I didn't know that the number of people on the autism spectrum who are unemployed or under employed is as high as 80 to 90 percent. I kept assuming that it was lower because there was this very infamous UA-camr which the autistic community felt angry towards since they felt that he was making the autistic community look bad. There were several different reasons why the autistic community in general felt that that very infamous UA-camr was making autistic people look bad, but one of the reasons is because he was being very lazy. And I felt very puzzled that it seemed like the autistic community kept denying that autism played a factor in his personality since I am someone on the autism spectrum who use to have problems with aggression and understanding what is socially acceptable behavior, and who struggles with employment. It must be because that infamous UA-camr was using autism as an excuse to be socially unacceptable and to be lazy rather than trying to improve himself. If the autistic community wasn't denying that autism played a factor in his personality in the first place, then I would not had started to assume that the number of people on the autism spectrum who struggles with employment is much lower in the first place.
It's not just high here, it's almost as high across the pond. I'm not which UA-camr you're referring to and that's okay. Communities, even ours have there own issues. But tik tok trends like faking disabilities has made it's way in somewhat and we have enough to deal with without fakers hijacking things. I've inquired with some about this and the push to make diagnosis a non-factor. Everyone I've quietly spoken to is very concerned about both issues. I have big ideas I plan on sharing regarding diagnosis and how it's done. If I had more time I'd roll it out with my startup but I'm too swamped with work right now and trying to keep myself healthy.
So glad you did! 😊💛
Me too!!
Very thoughtful video. I am confident your business will flourish. :)
I appreciate your kind words and that you took the time to watch.
I didn't know that the number of people on the autism spectrum who are unemployed or under employed is as high as 80 to 90 percent. I kept assuming that it was lower because there was this very infamous UA-camr which the autistic community felt angry towards since they felt that he was making the autistic community look bad. There were several different reasons why the autistic community in general felt that that very infamous UA-camr was making autistic people look bad, but one of the reasons is because he was being very lazy. And I felt very puzzled that it seemed like the autistic community kept denying that autism played a factor in his personality since I am someone on the autism spectrum who use to have problems with aggression and understanding what is socially acceptable behavior, and who struggles with employment. It must be because that infamous UA-camr was using autism as an excuse to be socially unacceptable and to be lazy rather than trying to improve himself. If the autistic community wasn't denying that autism played a factor in his personality in the first place, then I would not had started to assume that the number of people on the autism spectrum who struggles with employment is much lower in the first place.
It's not just high here, it's almost as high across the pond. I'm not which UA-camr you're referring to and that's okay. Communities, even ours have there own issues. But tik tok trends like faking disabilities has made it's way in somewhat and we have enough to deal with without fakers hijacking things. I've inquired with some about this and the push to make diagnosis a non-factor. Everyone I've quietly spoken to is very concerned about both issues. I have big ideas I plan on sharing regarding diagnosis and how it's done. If I had more time I'd roll it out with my startup but I'm too swamped with work right now and trying to keep myself healthy.
@@logicalameetsworld Chris Chan