Paris mayoral candidate asked if he is autistic and responds

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ASPartOfMe
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30 Nov 2019, 5:30 am

Flamboyant candidate for Paris town hall hailed for ‘dignified’ response to query on autism

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Cédric Villani, the eccentric maths genius running for the Paris mayor’s office, was this week lauded for his bold and dignified response to persistent rumours suggesting he has autism. Although Villani said he has never been tested for the spectrum disorder, he firmly pushed back at the notion that autism would be a problem: “what would it change anyway?”.

In the run-up to next year’s local elections in France, Villani – a ruling party lawmaker and mayoral candidate who is just as famed for his extraordinary maths skills as he is for his flamboyant Willy Wonka-styled looks – has in recent months been increasingly targeted by internet trolls who claim he must be suffering from some sort of autism disorder.

“How many percent of autism does Cédric Villani have?,” a Twitter user going under the handle @romanicheur wrote, while another tweeted that Villani would become “Paris’s first autistic mayor” should he be elected in the March vote.

As the questions surrounding Villani’s intriguing character have intensified, a journalist from the daily French news and entertainment television program “Quotidien” on Wednesday decided to ask the talented mathematician outright: “Are you personally affected by autism?”

Villani, who was dressed in a three-piece suit and wearing his signature spider brooch, remained fully composed and replied: “I don’t know, I have never been tested, and I’ve never felt the need to be tested for it, but what would it change anyway?”

Following the Quotidien broadcast, social media went wild with reactions to Villani’s response, with the majority of users hailing him for underscoring that autism shouldn’t be viewed as the obstacle it is often made out to be.

But some were angered by the journalist having asked the question at all, saying it was stigmatising. On Thursday, Villani therefore sent out a statement, thanking the Quotidien journalist for giving him the chance to actually respond to the speculations, saying he always prefers “frank questions to insinuations and vicious rumors.”

He added that: “A direct question on autism shouldn’t be perceived as being stigmatising, because autism shouldn’t be stigmatised.”


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CarlM
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01 Dec 2019, 7:23 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
targeted by internet trolls who claim he must be suffering from some sort of autism disorder.


Great stuff. I hope he wins. Most of our "suffering" is caused by people like the internet trolls :( .


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