Needles are scary Anti-vaccination movement |
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Pricks against pricks |
Autism Speaks is a highly controversial autism “advocacy” organization founded by Bob and Suzanne Wright after their grandson was diagnosed with the disorder. The organization has garnered huge criticism for its vilification and dehumanisation of autistic people, their treatment of autism as a curable disease, and their past flirtation with anti-vaxxers. They operate on the principles of age-old anti-modernists and are stuck in the 60s. Essentially, they fail to believe mental conditions are natural.[citation needed]
Actual autistic people generally despise them. One described Autism Speaks as "a charity for neurotypical people who have been afflicted with the horror of having autistic people in their lives."[1] California State University, Northridge, professor of philosophy Jacob Hale, who has Asperger's syndrome, has described Autism Speaks as "incredibly condescending and parentalistic."[2]
Its choice to focus on the cause of autism no longer aligns with the priorities of many parents and loved ones of autistic people, many of whom are opposed to preventing autism or trying to train children to act non-autistic and want autism organizations to focus on acceptance and support.[3]
In 2016, it elected two autistic board members, Valerie Paradiz and Stephen Mark Shore, ironically the same year co-founder Suzanne Wright died.[4] Its mission statement was revised to "increasing understanding and acceptance of autism spectrum disorder" rather than seeking a cure.[5] Some see this as a sign of improvement, while others see the changes as superficial and doubt that Autism Speaks will start treating autistic people like actual human beings.[6] However, most people are seeing the latter.[citation needed]
Autism Speaks used to hold the view that immunizing children put them at risk of autism and committed a great deal of funding to prove it.[7] It continued to spend money on researching a possible connection despite evidence to the contrary, resulting in several resignations from frustrated board members.[8][9] Its Strategic Plan for Science for the years 2013-2017 included spending money on looking for a link between vaccines and autism.[10]
It promoted anti-vax celebrities including Jenny McCarthy, Doug Flutie, and celebrity board member Holly Robinson Peete; all these celebrities claim that vaccines played a role in their children being autistic.[10]
When anti-vaccination beliefs became unpopular during a measles outbreak, Autism Speaks changed its tune and urged parents to vaccinate their children.[11] However, its spokespeople did not comment on whether it would continue spending money on research into vaccines.[12]
Autism Speaks has long claimed that autism frequently causes divorce,[13] likely spreading the unscientific myth that 80% of families with autistic kids divorce.[14][15] (They don't. There's no significant difference in divorce rates between families with autistic and non-autistic kids.[16])
Autism Speaks has also promoted pseudoscientific "autism diets".[17] In 2011, it drew criticism for promoting Floortime[note 1] despite there being little or no scientific evidence for it at the time.[18] It has also been called out for doing nothing to prevent horrifying "autism therapy" scams such as Miracle Mineral Supplement and chelation therapy from hurting autistic children.[19]
Its information on the prevalence of deadly diseases, which it likes to compare to autism, isn't always fact-based.[20]
—Autism Speaks worker to an autistic parent. In front of the kid, too.[21] |
Autism Speaks uses shocking, militant language to urge people to donate and "fight" autism. Their rhetoric consistently paints autism as the enemy and parents as either heroes or tragic martyrs. This is an archaic view that should have been dismissed as the ableist drivel that it is before the mid-70s.
Autistic people who speak out against Autism Speaks may be dismissed with the no true Scotsman fallacy: real autism causes suffering, so if you aren't suffering and don't hate your life, then you aren't truly autistic.[22][23]
This rhetoric can hurt autistic people who may already suffer from issues with anxiety, depression, and self-esteem problems. One survey found that negative "autism awareness" campaigns worsen mental health issues for a majority of autistic people.[24]
While the most egregious examples are in the past as Autism Speaks has become more savvy, many of its videos contain negative messaging (overt or subtle).[25]
In 2009, Autism Speaks released a sinister and inflammatory video which personified autism as some sort of living demon-figure that can ruin marriages, embarrass family members, and spread like cancer. The video, directed by much-respected film-maker Alfonso Cuarón, displays numerous home videos of children in a way reminiscent of how serial killer Francis Dolarhyde chooses his victims in Red Dragon. The video drew ire from autistic people and their families[26][27] for its portrayal of the condition as one where the person who has it is totally incapable of rational thought or taking care of themselves.[28] The video seems to equate divorce, bankruptcy, and public embarrassment with having an autistic child, which, while unfortunately in our world sometimes may be true (as dealing with an autistic child may sometimes not be easy and may even be for some very difficult), to paint such a complex and nuanced condition and to project it in the most extreme and negative light possible, without in any way trying to humanize children who have the condition to depict them all as inevitable tragic burdens shows the organization's true colors, where they seem to care less about actually fighting for the well-being of kids with autism, and instead fearmonger to parents so they can get as strong as a response as possible, even if such a strong reaction may negatively impact those with the condition.
Not to mention the logical fallacy of comparing autism to "pediatric AIDS, cancer, and diabetes combined"[29] when autism is not fatal.
Autism Speaks sponsored the short film Autism Every Day, in which a staff member says, in the presence of her daughter, that when faced with the prospect of inadequate school, she contemplated driving her car off a bridge with her child inside.[30] The producers, not through being assholes, said these feelings were not unusual.
The staff member in the video, Alison Singer, has since distanced herself from these comments, left Autism Speaks, and founded an organization promoting actual scientific research,[31] so perhaps some good came of this video.
Autism Speaks has never apologized for this. It has, however, stated that parents kill their kids because they lack services to deal with their children's "challenging behavior",[32] and it's not surprising, in general, if a parent "breaks".[33] (Somehow this doesn't seem to strike them as a condemnation of inadequate school services rather than the fault, somehow, of the kids being born with this disability.) It also failed to speak out when Harry Slatkin, the husband of a board member, stated in an interview that sometimes he wished his son would fall into the pond and die.[34][35]
One Autism Speaks mall ad features a young girl. A 3D camera captures viewers' movements, and the girl on the screen moves to avoid eye contact.[36] The ad is supposed to help people empathize with how "frustrating" it might be for a parent whose child won't meet their eyes, instead of empathizing with the poor autistic child who gets forced by adults — who are up to 3 times as big as them — to look them in the eyes or get hit, sprayed, or forced to eat hot chilli sauce.[37]
Many autistic people find eye contact uncomfortable or frightening,[38][39] and they prefer to avoid eye contact in order to have a pleasant conversation. By encouraging people to make eye contact with the virtual girl, Autism Speaks is teaching people to persistently try to violate autistic people's boundaries. Forcing or training them to make eye contact would do more harm than good.[40][41]
“”Autism Speaks – lighting it up blue and walking away with the green
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—Debra Muzikar[42] |
Autism Speaks is heavily into the charity as business model, on a level comparable to Susan G. Komen For The Cure.[43]
As of 2020, Charity Navigator rates its financials with 2 out of 4 stars, giving the organization 3 out of 4 stars overall.[44]
In 2010, Autism Speaks dedicated 44% of its funding for research and a cure, despite the extreme unlikelihood of "curing" different brain development. In the same year, only 4% of their budget went towards actually helping families of autistic people.[45] The organization also funds research for genetics, which would likely result in a pre-natal test to allow potential families to test for autism and choose to abort if they deemed the fetus undesirable.[46][47]
A petition called for a fraud investigation after people noticed issues with Autism Speaks' financials. The organization claimed to have funded "over $62 million" in Arkansas, Arizona, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, and Vermont (each); after a woman named Kimberly Steiner reported that at least one of these numbers was untrue, the organization pulled these claims without notifying stakeholders.[48]
Autism Speaks faced legal action for disability discrimination in 2012. The autism organization rescinded a job offer because the prospective employee wanted flexibility so she could care for her autistic son when he came home from school early on Wednesdays. Even though the boy's grandmother offered to babysit, Autism Speaks didn't want to deal with making accommodations for her, so it rescinded the offer.[49][50]
There have also been issues with Autism Speaks quoting an autistic writer, failing to remove the quote when she asked, and then white-texting it in order to remain higher on search engine results.[51]
Autism Speaks also threatened legal action against an autistic 14-year-old girl named Kelly for creating the parody website "NT Speaks," claiming that she repay them the $90,000 they had supposedly lost because of her.[52] They dropped the suit when they discovered she was a minor.[53] The issue was summarized on Fark as "Autism Speaks, a charity that claims to speak for autistic people sues 14-year-old autistic kid when she starts a parody website about autistic people being able to speak for themselves."[54]
Autism Speaks has also chosen not to take action to prevent child abuse, calling it "too political."[55]
Autism Speaks has tried to rebrand itself so it can profit off the growing culture of acceptance and neurodiversity. It has started using bright colors and optimistic statements to lure people in and convince them it's something positive.
Autism Speaks removed the word "cure" from its mission statement in 2016, replacing it with "solutions".[56] Dr. Stephen Shore, one of its 2 autistic board members (out of 31),[57] felt it was because Autism Speaks actually cared about empowering autistic people.[58] Other people were skeptical.[59] Maxfield Sparrow noted that Autism Speaks is still pouring money into genetic research and has yet to do anything beyond lip service.[60]
After being criticized for spending so little money on family services, Autism Speaks renamed its categories so that "family services, awareness, and advocacy" became a category (meaning that nobody can see how much money is spent specifically on family services anymore).[60]
Autism Speaks has gotten involved with Sesame Street, using the Muppet character Julia to advertise its stigmatizing "resources".[61] Fans of the series have concluded that Sesame Workshop (who worked with the Autistic Self Advocacy Network (mentioned below) in developing Julia[62]) were essentially forced into working with Autism Speaks thanks to AS being the go-to Autism charity in Hollywood.
In early 2020, Autism Speaks unveiled a new logo, which was the same thing but with a few rainbow colors. Autistics weren't impressed.[63] "Appropriating the neurodiversity movement's spectrum iconography is a slap in the face, especially since that imagery is used to differentiate ourselves from Autism Speaks," said autistic writer and advocate Steve Asbell.[64]
It's worth noting that despite all these superficial efforts, Autism Speaks hasn't apologized for anything so far, and they continue to share the same stigmatizing resources (like their 100 Day Kit).