09-12-2007, 06:49 PM
While I got the question popping into me:
"How will the situation be for autistics in the future?"
I figured that a more important question would be:
"How should the situation be for autistics in the future?"
How should people react when an article presents autistic people in an unnecessary bad way we so often see in the media today, quoting a recently published article:
"How will the situation be for autistics in the future?"
I figured that a more important question would be:
"How should the situation be for autistics in the future?"
How should people react when an article presents autistic people in an unnecessary bad way we so often see in the media today, quoting a recently published article:
The Times Wrote:
but it prompted thousands of parents to agonise over the cruel condition that seems to leave children walled off in a social and emotional world of their own, apparently beyond their love.
Will people know more about autism and maybe understand and accept behaviors common among autistics?
How should the ideal approach of "The Problem" be for parents who learn their children are autistic?
Should there be better ways for autistic people to get to know other autistics and other people they might relate to?