Asperger syndrome: Difference between revisions

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As part of the shift from the pathology paradigm to [[The neurodiversity paradigm|the neurodiversity paradigm]], the term Asperger's has fallen out of favour because:
As part of the shift from the pathology paradigm to [[The neurodiversity paradigm|the neurodiversity paradigm]], the term Asperger's has fallen out of favour because:


# Now that we're openly speaking for ourselves, even [[Antonym|allistic]] "experts" have to finally accept that [[The_autism_spectrum|autism's a spectrum]], with any combination of [[Autistic_and_allistic_traits|traits]] possible.  Instead of giving different hazily defined clusters of traits their own names, it makes more sense to briefly describe each individual person's own unique combination of strengths and requirements.
# Now that we're openly speaking for ourselves, even [[Allism|allistic]] "experts" have to finally accept that [[The autism spectrum|autism's a spectrum]], with any combination of [[Autistic and allistic traits|traits]] possible.  Instead of giving different hazily defined clusters of traits their own names, it makes more sense to briefly describe each individual person's own unique combination of strengths and requirements.
# Unlike society at large, autistic people generally accept that autism isn't a dirty word, and that being autistic is nothing to be ashamed of.  We don't need a euphemism to effectively claim "but we're one of the good ones", because no combination of traits makes you bad.
# Unlike society at large, autistic people generally accept that autism isn't a dirty word, and that being autistic is nothing to be ashamed of.  We don't need a euphemism to effectively claim "but we're one of the good ones", because no combination of traits makes you bad.
# Asperger was a literal Nazi, whose job was to determine who was enough of a burden to allistic people — or even Jewish enough — to warrant being sent to a concentration camp and killed.<ref name="wb-the-aftermath-of-the-hans-asperger-expose" />  He was monstrous.
# Asperger was a literal Nazi, whose job was to determine who was enough of a burden to allistic people — or even Jewish enough — to warrant being sent to a concentration camp and killed.<ref name="wb-the-aftermath-of-the-hans-asperger-expose" />  He was monstrous.

Revision as of 08:15, 23 August 2022

Asperger syndrome, also known as Asperger's, was an obsolete way of describing autistic people who are good at masking.

As part of the shift from the pathology paradigm to the neurodiversity paradigm, the term Asperger's has fallen out of favour because:

  1. Now that we're openly speaking for ourselves, even allistic "experts" have to finally accept that autism's a spectrum, with any combination of traits possible. Instead of giving different hazily defined clusters of traits their own names, it makes more sense to briefly describe each individual person's own unique combination of strengths and requirements.
  2. Unlike society at large, autistic people generally accept that autism isn't a dirty word, and that being autistic is nothing to be ashamed of. We don't need a euphemism to effectively claim "but we're one of the good ones", because no combination of traits makes you bad.
  3. Asperger was a literal Nazi, whose job was to determine who was enough of a burden to allistic people — or even Jewish enough — to warrant being sent to a concentration camp and killed.[1] He was monstrous.

All in all, it's simpler to just say I'm autistic.

References

[1]