@jewelsxsx: its like im a whole new person #fyp #fypツ #foryoupagе #trending #blowthisup #Relationship #lol

🌙ewels
🌙ewels
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Wednesday 24 April 2024 21:29:40 GMT
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sadfaceleah
leah🥂 :
LMAO doing this 😭
2024-04-24 21:36:50
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Since my post about the president saying “the autism crisis, the terrible terrible crisis” I have received so many comments stating, “you took it out of context” “it is a crisis” etc etc. let me explain why this language is stigmatizing. “the rate of autism rising is the crisis”* is stigmatizing, even if the speaker intends to highlight prevalence trends, because of how the language frames autistic people themselves. Here’s why: 1. It Equates Autistic People with a “Crisis” The phrase doesn’t separate the condition from the individuals. By calling the increase in autism a crisis, it implies that autistic people are inherently a societal problem or burden rather than recognizing that the true crisis often lies in lack of support, resources, and acceptance. 2. It Devalues Autistic Lives For autistic people and their families, hearing their very existence described as part of a “crisis” can feel like being told they are unwanted or less valuable. It risks reinforcing harmful stereotypes that autism is something to fear, fight, or eradicate, rather than a form of human diversity. 3. It Ignores What Actually is a Crisis The real crisis is not that more people are being identified as autistic. We know this is due to better screening, awareness, diagnosis, etc. The crisis is the lack of accessible therapies, inclusive schools, supportive workplaces, and societal understanding. By misplacing the focus, the statement shifts attention away from where change is truly needed. 4. It Fuels Stigma and Fear Language shapes public attitudes. Calling autism prevalence “a crisis” perpetuates stigma, fear, and pity rather than acceptance, advocacy, and investment in supports. This kind of rhetoric can contribute to discrimination and exclusion for autistic people in everyday life. I hope this explains why the narrative is potentially stigmatizing and harmful! So What’s urgent is ensuring that as more people are diagnosed with autism, society steps up with the resources, inclusivity, and support systems they need to thrive. #autism #asd #pediatrics #father #fatherson
Since my post about the president saying “the autism crisis, the terrible terrible crisis” I have received so many comments stating, “you took it out of context” “it is a crisis” etc etc. let me explain why this language is stigmatizing. “the rate of autism rising is the crisis”* is stigmatizing, even if the speaker intends to highlight prevalence trends, because of how the language frames autistic people themselves. Here’s why: 1. It Equates Autistic People with a “Crisis” The phrase doesn’t separate the condition from the individuals. By calling the increase in autism a crisis, it implies that autistic people are inherently a societal problem or burden rather than recognizing that the true crisis often lies in lack of support, resources, and acceptance. 2. It Devalues Autistic Lives For autistic people and their families, hearing their very existence described as part of a “crisis” can feel like being told they are unwanted or less valuable. It risks reinforcing harmful stereotypes that autism is something to fear, fight, or eradicate, rather than a form of human diversity. 3. It Ignores What Actually is a Crisis The real crisis is not that more people are being identified as autistic. We know this is due to better screening, awareness, diagnosis, etc. The crisis is the lack of accessible therapies, inclusive schools, supportive workplaces, and societal understanding. By misplacing the focus, the statement shifts attention away from where change is truly needed. 4. It Fuels Stigma and Fear Language shapes public attitudes. Calling autism prevalence “a crisis” perpetuates stigma, fear, and pity rather than acceptance, advocacy, and investment in supports. This kind of rhetoric can contribute to discrimination and exclusion for autistic people in everyday life. I hope this explains why the narrative is potentially stigmatizing and harmful! So What’s urgent is ensuring that as more people are diagnosed with autism, society steps up with the resources, inclusivity, and support systems they need to thrive. #autism #asd #pediatrics #father #fatherson

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