Warning: r slurs in the follow ups in the thread.
https://twitter.com/puella_meiberu/status/1708621428327657816
my reactions are as follows: Even if thats true, which it isnt for every autistic person, the reality is right now is that jobs dont have accomodations for neurdivergent thinking so its irrelevant to say that. Like we can push for and advocate for more inclusive workplaces, but its not the reality autsitic people are dealing with rn.
Especially since like, there are jobs that autistic people can do well but most of them are not "entry level" jobs that anyone can get without qualifications. Retail and food service jobs are near impossible for most autistic people and those are the jobs you can get easy. Manual labor jobs arent much better. I've worked at an after school program but I only lasted as long as I did because my original boss let me get away with not "running activities" the reality is that even if you're good with kids like me most jobs with kids have expectaitons that arent just "being good with kids" that arent good for autistic people. Idk about office stuff.
It reminds me of my ex-friend who claimed to be communist but had a lot of reactionairy attitudes. He always told me that if I ever called him on something and told him it was ableist he would take it seriously, and even called out others when they treated me abliestly. But one day when he posted on his Twitter shitting on Spoon Theory I texted him to call him on that and he started ranting all this shit about how you can "always push through" and talking about how his manual labor job cured his depression (and acting like that will be the case for everyone if they just push, and that manual labor is a cure all) and then started accusing me of wasting my life and making excuses and using my disability as a criticism shield. We no longer talk much lol.
maybe i'm being uncharitable then, but in the context of what "demonizing autism" would refer to historically, that seems to me to be a very uncritical/privileged thing to express publicly. there have been as many ways of understanding autistic people as there are cultures, but treating it as a mortal curse is to me pretty obviously a capitalist invention that treats autistic people as fundamentally undeserving of good life. i understand being frustrated, but even i'm not categorically this self-hating, and i personally refuse to accept that framing as even remotely valid. i have a lot of problems with the way that visibly disabled autistic people are understood, almost always in exceedingly infantalized ways. so again, the comment comes across to me as aggressively and violently reactionary, and i am repulsed by it.
Yeah I understand that reaction.
i recognize that i'm in a mental space where i'm having a bit of an emotional reaction to that idea as well. i'm self-hating enough that seeing the line of how i might have been treated my whole life if i had a childhood diagnosis, and how hostile i already experience society as being towards me without a medical diagnosis, fucks me up a little. thanks for the good conversation comrade.