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ci
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Joined: 28 Nov 2010
Age: 43
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Location: Humboldt County, California

11 Dec 2010, 3:53 am

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpwPMY0wY2Y[/youtube]

Autism anger in social politics reminds me of the noisy of this music video. I only used to listen to mostly classical music. Though in my study of emotion I watch music videos at times. I think anger about words like "cure" and the "negativities" about the label some people want to identify with should be used for creativity. Sometimes these people that are angry seem very successful in life able to carry a job and so on and it might be displaced anger for them because they have a really good life and are able to attend college and so on.

What about those who are stuck in their houses or in very limited programs during the day. Would it be selfish to ask for motivation for these things? Is it pity because if it is I'd suspect nothing other then people trying distract the listening minds in the autism political realm with different things to avoid much more important issues. An autism expert told me self-advocates will be the solution but I don't see this to often.

In advocacy I do things others are to afraid to do. I never think I will often fail myself and have near always succeeded. So I can be very creative with the media contacts, broadcasting contacts and have reached a time the past year where the success is so great it will take another 6 months to even want to try to employ more people with disabilities as the facilitations are not yet established. I would really like to impress the others with substantial disabilities to also think about their own dreams and if it's advocacy what you might do to help others classified as developmentally disabled.

What do you think?

So far this website has not attacked me, limited my free speech and so it has my respect as a social facilitator. I can now post up to 1hr a day on this website and a few others. So I am here to assist, motivate and encourage innovation in advocacy. Sometimes I will analyse important and sensitive topics and offer my opinion for the autism community here so better outcomes can be derived with your attention to them.

Nathan Young



Jono
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11 Dec 2010, 4:06 pm

I definitely think that people on the autism spectrum who need the disability support should get it. I think the motivation for society to provide that support should be the desire to improve the lives of people with autism, not the desire to eliminate autism altogether.