MGTame wrote:
I don't believe it to be a disease!
And it is not an illness. A person does not catch it or recover from it. We acquire compensatory or coping skills.
I don't have time to go over this at the moment.
I don't think anyone wants to be called a disease or have pride in a label that conotates a disease. In the broader sense of the word disease autism is a part of this framework that is also a condition. This is what I have gathered so far. While differing from what people might think of when thinking of an infectious disease for instance a disorder can also be innate and inborn. A disorder is applied to help a person and the milder the condition for the individual the less relevant it seems the condition is.
I personally have no problem with the terminology disease. It just does not matter to me. I also do not call myself autistic (I have autism), I don't call myself autie or aspie and I don't really enjoy seeing myself as a label or privy to a label from day to day. Whatever science and establishment defines me as so long as it is not calling me names to hurt feelings of course I just don't bother minding it to much. I wonder why it is so important to others to not call it a disease becuase to not see autism as important means to take it less seriously which means less reason to help. The very high functioning people this would not hinder that much if at all whilst those that depend on help it would.
3rd party interest would also have a stake in organizations such as the CDC no longer thinking of autism as important. Such as abortion politicians and other political interest. I am just wondering what is your personal agenda and what agenda might it also serve without your knowledge of it.
The Harvard university wrote a booklet about the human rights of individuals with developmental and intellectual disabilities. The right not to trust is entailed therein. By removing autism from the CDC's concern I believe it could result in neglect which is a form of abuse. My ability to trust groups and individuals within those groups requires my being able to practically interrogate them but for the most part simply investigate with maybe even a lie detector devise. It is my belief the system including the CDC currently take autism seriously enough to warrant my trust.
Nathan Young
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The peer politics creating intolerance toward compassion is coming to an end. Pity accusations, indifferent advocacy against isolation awareness and for pride in an image of autism is injustice.
http://www.autismselfadvocacynetwork.com