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Dashk Observes's avatar

I'm sure the point has often been made, but I want to make it again. RFK Jr. and others like him seem to completely overlook the fact that society has changed in such a way that people are much less (compared, say, to when I was a kid in the '50s and '60s) much less averse to acknowledging that they or some family member has some quality or condition lying outside the norm. Once upon a time most people were deathly afraid of being labelled as —or having a child labelled as —"ABNORMAL(!)," taken to mean "there is something 'WRONG' with them." This seems like a crucial consideration in thinking about certain things like rates of autism diagnoses.

Leslie  Gottshall-Decker's avatar

I have a good friend who is “on the spectrum”. He has a beautiful German Shepherd named Daisy who acts as a service dog. Actually he’s her service person. She was badly abused and is still afraid of some women, but he can obviously make her more comfortable too. I’m a retired home health psych RN, so maybe I’m a little more aware of when people need someone who will just listen, but feel honored with his trust. He’s had characteristics of autism his whole life, wasn’t on any specific medication that RFK jr. is yammering on about and there is no scientific evidence that vaccines cause this and if you ask people diagnosed with this they have been like that before they had vaccines and medication. RFK jr.’s case of having blinders on is making him focus on causes that have no statistical relation to the diagnosis itself. Since they can’t seem to find a cause that medical research will support and there are a variety of symptoms and severities, quit trying to pigeon hole people. Treat as a human being first, and listen. You might learn something.

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