MmeLePen wrote:
Whimsi-Cal wrote:
Irulan wrote:
This is the question for those people who wouldn’t like to have it: if you could become neurotypical but for the price of some sacrifice – you can go back to normal but instead of it you automatically become a member of another minority group chosen by you, which one would you choose?
I don't understand the logic of this question. Autism and AS occurs in all ethnic groups. There are even some gay AS people so this question is confusing to me. Is this question only for white people with a spectrum disorder?
Women also still have minority status in some areas. Yeah - the math gets all goofed up.
Hence the tongue and cheek. (At least from me - I've got so much "minority" flowing through me I'm a majority"....???)
In some areas. Even though boys are born more often then girls, the girls tend to live longer and have better survival rates. The older a woman gets the more of a majority she becomes.
ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo wrote:
Whimsi-Cal wrote:
I don't understand the logic of this question. Autism and AS occurs in all ethnic groups. There are even some gay AS people so this question is confusing to me. Is this question only for white people with a spectrum disorder?
Minority groups in the US are typically, black, latino, Native American, Asian, ect, based on ethnicity.
Gays would like to be included even though technically, gay is not an ethnic group.
Then you have other minorities who aren't minorities due to ethnicity or being gay. AS would be in these minorities.
I guess you have to be in the majority and have AS or imagine yourself living somewhere where you are the majority and think of what it would be like to be one of the minorities.
My parents didn't really teach me a bunch of stereotypes. I played with boys, I played with girls. I played with cars and army men, I played with barbie dolls and my little ponies. I had to come up with my own Autistic view of the world and I didn't understand race. I saw that people were all different looking and had different shades of color. Even two people of the same race can often be different shades of color. I didn't understand it and it didn't really bother me. I played with a Malaysian kid who was really dark but it didn't really matter to me. I also had a couple of girls who were friends. This was when I was really young to about 10 or 11.
Last edited by Whimsi-Cal on 25 Mar 2009, 2:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.