A few hours after the Autistic Self Advocacy Network
wrote to the Autism Society of America York Chapter (ASA York) about a billboard that dangerously compared autism to a national kidnapping emergency and uses puzzle piece symbolism [not being a whole person], they received a response saying that the billboard would be taken down.
Excerpt of the letter ASAN sent to ASA-York:
As we, Autistic adults and youth ourselves, attempt to assert our voices in the national conversation about us, we find ourselves characterized by those who often speak on our behalf as burdens on society, as not fully present within our own bodies and as individuals devoid of the full measure of personhood and humanity. Such mischaracterization threatens our efforts to be included in our homes, our schools, our communities and our collective society. By making the autism message one of fear, stigma and hostage-taking rather than one of civil rights, inclusion and support for all, our desire to be recognized as full and equal citizens in our communities is hurt.
Picture of the billboard:

Reads: If 1 in 150 American were kidnapped, we'd have a national emergency. We do. Autism.
Last year it took 21 disability organizations campaigning together via blogs, mainstream media, and thousands of phone calls and letters to have similar billboards taken down. In a time where disabled people are the last to be seen as experts of their own lives and where the public understanding of autism is strongly shaped by those with eugenic “cure”- oriented perspective (e.g. Autism Speaks, Jenny McCarthy), let’s celebrate self-determination being recognized and autistic self advocates being heard!
The response to ASAN from ASA-York President Amy Wallace:
Dear Friends in the Autism Community,
Regretfully it has been brought to the attention of the Autism Society of America – York Chapter – that our recent billboard campaign has caused undesirable confusion within the community. The intention of the billboard campaign was aimed at generating awareness to the general public and was in no way created to cause a malicious stir within the community. As a parent of a severely affected nine year old with Autism I can truly understand your passion regarding advocacy and respect for our children.
We thank you for your thoughts and concerns. I apologize for the misunderstanding and want you to know we will promptly remove the billboard posting.
Respectfully yours,
Amy Wallace
To email Amy and thank the ASA York chapter for taking the billboard down, email her at amywallace3@gmail.com
Big ups to ASAN and autistic independent media makers (Joe, Abfh, Nicocoer) who made this happen!
Posted by cripchick at 5:31 pm on August 16th, 2009.
Categories: activism, announcements, disability, links, ransom notes.
from wood’s rules:
My clients frequently express hatred of and disgust toward their bodies. Interestingly, however, more of them express shame that they are not able to work than over the perceived inferiority of their bodies. The men aren’t macho enough if they have disabilities, the women not sexy enough. But in a materialist society, apparently, the ultimate failure of the disabled is that we don’t make money.
Never mind that discrimination is responsible for the largest portion of the wage-differential between, say, able-bodied white guys at the top and disabled women of color at the bottom–it still feels to us like some kind of character failing on our parts. Never mind that materialism is a rotten way to value people–we still feel like losers.
Posted by cripchick at 6:44 pm on July 29th, 2009.
Categories: ableism, disability, links.
update (5/16): to see the newsweek article mentioned below, click here. it will also be in the 5/25 issue (hitting newstands on monday). to thank newsweek for the coverage, please write to editors at letters@newsweek.com. thanks!
abfh and i are on the same wavelength! i recently made a donation to the autistic self advocacy network as a way to fight the hate and death threats those involved with ASAN are receiving. hope you will consider doing this as well. you can find out more about this at abfh’s place and donate through the change.org website. below is a letter i wrote in regards to newsweek’s upcoming coverage of neurodiversity and the response to it.
-cripchick
Dear Newsweek,
As someone that witnesses the struggle of disabled people fighting to have their voices heard every day, I want to commend you on your recent interview with Ari Ne’eman, president of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network. I hope you will move forward with the pending article as the mainstream media continues to miss the struggle of this rising civil rights movement in their overwhelming coverage of autism issues.
History continues to illustrate that every social movement first begins when a group of people realizes both the power of their own agency and the birthright of self-determination that they carry as human beings. Once this realization has manifested, people move towards freedom with an urgency that seems unstoppable.
Unfortunately, history has also illustrated that when a group of people begins to believe in their own power, other people will attempt to silence their voices by claiming that these people are unable to know their own experience, let alone speak in their best interest. We saw this with first wave feminists and the resistance they faced from government, fathers, and husbands when they began to believe that they could speak for themselves. We also see this with other struggles, such as those of people of color, workers, and others who are still fighting for self-determination.
You may have seen a blog post titled “Ask Newsweek to Kill Ari Ne’eman” from John Best, a blogger who also writes that Ne’eman should be “put to death” and calls autistic self advocates “psychopaths”. As a leader of an organization that promotes autistic people’s right to self-determination, Ne’eman has received death threats from people claiming that he is not a “real” autistic and that autistic self advocates are so ignorant that they could not possibly ever understand the breadth of experiences that make up their community. There are other bloggers, such as Jake Crosby at Age of Autism, who, among other inaccuracies, say that Ne’eman and other advocates of neurodiversity deny autism as a disability* and despite scientific evidence that says autism is not vaccine-related, continue link to radical fringe groups on their sidebar.
Sadly (and quite outrageously), these inaccuracies are often what cloud mainstream media’s coverage of autism issues and the community rarely gets to hear from self-advocates. As a Newsweek subscriber, I’d rather read about the important work advocates of neurodiversity are doing, such as last year’s victory against the Ransom Notes campaign, advocacy against aversives and school abuse, or work promoting the right to receive services in the community. I hope you will remember ways that other social movements have been denied ownership of their own experience and continue publishing pieces like the one that is to come out soon.
Respectfully,
cripchick
*For those that say Ne’eman and others do not recognize autism as a disability, here is a link to a keynote Ne’eman recently gave at National Federation of the Blind’s Jacobus tenBroek Disability Law Symposium.
DONATE TO ASAN IN HONOR OF TROLLS HERE.
Posted by cripchick at 9:20 pm on May 8th, 2009.
Categories: ableism, disability, links.