiled as kids just for staying alive, never in their life have they've been expected to care about anyone but themselves.
 
Perhaps this is a controversial take but I don't think every activity needs to be 100% accessable.

"This place is not disability friendly, they need to put on their website that they are not disability friendly!!"

I bet all she told them was she's in a wheelchair. Disability is a spectrum. Of which Alex is on the farthest end, quite literally all she can do is talk, vaguely swallow, release piss/shit at will, and sort of move her wrists. She's not an amputee who can jump out of the chair and do a few assisted hops, shes not paralyzed from the waist down with full use of her arms. I remember once she showed us her "dancing" and there was the slightest body wiggle, she has no meaningful movement.

I was going to say she's basically an intelligent newborn but she didn't even have the planning abilities to call and see if they could accommodate her soooooooo
 
I cannot believe her caretaker is an actual pilot. She, of all people, should understand aircraft safety, the importance of weight and balance, emergency procedures., etc.

Alex cannot enter a helicopter, you typically climb in with rotors going. You also climb out with rotors going. She can’t take her wheelchair, it’s way too heavy; it’s not a Chinook.

If she had a flight they could place her in safely, rotors off-it’s still not safe because she can’t adjust her headset. She can’t balance herself-what if they have turbulence? If she gets disoriented or airsick, can she even hold a barf bag? Can she sit up straight in a bouncing turning machine?

What if there is an emergency? Aircraft are typically safe, but problems happen (as we’ve seen a lot in 2024 with both light and commercial aircraft) and passengers need to know what to do.

Alex cannot undo her seatbelt.
She can’t open a door in an emergency.
She can’t activate any emergency beacons.
If there is a water ditching, she can’t inflate a life vest (or even put it on.)

I am sad that some people can’t do everything they want, but that’s life. All of us have encountered nos, whether it’s physical or other reasons. She could have been injured in normal turbulence, and put the pilot’s career and the helicopter companies business under, and caused years of litigation for what?

If Alex wants to take a helicopter, she needs to be medevac’d somewhere, because commercial operations are not for her. And her tard caretaker should have told her that before they ever went. God help anybody who gets in a plane with that stupid girl.
 
Perhaps this is a controversial take but I don't think every activity needs to be 100% accessable.

"This place is not disability friendly, they need to put on their website that they are not disability friendly!!"

There's a difference between something not being accommodating when it could be and something that isn't accommodating because it can't be (safely or logistically). They weren't telling her no because they're ableist jerks. They told her no because they knew they couldn't keep her safe.

She probably went into this hoping for "inspiring influencer rides helicopter! everyone claps!" That didn't work out, so she's instead trying for "plucky disabled gal gets denied access and cries." Clicks either way, I suppose, but comments continue not to go in her favor.

Here's some backlogged Alex content.

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I think that's the girlfriend's car. Scrawl at the top is mine.

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This one is from Reddit. A TikTok, I think? She's saying that her parents paid for this Chicago jaunt and that it's a break from Ari.

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Before the helicopter debacle, she posted this:

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Post-helicopter, she posted this:

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Last night (her time), this:

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NOAH WATCH: clearly in the first stages of BPD love with the rich girl.

ARI: lol, who?
 
Alex got denied a ride in a helicopter and has uploaded a crying Instagram story about it
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LOL! Our "Disabled rights are human rights" really making a positive change for the people around her.

It's been a long time i saw such a sassy take down so really hope Alex wont block her.
 
Facebook comments are even worse than the Instagram one, which is somewhat unusual because she has a lot more true fans (as opposed to trolls) on Facebook.

Comments under the spoiler aren't curated by me. I just started at the top and took 6 screenshots.

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Also, I forgot to point out that she excused not visiting Ari in Chicago (when she was still in Florida) by saying that flying is too fraught with issues for her. Priorities!
 
Physically, she is a newborn in a body the size of an (small) adult!
If her pilot caregiver didn't explain that she was not ever going to be able to take this flight, I'll date Cris Chan!
She knew she'd be denied. That's why she deliberately didn't call ahead when a lifelong, severely disabled person would have calling ahead to check accommodations as business as usual.
What infuriates me almost as much as Alex is her idiotic supporters, who are perfectly willing to throw a company under the bus because they somehow believe that the entire world must be 100% accessible by  everybody, otherwise they obviously want disabled people to literally die!
 
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