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How the hell? I hope that's not offensive. But that's incredible.
Blind != No Sight. It's possible they have low vision. They do mention an assistive magnifier in a comment on that post. Still more challenging than a fully-sighted individual, and would take a lot of practice. All too often though people assume blind means no sight at all.
This is correct.
Most blind people (> 90%) can point to the sun. In the US legally blind means glasses can't correct your vision to 20/200 (which is really bad). Depending on exactly how that works with your eyes, for some close work like soldering would be no problem, while others it would.
Sort of like everyone thinks that because I'm colorblind I couldn't pass a kindergarten color exam.
Somehow as a society we've come up with a real black and white view of disability. You're either able-bodied or completely disabled, no in between. This does not match reality. Many wheelchair users can stand and walk in a limited capacity, for example.
Unfortunately this leads to misinformed people casting moral judgments upon disabled individuals who don't act "disabled enough". Hopefully we get over that misconception some day.
Yes, that's what I assumed, thanks for clarifying.