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Tommer1234love.I.L.
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26 Mar 2016, 7:52 am

first I like to say that I respect the people who does take a part in this movement but have decided to stop be apart of it because of number of reasons :
1. I grew up, I know it sounds mean but as I became more mature and more self aware I realized that it is not for me.
2. the self advocacy movmant claims every one equal (inside the spectrum and outside of it) which is ridiculous to me, it is called spectrum because its a range of how the condition effecting people . excuse me for saying but I don't think that a low functioning au' with a diaper who cant eat by himself is the same as an army veteran INTEL worker with mild autism. sorry for sounding rude again ...
3. autism is so complex that comparing it to deseases like downs syndrome and cerebral palsy is just stupid, people in the self advocacy movmant,especialy the ASAN are doing this ever since it was formed. autism can be a gift to one and hell and prison to other.
4. my personal story , as an autistic who'es autism is not disabling me more than really mild and borderline effects and the fact that I'm living a normal life like every Israeli in my age I do not agrees that we are all should join together, a lot of my friends are autistics but also I have many NT friends.

sorry for my crappy english



ASPartOfMe
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26 Mar 2016, 9:08 am

You are confusing autism self advocacy with the autism rights and neurodiversity movements. While overlapping sometimes they are not the same. Self advocacy means just that advocating for yourself. Those other movements are about gaining rights for Autistics and accepting autistics and other neurodiverse people for who they are respectively.

You may not need to self advocate because you can fit in naturally. You do not need time outs or quiet areas or literal instructions. Or you are socially aware enough at this point in your life that sticking up for yourself is something that comes naturally. Of course there are autistic people so intellectually disabled they can not advocate for themselves. They stlll might be helped by the autism rights movement (exp. preventing cruel treatments)


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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.

“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman


SocOfAutism
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28 Mar 2016, 10:30 am

It can be confusing. There are a history of movements. Some replace previous ones and others are children of previous movements, while the parent movements continue as a slightly different cause. I would say that autism rights are within human and civil rights, so our "sister movements" are within race and gender rights.

I could be wrong, but it looks to me like we have had:

*Reconstruction (post Civil War human rights)
*Suffragettes
*Civil Rights
*Feminism and Black is Beautiful(children of civil rights)
*Gay Rights
*(Dis)ability
*Autism Self Advocacy
*LGBTQ (gay rights now gone, replaced by LGBTQ)
*Neurodiversity (child movement of self-advocacy AND of (dis)ability, but a different movement)
*Black Lives Matter (child of Black is Beautiful movement, but separate)