barbara-pit for Cringetopia users

Also I hope people in here are decent about plurals. r/fakedisordercringe is another one of the "be normal debatebro-l" instances

  • ReadFanon [any, any]
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    edit-2
    10 months ago

    Don't forget constantly using person-first language when talking about autistic people, using the deprecated and Nazi-collaborationist namesake "Asperger's", and the pick-me autistic people who always chime in on mainstream discussions to validate anti-autistic ableism:

    "I have high-functioning Asperger's and I hate it when [autistic people do or request something].

    Autism is no excuse for not doing [thing I am capable of but which others may not be capable of].

    Personally, I hate other people with autism who don't fit into allistic society as well as I do and it makes me resent people with autism who don't because it makes us all look bad."

    *Shudders*

    • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]
      ·
      10 months ago

      "I have high-functioning Asperger's and I hate it when [autistic people do or request something].

      The eternal drive of individuals in oppressed groups to try to prove themselves as worthy and "one of the good ones" to the oppressor deeper-sadness

    • VHS [he/him]
      ·
      10 months ago

      constantly using person-first language when talking about autistic people

      can you explain what you mean by this? i'm autistic but i don't really know the controversy about it

      • ReadFanon [any, any]
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        edit-2
        10 months ago

        Of course.

        It's generally accepted that autistic people prefer to be referred to using language that uses the term "autistic person" rather than "person with autism" because the latter is considered to be externalising autism and denying it as being central to the identity and experience of the autistic person.

        Just as we wouldn't say "a person with blackness" or "a person with womanhood" or "a person with homosexuality" because that is seen as separating out the core experience of being a black person, a woman, or a gay person so too does the autistic community feel that phrasing it as "person with autism" has the same effect. (Also in the case of a gay person, the way of phrasing it above has implications of pathologising and medicalising the experience, which is what happens a lot for autistic people too and that has historically been to serious detriment to autistic people.)

        For me, being autistic, there is no "outside" of autism; it colours who I am, it shapes my relationship to and understanding of the world (and this extends to how I experience myself) so to put autism as external to me is to imply that it's sort of additional somehow and it gives the impression that there's a "real" me beneath the autism, which I personally reject the notion of.

        Note that this is just the general consensus here; some people don't care, some people prefer to refer to themselves as "a person with autism" and that's valid. But as a rule I'd say that it's best to refer to autistic people this way around as it's the preferred term.

        That being said, I will sometimes say things like "excuse my autism", "this might be my autism acting up", "today the autism won", and "this is just my autism speaking but...", although I do this ironically.

          • ReadFanon [any, any]
            ·
            10 months ago

            Nice. I'm definitely stealing that idea. What a perfect example of reverse discourse!

        • JamesConeZone [they/them]
          ·
          10 months ago

          This is so helpful, thank you. There has been a movement to change language in academia from things like "a leper" or to "a person who has leprosy" or "a depressed woman" to "a woman who has depression" etc in order to emphasize humanity of the person first and other characteristics second. I appreciate your perspective on that type of wording.

        • CatoPosting [comrade/them, he/him]
          ·
          10 months ago

          You put that so clearly. Person with womanhood really does sound so alienating, so I'll try to modulate my language towards autistic people in the future :)

        • JuneFall [none/use name]
          ·
          10 months ago

          While I agree with what you write, ESL speakers often vary in meaning. The discourse and concept you mentioned is one that is part of learning a language. I do prefer for my diagnosis a person with specific diagnosis instead of diagnosis person, too. But that varies by person. Since the diagnosis is something that is an assigned thing, what is constitutional to me is not quite described by it. Though at the same time I am a queer person more than I am a person with queerness.

      • berrytopylus [she/her,they/them]
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        edit-2
        10 months ago

        The word autism to me isn't like "something I have" but rather just a descriptive term about me and my traits. It's like

        "That person is nice" = nice person "that person is mean" = mean person "That person is into art" = artistic person

        Autism is just a label, an observation made that "hey people with X and Y trait also seem to have A, B, C trait in common". I would be who I am with or without the word existing so putting it as something I "have" rather than am feels odd.

        But you're free to use and prefer what you want for yourself.

    • NoGodsNoMasters [they/them, she/her]
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      edit-2
      10 months ago

      I have Asperger’s and my “special interest” is gender ideology, which means I spend every waking minute thinking and problem-solving on how to quell this monster. Everything points to exposing the abysmal quality of “scientific evidence” that props up their beliefs. 🧵

      Not 100% what you were talking about, but is word for word an unironic tweet I've seen and idk it felt relevant somehow. And down in the replies they make the point that they can't be wrong because of their Asperger's genius powers or whatever

      • ReadFanon [any, any]
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        edit-2
        10 months ago

        Ugh. This is abysmal.

        Autistic people are just as likely to be cranks as anyone else. Perhaps even moreso because the degree of focus it usually requires in order to become a crank is not that common in the allistic population whereas autistic people are much more inclined towards hyperfixations and, thus, they are more likely to become a crank due to this ability to sustain their focus on a singular subject of interest.

        We're just as susceptible to the Dunning-Kruger effect as anyone else.

        Just like how clumsily hammering away at the keys of a piano for 10,000 hours will not turn me into a concert pianist, so too is 10,000 hours of hyperfocus on a subject insufficient to turn me into an expert on it. With training and guidance, or in less common circumstances with a keen focus on self-teaching, devoting that amount of time can turn someone into an expert (which is why autistic people tend to be more likely to be a wealth of knowledge in their interests) but unless you've taken account of your biases and for the fact that information needs to be viewed with healthy skepticism and a critical eye then you probably aren't going to end up an expert in a subject, you will likely just end up being a very proficient crank.