Obviously it is very bad if you are diagnosed as autistic. You could turn out like one of these people: Famous Autistic People in History • Dan Aykroyd • Hans Christian Andersen • Lewis Carroll • Charles Darwin • Emily Dickinson • Albert Einstein • Bobby Fischer • Bill Gates • Temple Grandin • Daryl Hannah • Thomas Jefferson • Steve Jobs • James Joyce • Michelangelo • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart • Isaac Newton • Nikola Tesla • Ludwig Wittgenstein I don’t get it. I thought autism was very very bad. You mean you could turn out like Wittgenstein or Michelangelo or James Joyce or Albert Einstein or Charles Darwin? This is terrible. School is all about indoctrination and rule following. If you don’t want to follow the rules, then you need to be fixed. You will get bad grades, you will punished. You will be sent to special ed. We are teaching cyber security these days. The best hackers seem to all be “on the spectrum.” Clearly we should shoot people like this. Or at least we should make the feel bad about themselves. As for me I would like to train them to be hackers. We have an online learn by doing course to do just that. If you know an autistic kid who you think might like to be a hacker send them my way.
Well... he's 4 years old and the only language he knows is Scratch Jr. but...
Advisor - Data Science based Healthcare Transformation at Ingine Inc
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Ingine a compony I called due to possibility of special mind endowment disposing one to be ever creative. The special endowment provides natural gift to be ever curious and ability to engineer learning from inside and nature. Autism, Dyslexia, Asperger all these and few others all unfortunately has something to do with the insidious Nazi Eugenics. Later adopted by US with lots of icing on the cake. https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/140/2/e20171419 “””The debate over whether to consider autism a disability or identity is surely complicated by its expansion into a spectrum that encompasses a wide range of individuals and functioning. But this controversy is also rooted in a fundamental tension within the core definitions of autism as formulated in the 1940s by the 2 physicians credited for first describing the syndrome. Drs Leo Kanner and Hans Asperger both highlighted the presence of intellectual gifts in many of their patients, alongside social deficits and characteristic behaviors. This emphasis is best understood as a strategy to draw a sharp line dividing autism from mental retardation, reacting to a historical moment when the latter had become the target of a powerful eugenics movement.”””