Review into mental health conditions, ADHD and autism: interim report (gov.uk). https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/independent-revie...
It's amazing how much we continue to learn about these conditions.
Shameless plug but to see ABA data better, I built a site with the Observable Framework[1] that analyzes sessions at: https://behavior.today
There is a matrix of is-diagnosed, is-not-diagnosed, identifies-as, does-not-identify-as, which is open to exploitation by those who "identify as" something they are not diagnosed with. Who gets fucked? The people who are diagnosed but do not identify as their diagnosis.
God help me once we start adding another dimension of people who have a condition, but are also not diagnosed and do not identify with it either...
It turns out, no amount. Now I’m just a weird adult with an ironclad distrust of all authority.
Diagnosed with adhd last year at 45, scored ridiculously high on self test aspie but no incentive to get an autism diagnosis atm (my wife is worried the far right will get in and they’ll go after the autistics).
Would have been nice to have had a diagnosis as a kid though - my life would have been quite different (maybe more hugs less drugs)
Are you really so petty as to call anything not fitting your world view "ragebait"?
Autism is a varied condition and the stereotype that you are referring to does not apply to a very, very sizeable portion of people with autism.
Digression from this narrative is often met with hostility. That's popular, emotionally-charged narratives for you.
If not all, what percentage?
And this is just more of that darn hostility to which I referred. It blots out rational conversation.
They really know how to concentrate. It's next level, unknown by the normies. You want a guy who can give his full obsessive waking attention to a riddle for days or years, that's where you look. And that makes them valuable. Which brings us to my actual point.