Axeman wrote:
helloyes96555 wrote:
The union strikes are a great thing because they help to promote class consciousness and advance the zeitgeist to socialist policies. America, as it is currently today, basically refuses to help autistic and neurodynamic people like us find longterm employment, and so on, as well as the ability to reproduce and form our own families, due to the profit-related nature of the system. (ie, if you can't work fast enough or if you can't learn of something fast enough, you're fired withing a couple of months or so), and this is compounded with and made worse with the obvious shrinkage of the welfare state. The longterm survival of autistic/aspergers people IMO is to promote things like class consciousness, union strikes, and socialist ideas because a lot of autistic people aren't compatible on a mental level with the current for-profit system of economics. I've personally always wanted to be more useful regarding wider society, but my condition prevents me from holding down a job longer than 6 months or so, and it's a really awful thing.
The disabled are next to impossible to fire in the US even if they can't do the job for which they were hired. Hence "challenged" grocery baggers who put furniture polish in the same bag as fresh meat.
So if that's the case, then why do so many people autistic people struggle to find and keep employment?
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jenniferpa ... -spectrum/Quote:
Unemployment among those with autism is approximately 85%. This statistic means that roughly two-thirds of people with autism are not working. In general, those with autism had lower employment rates and higher social isolation rates than people with other disabilities.
I'm one of the "better off" ones that has the ability to suppress some of my worse traits and quirks IRL, and even for someone similar to me it's difficult to keep serious employment.