I think aspies and others should have more words and expressions which could be good arguments in certain situations especially we meet.
What is a nazi thing to say?
• "Sorry, there you see. It's because he's autistic."
• "I think it is wrong that aspies talk for autists. I've heard that people with autism have a lack of theory of mind, which I think affects their ability to understand another's situation. How could people with lack of theory of mind talk for other people?"
• "You're stupid, I've read that people with autism have a lack of imagination."
That's why it is a nazi thing to say!
"That's such a fascist thing to say!" then.
I don't know what nazi means, but I do know that fasci means "company".
What is a nazi thing to say?
"Heil Hitler"?
Not sure what Nazis are supposed to have to do with any of the suggestions you made.
"We are the master race" or "we are superior to NTs because of our high IQs".
What is a nazi thing to say?
"Heil Hitler"?
Not sure what Nazis are supposed to have to do with any of the suggestions you made.
I think there should be a word for such comments as I suggested, which it's meaning is "in the word".
Just a short remark: Hans Asperger was a Nazi !
Was he?
He was a card carrying member of the NSDAP? I doubt it although I've read rumors that he may have been a soldier deployed to the Ukraine.
Yes he was .... or, let me say it this way: that's how some his biographies* introduce him.
I always thought the only reference to the Nazi Party was that he worked in Nazi Austria.
Any links to these biographies?
"We are the master race" or "we are superior to NTs because of our high IQs".
I don't have a high IQ. What am I to believe?
I think that comment was meant to be an example of a "Nazi" thing to say about AS. That doesn't make it the truth.
I meant Aspies can be rigid in the sense that their social functioning often stays within a certain "mode," without too much deviation of expression--hence the stereotype that a lot of us wear a neutral/serious expression a lot of the time (this is true of me.) This will not be true for all Aspies, of course, it is why I said "stereotype."
In my experience I have noticed most NTs use a wide range of expression, both nonverbal facial expression and with words, easily shifting from one emotion/thought to the next. You can't often tell how they are going to express themselves, they shift from one kind of expression to another so quickly, it's tough for Aspies to predict.
I agree with the first part but am not sure what the second is supposed to have to do with rigidity. (Or do you mean physical, as in stiffness?)
I wonder if I have met any normal people by your definition...
Using the google translater and I find that the top article talks about:
"[asuperuga] syndrome "