The Autism Establishment

There is a monopoly of an establishment of experts on the disorder who clearly know that their actions have inadvertently caused unintended consequences.

Many doctors or “doctors” in name only have worked with clients at a very young age. Supposedly children with autism become teenagers and apparently my group of people become these puffed up prickly monster fish that you see in Finding Nemo. The problem is there these experts that are very ageist, focus on a single disorder, a single demographic, and well they could care less if they cause unintended consequences with improper use of advice, etc..

Those unintended consequences hurts the individual more than the professionals themselves. Another example of a monopolistic practice is if they realize they have no control of the individuals, what do they do? Just like liberals and their ad-homonym attacks; they’ll punish you like a child! Because afterall they don’t have any more control over some autistic individuals. They cannot accept the fact they can be their own person, make their own decisions, so they feel powerless. But what’s really interesting, is some of the individuals themselves are powerless too.

I hope this little brain teaser makes you think about how broken the autism narrative is in my humble state that I call “home.”

The New “Evil”

I have a very dark prediction that in about 5 years, we will have a new “evil”. Not just ISIS or Al-Queda on steroids. But something not in the traditional sense of “evil”, but something north of bad—. We have more people more careless, more thoughtless, less accountable people than ever before.

Why?

It’s the rise of the “professional class” or anything of a 4 to 6 year degrees of college educated people. They aren’t taught to have common sense, and they are taught to read the books, and whatever the books say must be true. Meanwhile these “professionals” are believing in the gunk as described yesterday and now these “professionals” who are taught to be “objective”, to “not have emotions” to “protect ones privacy” and to have hands-off approach to these most vulernable citizens of our society are the ones that will screw up our children more than to help!

White collared crime is on the rise. They see someone in pain, but because they tout “That’s not my job”, or “that’s out of my pay grade”, “it’s not in my job title”, and its this arrogance I’ve previously described, college educated, and indoctrinated to be a “professional”, and they just let a person like me crash down to the ground being psychologically kicked around by other “professionals” and say “well that’s not my job” and go home and not have any remorse. If I can use an example, my high school teacher fit this narrative perfectly.

It’s not to say that all professionals are bad. It’s not to say that there are people who work in the corner-suite of the local SAU or “central” offices and not having to be around, or be disrupted by people acting out. They can sit there, shuffle papers, answer phone calls, send emails and have no duty to go to the schools and see the problems they create.

“Professionals” are no different than the crooks who destroyed Enron or even someone like a Bernie Madoff. I’d bet some special ed management even said things in an interview with a tone like Jeff Skilling: “I’m f—–g smart!”

Some people may think I have some conspircary theory, that the school and special needs systems are out to get Steven A specifically. No only criminal systems are out to get people by specific names. All I’m saying there were many, many people involved in my schooling, and yet they really did nothing to stop the bleeding. I assume Concord had known me by name, but they don’t oversee things unlike the adult system under DHHS.

These people have gotten away with doing harm and evil with me, and yet they continue to lurk in the public sector of the New Hampshire School Administrative Units and the Public Schools in Massachusetts. Who will try these people to hell? Are they too scared? Or they think it won’t happen politically?

Something needs to be done.