DVCal wrote:
Why don't you quote some sources, I did quote a source if you don't like it then tough. FYI those so called neurodiversity groups are nothing more than bunch of autistic people who don't like autism being called a disorder. But real experts agree it is a disorder.
Even the DSM V defines it as a disorder, the authority on such issues.
First of all, I am infuriated at your statements. "Expert"? Do these neurotypical people read the minds of autistic people and know everything they're thinking? Anyone can call themselves an "expert", and considering how obvious it is that medical practitioners are fallible, only know what they've been taught and what they have observed, and have a record of being wrong *most of the time* (which is why medical science is still evolving HEAVILY), you sure do argue about the infallibility of "real experts" a lot. These "experts" are people who went to medical school and let the books or the popular thought of the day speak for them, never questioning the buzz-words and teachings of autism or testing out the practices that people throw around like old wives tales.
Also, most mental health practitioners **I** know believe the DSM-V is wrong, incomplete, and/or inaccurate most of the time. It's a book, written by fallible medical practitioners with limited exposure to the autistic mind.
I can't tell if you really tried to weigh things out and you just speak from your little bit of experience, or if you are being arrogant and actively dismissing basic logical deductions. Assuming is the arch enemy of knowledge. Not everything you read or hear by even the smartest of people is true. They, like most other people, tend to mindlessly repeat what is popular.