If you're a speaking autistic person who suddenly discovered that nonspeaking autistic people have something to say, are you going to concertedly continue amplifying their words after you have used them to bolster your anti-Sia campaign, or is this just a one-time thing?
Want to become an actual therapist who helps nonspeaking autistic people develop motor skills for communication? Or a Communication and Regulation Partner for a specific nonspeaking person you know?
Autistic Strategies Network - 2021: A year of increasing collaboration [THREAD]
We begin 2021 with a number of programmes and projects in the pipeline. These are some of our focus areas for the year, on the continent, in our country and in our province:
AFRICA: Autistic advocacy
We’re building relationships with autistic activists throughout Africa and with cross-disability organisations serving communities in African languages to support autistic strategies in ways that draw from the best of African values and culture.
AFRICA: Ableism
A meeting with the head of the Health Department in the Western Cape identified ableism as the single greatest obstacle to better health services for disabled people in the province.
This alarming message came through on WhatsApp this morning from Johan Pretorius of DeafBlind SA:
"With the predicted stormy weather in KZN, Mpumalanga and Limpopo please do take care. Avoid unnecessary traveling and be careful during dangerous weather conditions by staying indoors."
(Keep reading; that's not the big problem yet.)
"I am currently making enquiries with our local police about accessable emergency contact number with local police stations all over South Africa. The usual phone call number 10111 is not accessible for Deaf and DeafBlind persons."
People who SAY they care about nonspeaking autistic people can't be judged merely on how much they talk about it. They can work with nonspeakers, have a nonspeaking brother, start an organisation to support parents and research etc. etc.
Why the predominant paradigm of personal achievement in the US (and the main approach to working with autistic children there) is immoral, unscientific and counterproductive.
(Long educational video. Spend this hour. It may be essential to do so.)
The USA isn't the only culprit, but Alfie Kohn focuses on the US, because they have some uniquely extreme manifestations of the problem.
He even connects it to why anti-maskers are so common and so extreme in their selfish rebelliousness in the US compared to other countries.
I am going to try taking megadoses of thiamine to persuade my mitochondria to cooperate with my desire for productivity.
My vitamin B complex supplements contain 28 mg, which is, like, nothing compared to where I want to go, so today I am adding 200 mg thiamine, and will work my way up to 700 over a few days, then see whether it needs to be more.
Also getting lysine again, so that I can take lysine and citrulline together as well.