FrogReaver
The most respectful and polite poster ever
Again, the trick is, not everyone is an Olympic level athlete. Most amputees generally aren't - kinda like how most of us aren't either.
And, @Northern Phoenix's point is well made. If the "disability" is actually an advantage, well, it's not really a disability is it?
I'm not so sure. Having extremely good prosthetics might give you some advantages with running etc, but you are still missing your freaking legs. Your life isn't the same even though your more or less on a similar functional level to everyone else. People don't look at you the same. You paid a fortune for your legs. God forbid someone steal your prosthetic legs. You've still got a whole slew of issues non-disabled's don't. So I dunno. I kind of think that would still be a disability even if your mostly able to function at non-disabled levels.