Anti neurodiversity movement article
ASPartOfMe
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Hannah Spier is a medical doctor trained in psychiatric residency in Norway and Switzerland, with a degree in Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy from the University of Zurich. Now based in Zurich with her husband and three children, she launched the Psychobabble publication and podcast in October 2022 to challenge postmodern influences and champion traditional values in the mental health field.
The Overdiagnosis and Mistreatment of Autism Suffering children are not being helped by a wrong-headed diagnostic revolution
Helped along by characters like Sheldon Cooper on the new century’s most popular comedy program, The Big Bang Theory, and the up-to-date version of Sherlock Holmes as embodied in the wildly popular BBC series Sherlock, being autistic has become something of a badge of honor. You’re socially odd, intellectually superior, and emotionally detached in an edgy and endearing way. For many, especially mothers with narcissistic tendencies who are themselves hungry to possess a narrative of their own exceptionalism, the reframing of autism was too seductive to pass up—a way of casting a child’s concerning behavior and obvious nonconformity not as problems to be overcome but as evidence of special gifts. A devoted parent of an autistic child could thus become the steward of a quirky and special genius. Given the difficulties of raising a child with myriad such difficulties, she could be viewed both as a patient and exceptional person as well as one of the overseers of an elite cultural phenomenon. And psychiatric professionals have made it easy for parents of this particular sort by flinging open the diagnostic gates. Rather than refining and focusing on specific symptoms to make it possible to spot the differences between quirkiness and genuine difference, they have expanded to a breaking point the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). Once a club no one wanted to join, once a condition that no one would ever have wished on a child, as you would not wish a chronic and incurable condition on any child, autism has become something else entirely: something oddly desirable.
Kanner’s original understanding of autism was fairly rigid and recognized a distinct group with unmistakable qualities: nonverbal children, socially disconnected, cognitively impaired, often with seizures. These were not quirky introverts. These were developmental dysfunctions, not misunderstood personalities. And neither clinicians nor parents had a problem naming them as such.
Then came the DSM-III-R in 1987, which introduced the term “pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS)” and broadened the field significantly. Suddenly, language delay and intellectual disability were no longer central to a diagnosis. Subclinical cases were included. In 1994’s DSM-IV, Asperger’s syndrome was added, which broadened the definition to high-IQ individuals with no language delays but poor social functioning. A child who spoke on schedule but didn’t understand jokes, had poor eye contact, and rigid routines was now also autistic.
The most dramatic change came with DSM-5 in 2013. Subtypes were eliminated. Autism became a spectrum. The criteria were thinned down to two domains: first, social-communication difficulties; second, restrictive and repetitive behaviors. A person needed to meet just six out of 12 traits, spread across these two clusters. Language and cognitive delay? Optional. Even the requirement for early onset was removed. A diagnosis could now be given based on historical symptoms. Questionnaires like the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ) are so broad and subjective that a 30-year-old who recalls feeling “socially overwhelmed” in school and not liking itchy clothing can receive the same diagnosis as a nonverbal child requiring lifelong care.
The diagnostic category has become a black hole, pulling in people with no clinical resemblance, collapsing distinction into sameness. From what I’ve observed, three distinct autism “patients” now account for much of the increased prevalence, none of whom would have qualified under the original criteria.
The first is the temperamentally awkward and quiet child. He is highly conscientious, literal-minded, and has a strong preference for things rather than people. He can spend hours absorbed in intricate play and needs some form of coercion to focus his attention elsewhere. In subsequent forced social settings, he comes across as “weird.” Such a child can be embarrassing for a highly self-conscious parent worried about appearances. What would such a person rather have—a child with an introverted and eccentric personality or a child with “special needs” that might suggest an elevated intelligence and perspicacity?
I keep referring to parents and their conduct here because there is extensive evidence across the internet of just such people writing blogs, making TikToks, and filming YouTube videos chronicling a person’s “autism journey”—both as a parent and as the child himself.
One striking example of how blurred diagnostic categories have become is in the interpretation of “stimming,” a key defining feature of autism. Stimming is an involuntary, neurologically driven motor response to sensory overload: repetitive, unconscious, and difficult to suppress. The thing is, the stimming that’s described on social media by many parents highlighting their own experiences and those of their children is indistinguishable from what any typical two- or three-year-old does: hand-flapping, spinning, lining things up. Such behavior can, to a certain degree, be found in all people. So what’s now presented as evidence of “neurodivergence” is often just a developmental phase that is later reframed through the influence of online checklists and the retroactive placement of unreliable memories.
A common thread in these stories is the initial dismissal by general pediatricians who are extensively trained to distinguish normal developmental variation. After enough doctor-shopping and vague questionnaires, the parent eventually finds someone willing to confirm what she’s already decided: that the child’s aloofness is hidden brilliance. The diagnosis is finally secured by an ideological autism center clinician who is trained not to evaluate critically but to recognize and affirm such “symptoms.”
The second is the undisciplined child—verbally skilled, highly functional, but socially inept. Pediatricians often see nothing wrong with such a kid, because there isn’t a developmental delay. But in the classroom, the behavior becomes disruptive, teachers grow exhausted, and parents give up. Between the second and fourth grade, a diagnosis is sought, not from a clinical need, but from institutional surrender.
The third is the adult Cluster B cases. On TikTok, the Cluster Bs proudly recount their autism diagnosis as if it were an Ivy League diploma. To the trained eye, what’s on display is emotional immaturity, narcissistic attention-seeking (“I am the best at being oppressed because I’m special”), and interpersonal manipulation. Their immaturity is revealed in the way they label the rest of society as “phony” and “fake,” casting themselves as the only ones authentic enough to speak the truth, regardless of its impact. It’s the same adolescent script performed since the dawn of time. Only now, the diagnosis confirms the performers’ righteousness. They’re told that they’re wired differently, that their discomfort is insight, and their perspective a rare gift to be bestowed on society. Thus, maturation is stalled.
The performative tendencies of Cluster B patients have them mimicking classic autistic behaviors, such as stimming. But what these patients call stimming is often a form of self-soothing taught in therapy, where repetitive motion and sensory grounding techniques are often successfully deployed to manage emotional dysregulation. And there’s a critical difference. In autism, stimming is a symptom of underlying neurological dysfunction. For others, it is a practiced coping mechanism. The behaviors may look the same on the surface, but they emerge from entirely different clinical realities.
Any attempt to question these realities is swiftly met with the concept of “masking.” If you don’t meet diagnostic criteria, it’s not because you’re not autistic; it’s because you’ve been too good at hiding it. Your true self, oppressed by a society too old-fashioned to see differences, learns all too well how to behave falsely to get along. But the research on masking is methodologically flawed, relying heavily on interpretations of retrospective self-reports from adults diagnosed in their 30s, samples drawn from those already invested in the diagnosis.
It’s circular: If you say you’ve been masking, that becomes proof enough that you were autistic all along. Most people would consider masking no different from the politeness I educate my three small children to show—an ability to put aside their immediate whims to function in a society one day. It’s not evidence of hidden pathology. It’s socialization.
All of this has been made more appealing by the transformation of autism from something considered a dysfunction to something considered a “difference.” This is a deliberate move away from the medical model of disability on the part of what has become a movement—the neurodiversity movement. In the 1990s, the sociologist Judy Singer coined the term “neurodiversity” to frame autism as a natural variation of the human mind. No longer was it to be considered a developmental disorder; no, it was a “neurotype.” Sounds good, and serious, and seems to be the result of sustained longitudinal research, perhaps, but the term “neurodivergence” crumbles under the slightest scrutiny. There is no clinically defined “neurotypical” brain and no bimodal distribution that separates autistic from non-autistic minds.
Groups like the Autistic Self Advocacy Network ran with the unscientific term and lobbied fiercely to widen the diagnosis, especially during the DSM-5 revisions in the early 2010s. They demanded the inclusion of “historical” symptoms, which has enabled adult self-diagnosis. Their mission wasn’t diagnostic precision, but rather diagnostic access.
There are several such activist groups, each playing its role in shifting focus away from those who are genuinely autistic and the needs they have that must be addressed. But when autism is thought of not as an impairment to be treated, but as a unique perspective to be honed, it becomes something else. Under this framework, to describe someone as “low-functioning” is offensive, and the effort to achieve behavioral modification is recast as “ableism.” There is no hierarchy of function to distinguish those whose lives are truly disrupted by the mysterious affliction that affects their physical movements and their ability to connect to others in the world. Instead, they are possessors of diverse minds, and it should therefore follow, we are told, that autists should be offered neurodiversity-affirming interventions and programs tailored to their strengths.
In this vein, another idea that’s gained traction under the neurodiversity banner is the “double empathy problem.” The theory claims that communication difficulties between autistic and non-autistic people aren’t due to a lack of empathy or social skill in the autistic individual, but to a mismatch in communication styles between the two groups. They claim autistic people understand each other just fine; it’s only when interacting with “neurotypicals” that problems arise. What was once viewed as a core deficit in social reciprocity is reinterpreted as mutual misunderstanding. Leave aside that the research in this is weak. The real problem is that it flips the burden of adaptation. This is not a way to create incentives for parents of autistic kids to take measures, often very difficult and exacting measures, to improve their children’s ability to function in the real world.
This was perfectly illustrated in a recent conversation between Jordan B. Peterson and Dr. Simon Baron-Cohen, one of the key architects of the modern autism framework. Peterson pressed Baron-Cohen to define what “severe autism” looks like. Baron-Cohen deflected, saying autism is a spectrum and “always looks different.” This is a pitch for dismantling hierarchy. If you insist that gradations of function are diagnostically relevant, you are supposedly merely demonstrating your lack of understanding on the subject. Baron-Cohen’s answers revealed how ideology can easily overshadow clinical clarity. Vague empathy trumps the precise language we need to create categories that will help us identify correct treatment.The ones most affected by this euphemistic fog are not the high-functioning adults demanding validation, it’s the children who still cannot speak, and whose parents are begging to know: Will they ever be able to live independently?
This ideological shift away from functioning hasn’t just changed how we diagnose. It has changed how we treat.
In the classical model, when autism was widely accepted as a developmental disorder, treatment was structured, measurable, and goal oriented. It aimed at improving functionality: language acquisition, daily living skills, social adaptation. Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA), a form of managing autism treatment that has been a subject of great controversy, was built around this principle. The goal wasn’t to eliminate autism, which may not be possible: It was to reduce dysfunction and build independence. And we have collected solid evidence that it works.
Now there is “floor time,” a therapeutic approach that supposedly meets the child where he is. Also called DIR (for Developmental, Individual-differences, and Relationship-based), it is marketed as a humane alternative to the supposedly oppressive structure of ABA. But floor-time DIR has no measurable outcomes, no behavioral goals, and shows little evidence of progress. It relies on vague concepts like “attunement” and “connection,” and therapists are instructed to avoid correction and excessive coaxing. Children are encouraged to “unmask,” to stim freely, with meltdowns and aggression viewed as forms of communication. “Sensory rooms” are prioritized over skill-building and parents are coached to be 24/7 facilitators of co-regulation, abandoning discipline altogether. This approach places enormous emotional burdens on already overwhelmed families, while leaving the most impaired children to flounder, missing key developmental windows where behavior can be learned.
Autists themselves are not the only ones harmed by the consequences of the obsession with inclusivity. In schools, children with severe behavioral challenges are now placed full-time in mainstream classrooms. Paraprofessionals with minimal training act as substitutes for specialized care. In the United States, special-education spending per student with disabilities ranges from $10,500 to $20,100, nearly double the cost for general-education students. Roughly 7.5 million U.S. students receive special-ed services, about 15 percent of the total school-age population. Where districts are lucky enough to have trained special-ed teachers, turnover is high, with burnout cited as a primary reason for leaving.
Not only does this exhaust the staff, but “neurotypical” classmates are forced to tolerate disrupted learning and even bodily harm. Complaints after being spat on or kicked at are met with demands for greater understanding and empathy.
For all the compassion that progressive psychologists, psychiatrists, social scientists, and activists driving this shift are supposedly “modeling” for the rest of us, convincing autists and non-autists alike that society is wrong to expect basic conformity to common codes of conduct isn’t kindness. It’s cruelty. It’s cruel to the truly autistic children who need structured care and specialized environments, not resentful stares from classmates. It’s cruel to the Cluster B patients who require a diagnosis directing them to Dialectical Behavior Therapy, a way of helping those suffering from emotional dysregulation to find a path to living with others and getting their needs properly met as part of a community. It’s cruel to the awkward, odd child who simply needs to be left alone to grow—rather than pathologized. And it’s cruel to the undisciplined child who needs boundaries firmly enforced, not a diagnosis that grants him access to a “sensory room” and even fewer expectations. This is not the way.
I really don't know where to begin. This is a throwback to what many clinicians and some members believed when I first joined Wrong Planet a dozen years ago this month. Reading this was anything but nostalgic. Pretty much every anti ND movement stereotype and trope was in this article. Like most stereotypes and tropes, they contain elements of truth. As is often the case, extreme elements are used to define a group of people or a viewpoint.
She claimed that ASAN wants diagnostic access, not precision. What is wrong with both?
She mentioned diagnosis stories, which have always been popular on this site. It's not about "wow look at what I achieved," but comparing notes. You know, normal socialization that she is supposedly for.
Basically, what I see is that she is a conformist. She claims we can learn to be "normal" . Not all of us can, but putting that aside, people like her can learn to live with our quirks, they just don't want to(Not talking about truly disruptive or violent behaviors).
She mentioned stimming. All I can say I don't do it I because I was brainwashed by some ND ideologue. They did not exist when I was a child.
Most of us have many problems with the DSM. This is not what this article is about. It is about defining autism as it was defined decades ago.
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“Self Acceptance is a process not a performance”
“You are autistic enough. And you always have been”
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
Seems there should be some additional seperation of the diagnostic criteria if level 1 ,2, or 3 is inadequate .
But obviously those whom qualify as Non - verbal most likely might benefit from marked better ( intense)treatment .
As perhaps Mr Kanner had intended . And further studies need to be done. IMHO
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ASPartOfMe
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But obviously those whom qualify as Non - verbal most likely might benefit from marked better ( intense)treatment .
As perhaps Mr Kanner had intended . And further studies need to be done. IMHO
We need more subtypes. Futher studies are needed.
_________________
“Self Acceptance is a process not a performance”
“You are autistic enough. And you always have been”
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
Commentary Magazine articles are paywalled but non suscribers get a few free reads.
Hannah Spier is a medical doctor trained in psychiatric residency in Norway and Switzerland, with a degree in Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy from the University of Zurich. Now based in Zurich with her husband and three children, she launched the Psychobabble publication and podcast in October 2022 to challenge postmodern influences and champion traditional values in the mental health field.
The Overdiagnosis and Mistreatment of Autism Suffering children are not being helped by a wrong-headed diagnostic revolution
Kanner’s original understanding of autism was fairly rigid and recognized a distinct group with unmistakable qualities: nonverbal children, socially disconnected, cognitively impaired, often with seizures.
Evidently this author has never bothered to read Kanner's original paper on autism. While the children Kanner described were indeed all "socially disconnected," they were not all nonverbal or "cognitively impaired." Some of the children he described as being quite intelligent. And the very first child mentioned in his paper grew up to become a banker.
_________________
- Autistic in NYC - Resources and new ideas for the autistic adult community in the New York City metro area.
- Autistic peer-led groups (via text-based chat, currently) led or facilitated by members of the Autistic Peer Leadership Group.
ASPartOfMe
Veteran
Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 68
Gender: Male
Posts: 39,637
Location: Long Island, New York
Commentary Magazine articles are paywalled but non suscribers get a few free reads.
Hannah Spier is a medical doctor trained in psychiatric residency in Norway and Switzerland, with a degree in Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy from the University of Zurich. Now based in Zurich with her husband and three children, she launched the Psychobabble publication and podcast in October 2022 to challenge postmodern influences and champion traditional values in the mental health field.
The Overdiagnosis and Mistreatment of Autism Suffering children are not being helped by a wrong-headed diagnostic revolution
Kanner’s original understanding of autism was fairly rigid and recognized a distinct group with unmistakable qualities: nonverbal children, socially disconnected, cognitively impaired, often with seizures.
Evidently this author has never bothered to read Kanner's original paper on autism. While the children Kanner described were indeed all "socially disconnected," they were not all nonverbal or "cognitively impaired." Some of the children he described as being quite intelligent. And the very first child mentioned in his paper grew up to become a banker.
Donald Triplett was not a banker per se, he worked at the local bank owned by his dad. He was a college graduate who frequently traveled abroad by himself. He was verbal.
_________________
“Self Acceptance is a process not a performance”
“You are autistic enough. And you always have been”
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
Most of that article makes perfect sense to me. But then I don't particularly support neurodiversity.
This is an interesting bit. I've never understood this concept as I don't understand autistic people any more or less than I understand anyone else.
This is an interesting bit. I've never understood this concept as I don't understand autistic people any more or less than I understand anyone else.
Odd post imho, if you do not support ND concepts ? Then what is it about this site,What is it, that has drawn you here ?
Judging by the amount of posts you have made. You might appear to have some understanding of Underdtanding of Aspies who write to this site.? Or am I giving more credit to your writing here than might be appropiate.?.
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Diagnosed hfa
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Thank you , for allowing me this extra understanding We may have had similiar experiences.
in that we both had specific experiences before
Autism was being a diagnosis in the USA..prior it all came under the heading of Mental retardation . From what I can recall. Medium to lower functioning Mongoloids and Aspies ,etc. were grouped together regardless of abilities.
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ASPartOfMe
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Age: 68
Gender: Male
Posts: 39,637
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This is an interesting bit. I've never understood this concept as I don't understand autistic people any more or less than I understand anyone else.
That line by the author was an extreme oversimplification. In general be it Neurotypical or Autistic people who have common experiences tend to bond over them but that is no guarantee.
As the saying goes. “If you have met one person with autism, you have met one person with autism.”
_________________
“Self Acceptance is a process not a performance”
“You are autistic enough. And you always have been”
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
The point is not to "keep autistic people apart from non-autistic," but to make friends where we can.
After all, most autistic people don't have a superabundance of NT's lining up to become our friends.
Nor, as far as I am aware, are very many people claiming that we are pure angels who must avoid polluting ourselves by associating with NT's. If anyone were to say the latter, that would indeed be "cult-like" behavior.
The point is simply that, other factors being equal, it is easier to bond with people who have had similar experiences and who have compatible expectations.
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- Autistic in NYC - Resources and new ideas for the autistic adult community in the New York City metro area.
- Autistic peer-led groups (via text-based chat, currently) led or facilitated by members of the Autistic Peer Leadership Group.
This is something that has had a huge effect on me throughout my life. I wouldn't go as far as saying my communication difficulties aren't a deficit, just that most of the problems they have caused for me are from NTs misreading my non-verbal communication differences. I would never make the wild claim that autistic people understand each other just fine, just that the communication problems are usually reduced when you know the person you are talking to is autistic and understand what that means. I think that having facilitated social groups of autistic kids is a great idea to help them develop social skills. Kids taught to mimic NTs using ABA may seem more acceptable to some adults but will still may be rejected by their NT peers who won't be fooled by their "acting like NTs". I think that educating NTs about autism can help reduce the communication gap somewhat, and no we don't think we can "flip the burden of adaptation", just meet in the middle.
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ND: 123/200, NT: 93/200, Aspie/NT results, AQ: 34
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