Candace Owens is wrong. Women like me who use wheelchairs can – and should – model underwear.

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The Daily Wire's Candace Owens recently made comments that led me to believe that she either doesn't understand why disability representation is important or that she would like America to reinstate "ugly laws," the last of which was abolished in 1974.

Two parts of my world collided as I listened to her speak. As a woman with a visible disability, I understand why representation, especially in advertising, is so important.

As a lifelong conservative, I am appalled that Owens seems to see herself as the spokeswoman on this issue for the whole freedom movement.

Owens asked to be educated if she was wrong, so I reached out directly via social media with no response. The lack of response was not shocking as each time I have attempted to interact with her upon crossing her path in person, she has refused. I understand why now.

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Owens and I prove that no political leaning is monolithic in nature. Her boldness resonates with me and many other conservative women. But I was stunned by her comments about women in wheelchairs modeling underwear, especially her sentiment that no one wants to see that.

It isn’t about taking inclusivity too far; it's about people modeling clothing so that women with disabilities could see whether it would work for them. I found it helpful because, like the models, I use a wheelchair.

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Shopping for clothes can be an ordeal for people like me

When I go to stores to try on clothes, more often than not, the wheelchair accessible fitting room is being used for storage (illegally, by the way) and I cannot use it to see whether the items fit me properly.

Though it might take women without disabilities minutes to try on a flurry of clothing, it can be a lengthy and frustrating ordeal for people with disabilities to try on a single item.

Conservative commentator Candace Owens recently criticized advertising for SKIMS clothing that featured women with disabilities.
Conservative commentator Candace Owens recently criticized advertising for SKIMS clothing that featured women with disabilities.

To simplify life, many people with disabilities have to buy the clothes, take them home to try them on then return what doesn't work – adding yet another difficult trip to the store.

All that extra effort could be avoided if I could use the fitting room or see a model in a wheelchair with that item of clothing. Sometimes a skirt that looks long enough on the hanger is too short once I get it on my body.

Because I am seated all day and my hips don’t function properly to help keep my knees together, it's crucial for my dignity to make sure that the skirt is long enough to cover my knees. No one needs to see my panties, sexy and frilly though they may be.

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To Owens and others who follow her line of thinking on this: Does the model in the wheelchair make more sense now? It’s not just about being inclusive, it’s about practicality and the ability to sell merchandise.

Sales make profits that pay salaries. Of the 333 million people in America, 61 million have some sort of disability. That’s about 20% of the population. They all spend money.

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Making money to support oneself is a conservative value. Part of how I supported myself early in my life was by modeling. I earned college scholarship money by competing in pageants, which enabled me to graduate with a lower student loan debt.

All of this I did using crutches and making no effort to hide my disability, spina bifida. I didn’t go to a wheelchair full time until 2004, two years after I married the love of my life.

Owens' comments, intentionally hurtful at worst or uneducated and thoughtless at best, were nothing more than clickbait. No one should reward this behavior. It makes all conservatives, especially conservative women, look bad. That is not what the freedom movement is about, and her comments about people with disabilities do not reflect conservative values.

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Melissa Ortiz
Melissa Ortiz

Owens stated publicly that she wants to be educated on this topic. In an atmosphere of mutual respect, I would welcome the opportunity to meet with her to discuss living with a disability and the related policy issues.

I am the senior adviser for the Able Americans Project at the National Center for Public Policy Research. We fight daily for common sense, free market, limited government approaches to living with a disability.

As it says in Isaiah 1:18, “Come let us reason together.”

I’ll be waiting for her call.

Melissa Ortiz is the senior adviser for the Able Americans Project at the National Center for Public Policy Research.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Not just inclusivity: What Candace Owens gets wrong in Skims comments