this post was submitted on 04 Dec 2023
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ehhh what? being autistic is a really major part of my experience as a human you know? have you talked to an autistic person before?
vitamin d supplements are thing you know? a thing that in the scenario you describe would be necessary anyways
comparing autism and epilepsy is insane. one of them causes you to get a seizure and literally die if you are unlucky. the other doesn't
Yes. But then I've also been told I'm mildly autistic myself. I don't know if that's true, but I also don't know how to describe "being autistic" verses "not being autistic" when I only have my own frame of reference. What's more, I wouldn't assign my the majority of my behavior, attitude, and temperament to genetics. A big part of it is my upbringing and another big part is my immediate environment. I'd definitely be a different person without my OCD-ish tendency, but I don't think I would be somehow deprived or removed if I'd ended up differently.
A thing that achieves more innately what these scientists are attempting to engineer. But the end state is (intended to be) the same. Should pregnant women with low exposure to sunlight be prescribed/forbidden Vitamin D supplements in the name of neurodiversity? Or is this specifically proposed treatment a problem because of some objection to methodology?
There are plenty of syndromes that exhibit both as symptoms. And, in this particular course of treatment, it appears the goal is to eliminate the symptoms by treating the underlying genetic conditions.
this is the weird thing you do lmao pretending like it is all genetics is fucking insane in the first place.
low vitamin d is a sickness by itself, as it for example causes depression and malfunctions in the immune system. It is quite a difference to cure people who are just autistic then to treat something that might increase the rate of autism in children. It's not like vitamin d is the all cause of autism you know? and the end state is not the same. treating a malnutrition issue is different from removing a part of natural human variation, even if that malnutrition issue caused a intensification of that variation. Autism is for most of us simply not a disease to be treated, but a totally normal way for a person to be. It's like trying to use gen therapy to 'cure' trans people. Or use it to remove black people.
autism as a symptom of a syndrome? are you okay? do you know what these words mean? this is barley a sentence
Spinabifida is part of natural human variation. ALS is part of natural human variation. Cleft palates are part of natural human variation.
Many aspects of autism are simply lateral differences to NT people that society, in its inadequacy and bigotry, fails to account for, but being "natural" cannot suffice to establish something is "not bad".
The treatment is explicitly stated as gene therapy.
Vitamin D deficiency results in the gene-writing anomaly that the proposed treatment is also correcting for. The difference is, firstly, the stage of development when you intercede to make a correction and, secondly, the anticipated success rate of the intervention.
But that's just it. Malnutrition in pregnant adults is well-established as a casual factor in reduced cognitive function in children. Human variation is a consequence of environmental factors in pre-natal and early development. You aren't just a product of your parents, you're a product of your material conditions during the period of gestation.
Should physicians refuse to intervene after a child is born, because of variations caused in their mother during the period of pregnancy?
Rett syndrome is an example of a syndrome that results in the patient's behavioral characteristics meeting the definition of autism.
Apologies if I no make words good. Me try better harder next time.
This might be the bit causing confusion, they (and also a lot of autisc people including me) assign a lot of who they are to how they perceive and engage with reality. Autistic people usually have different cognitive functioning, and at that point genetics is just a distant cause at best.
"Curing" autism would mean somehow changing that functioning to a neurotypical one, and that would definitely impact somebody's identity or behaviour. Also autism is often termed a "behavioural disorder", so if people are claiming to "cure" autism they most likely mean the behaviours go along with it.
This might be just a mistake, but autism is not a symptom and even then the thing there isn't being advertised as a "tactile hypersensitivity jab" or something like that. Autism is at worst called a spectrum "disorder" with an assortment of "symptoms" in common
Epilepsy on the other hand is indeed a disease. Lot's of people (like me!) are really fine with staying autistic for the rest of their lives, and would much prefer research be directed at accommodating autistic people. On the other hand I think you'd struggle to find people who are glad to keep their epilepsy.
But that isn't just genetic. Two color-blind people can have very different aesthetic tastes despite both "seeing" the same spectrum of color.
In this case, the "cure" appears to involve treating secondary symptoms that are far more sever than simple perception. And, again, in mice. This is miles away from a holistic rewriting of consciousness to be neurotypical.
It is diagnosed through its symptoms.
Its a disorder that's diagnosed by a particular brain disorder. And conditions within the brain can produce both epilepsy and autistic symptoms.
Another bad equivalence, colourblind people clearly have "less" vision in that they see less information. Autistic people usually have "different" cognitive functions in a way that's hard to even describe in text to a neurotypical person.
But even then it doesn't matter whether the neurodivergence is genetic or not, it has obvious and direct impact in how people see reality and themselves.
And if this is advertised as an "anti-autism jab" treatment rather than say a "social anxiety" one, I hope you'll forgive me for disliking the obvious ableist implication that "curing" autism is desirable, even if it could be optimistically interpreted as "alleviating common autistic issues".
That is still the end goal of organisations like Autism Speaks and I'd rather actual sane people were more careful when talking about the medicalisation of neurodivergence. We live in a world where it's not even that hard to find stories about autistic people who basically grew up locked in medical institutions being put on all sorts of treatments because this is how our current systems treat neurodivergence. So we can't pretend that "voluntary" will actually mean "voluntary" when push comes to shove.
It's still not a symptom so "sharing symptoms" is a moot point. Some people with brain tumours experience sensory hypersensitivity, but that doesn't mean it's that related to autism (besides being neurological) or that some kind of autism cure will have any use for that. It's not even clear from the article if their treatment is directed at "symptoms" or just behaviour.
I did not realize I was talking to a debate-bro. My apologies.
There are plenty of conditions that change how people see reality that aren't desirable.
Are we going to medicalize the discussion of medicalization, then? You're a champion of neurodivergence who casually dismisses an intervention by denouncing the researchers as "insane"? Dafuq?
It is diagnosed by its symptoms.
The article specifically calls out sever conditions associated with autism that they were seeking to treat in mice.
I'm going to assume by this non-response that you're apologising for a faulty analogy. It's okay, I sometimes do it too.
This was a response towards you claiming that autism being part of somebody's identity being "genetic-essentialism". Of course there are plenty of conditions, like colour blindness and brain tumours. But I wasn't arguing that autism is good because it's different. I was arguing why autism can be part of somebody's identity besides whatever genetic origins it has.
Obviously I could've chosen better words and I apologise. But by "actual sane" I meant people who aren't reactionary ableist bigots like those of Autism Speaks (who are not researchers). And at no point did I imply that the researchers themselves were such, though I wouldn't be surprised. But although the word I used was unfortunate, I'll still denounce interventions based on what I actually meant (bigoted/ableist/reactionary reasoning).
Which is different from being a symptom. You can't just lump a bunch of unrelated conditions with possibly very different underlying causes because they have common symptoms. Like I said for brain tumours.
Fair point, I missed it. Here's the line.
Those are definitely not what I'd associate with the worst of ASD. Nor are they very well defined ("problems").
It's strange though, this is a thread about autism erasure and "fixing" but you are the one getting flippant despite all forces between at your side.
E: fixed a lot of bad grammar