Disaster Many in the autism community say RFK Jr. is pushing harmful and regressive rhetoric about who they are


By Deidre McPhillips, CNN
Sat April 19, 2025

Alison Singer has a few people she’d like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to meet.

Singer’s brother and daughter are two of the millions living with autism in the United States, and part of a much larger community that has very publicly expressed feeling hurt and disrespected by the US Health and Human Services secretary’s description of who they are and how they live.

“He clearly doesn’t understand either one of them,” said Singer, the president of the Autism Science Foundation.

Singer’s daughter lives and works on a farm where she takes care of animals and grows and sells crops, and her brother lives in group home where he delivers meals on wheels to homebound senior citizens, she said. They’re both loving individuals who are active members of the community and family, she said.

But Kennedy “made it sound like these were people whose lives were worthless, when that couldn’t be further from the case,” Singer said.

At his first news conference as head of HHS, Kennedy said this week that the rising rate of autism in the country is an “individual tragedy” and “catastrophic for our country.”

A new report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that autism rates in 8-year-olds in the US rose from 1 in 36 in 2020 to 1 in 31 in 2022. The increase continues a long-term trend that experts have largely attributed to better understanding of and screening for the condition.

But Kennedy has rejected that concept, instead pushing the idea that autism is “preventable” and part of a “chronic disease epidemic” that “destroys” children and families.

“These are kids who will never pay taxes. They’ll never hold a job. They’ll never play baseball. They’ll never write a poem. They’ll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted,” Kennedy said Wednesday.

People with autism, their families and advocates were quick to refute Kennedy’s comments.

Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine, is a vaccine researcher who has an adult daughter with autism whom he wrote a book about.

“My adult daughter Rachel, works everyday, pays taxes, has friends, loves going to the movies, and listens to lousy (IMO) music. She has a meaningful and thoughtful life,” he wrote in a social media post on Thursday. “Our U.S. Dept of HHS has lost all of its humanity, compassion, and intellectual curiosity.”

Many advocates and researchers alike say that Kennedy’s narrow description of autism – his characterization of both the science and the experience of what living with it can be like – is reductive and harmful.

Kennedy’s rhetoric sets the US back at least a decade to a time rife with damaging stigma around autism that the community has fought hard to change, said Zoe Gross, director of advocacy at the Autistic Self Advocacy Network – one of a group of leading autism advocacy organizations that released a joint statement on Thursday about these concerns.

“He set up this litmus test of what it is to be a person and have a valuable life,” said Gross, who is autistic. “It’s not acceptable to talk that way anymore because of the work that we’ve done.”

In a social media post on Friday, leadership from technology company Aspiritech championed dozens of people on the team – more than 90% of whom have autism, they say – and highlighted ways that their tax-paying employees directly contradict the picture Kennedy painted of autism.

“We’d like you to meet 100 people who will help dispel the many misconceptions about autistic people that seem to be driving a false narrative,” the company wrote, inviting Kennedy to visit its offices in Chicago. “We’d like to talk to you about how the idea of a cure feels like you don’t want autistic people to exist. Autism is a birth-to-death condition, and many diagnosed autistic people view it as a critical piece of their identity.”

Autism spectrum disorder, or ASD, refers to a broad range of neurodevelopmental conditions characterized by challenges with communication skills and social skills. People with autism “may behave, communicate, interact, and learn in ways that are different from most other people,” according to the CDC, and “the abilities of people with ASD can vary significantly.”

Dr. Lisa Settles, director of Tulane University’s Center for Autism and Related Disorders, has spent more than 20 years in autism research and worked with thousands of patients. None of her patients have been exactly alike, but all of them have value, she said.

“To me, it’s very obvious that [Kennedy] doesn’t know a lot about the diagnosis,” she said. “He’s pulling things together into a theory that isn’t based in any ounce of science, and it’s really frustrating to those of us who are professionals.”

Kennedy later went on Fox News to “set the record straight.” He doubled down on the limitations that he says people with autism have, but clarified that he was specifically talking about the 1 in 4 people with autism who have “severe autism.”

A CDC report from 2023 shows that about 27% of 8-year-olds with autism were considered to have “profound autism,” defined as children who were nonverbal, were minimally verbal or had an intelligence quotient (IQ) less than 50. That report analyzed data from 2000 to 2016.

The latest CDC report did not include an analysis using this criteria. But other data on the cognitive level of children with autism contradicts Kennedy’s claim that “most cases now are severe,” or that these cases are driving the rise in prevalence. CDC data from 2022 shows that about 40% of 8-year-olds with autism had an IQ of 70 or less, up less than 2 percentage points from 2020 when about 38% did.

Early diagnosis of autism is easiest in children who have greater support needs, experts say.

“We see them because they’re not meeting their developmental milestones,” Settles said. “They have speech delay or total lack of speech, so those are going to be the kiddos that are picked up diagnostically first.”

But some kids with autism who have lower support needs might continue to meet developmental milestones until age 8 or later, and those cases would be missed in the data that CDC is analyzing, she said.

Advocacy groups over the years have worked to raise awareness to help parents and others understand what their child might be experiencing and seek out a diagnosis.

“If the more severe cases are going to be the ones that are brought to your attention earlier, then it may look like the severe cases are increasing. But if you look overall, it’s really that we diagnose just as many kids with a level one as we do a level three,” Settles said.

And Kennedy’s use of outdated terminology like “severe” is also not in line with current science and can have damaging negative connotations, she said.

“Clinically and professionally, we don’t use the word severe,” Settles said. “It’s really short-changing the individuals with autism, it’s short-changing the families, and it’s hurtful.”

Kennedy has launched a “massive testing and research effort” at HHS to determine the cause of the “autism epidemic,” promising some answers as early as September. There are differing opinions in the autism community about the importance of searching for a cause when limited resources may be better spent understanding how to build support for people living with autism. But there’s broad agreement that Kennedy’s laser focus on environmental toxins is problematic, especially if he continues question science that has already proven that vaccines do not cause autism.

“This was the most exciting time in research. Things that we thought five years ago sounded like science fiction were actually happening,” Singer said. “All that is now under threat to be derailed in favor of more research on vaccines.”

And advocates emphasize that even if most people with autism can do the things that Kennedy said they can’t, those who may need more support deserve more respect.

“If someone can’t do any of those things because of their disability, it doesn’t mean they can’t have a good life,” Gross said. “They deserve better than being a rhetorical prop.”
 
I don't think RFK is correct that the more severe types are driving up diagnosis. At least in Australia, a significant driver is eligibility for NDIS (support payments for disabilities). I think the stat is now 1 in 7 boys are on some sort of NDIS payment.

Every 'autism is a superpower' activist I encounter is female. I am both female and ASD but have no issue with research into autism. The issue is that most treatment for autism is about training people to adapt to normal social behaviours which they will frame as requiring 'masking' and denial of one's true self. They would rather a child live an 'authentic life' with no friends or relationships than learn to control stimming or make eye contact. It's a harmful ideology that has lead to allowing kids to identify as the opposite sex, or simply not come to school if they feel overwhelmed. It is short term comfort prioritised over long term well being.
 
Unfortunately I know exactly why the left wing spergs are ass-mad about it. This is the same thing as troons (some im sure actually are troons) crying about being "erased". If old busted-voicebox Bobby here manages to cure spergery, they will then no longer be special or victims. Because they're almost all white, the SJW machine will turn on them in a nanosecond. They would instantly become the enemy of their own ideology, and their psyche cant take it.

As for me on the other hand, if I could fix my own spergery, I would. I would like to be able to be normal. Being a social cripple sucks balls. I hate it. Pretending to not be a socially defective freak is exhaustuing work. By all means, cure me. Please.
Most social justice fags hate actual autists. If you're blunt in your wording and don't pretend to be the happy flapping type, they will throw you out just as soon as they would a bonafide racist. They are clout-chasers first and foremost, and they dislike anyone who doesn't conform to their idea of progressivism.
 
I've known several men and women around my age that are aspies or high functioning autists. They struggle more than the average person. Some have sensory issues that impair everyday life. Few of them have good paying or full-time employment. All have problems making or maintaining friendships and relationships. They all wish that they didn't have autism or that they were less autistic.

I'm not convinced it's entirely genetic. If cases keep increasing, that tells me there's something in the environment that's causing it in otherwise healthy children.
 
We've got a bonafide autist in my family. Dude is 6'3, weighs 350 pounds, and spends all day every day watching speed racer and playing with hot wheels. You cannot have a conversation with him. He is completely nonverbal and will need to be taken care of the rest of his entire life. He gets physically violent when he has a meltdown too and needs to be restrained. Autism like that is just a curse on the entire family and it sounds harsh but he really shouldn't be alive.
 
Autism is the only fucking disorder/disease that has provoked a "pride" movement.

What in the fuck is "prideful" about having a shittier lower quality of life? Where's Schizophrenia Pride? Leukemia Pride? Sickle Cell Pride?

I hope they identify what causes it and put an end to it. This is coming from someone who fucking deals with this bullshit constantly and it's fucked up my life chances big time.
 
keyboards fucked st!ll, saar eye am too taered to copy/paste every fuck!ng I

The issue is that most treatment for autism is about training people to adapt to normal social behaviours which they will frame as requiring 'masking' and denial of one's true self.
Fuck!ng hate the "mask!ng" rhetor!c sh!t, epec!ally when !t's always people that are clearly fak!ng sh!t and !m!tat!ng early tells for aut!sm !n small ch!ldren but as people aged l!ke 16-40 because th!s sh!t l!ke everyth!ng !n the eternal current years mach!ne spawned fromt he ensh!tt!f!cat!on of tumblr and the subvers!on of OWS over a decade back now. "woah you learned soc!al th!ngs you wouldn't have p!ckedup on otherw!se due to how your bra!n development went? No you shouldjust be completey useless and record yourself flapp!ng your arms l!ke a small ch!ld!" HELL!SH.

What in the fuck is "prideful" about having a shittier lower quality of life? Where's Schizophrenia Pride? Leukemia Pride? Sickle Cell Pride?
Those are all a lot lower qual!ty of l!fe than "needs to be taught some soc!al cue stuff other people may noot!ce normally". Aut!sts are pretty good at pattern recogn!t!on otherw!se though wh!ch means !f they aren't ch!mp level t!sm they can bas!cally m!t!gate sh!t by noot!c!ng cause and effect and gradually ga!n an understand!ng of stuff. !t's not called a "cure" because the bra!n st!ll developed a b!t d!fferently but !t's a pretty permanent !mprovement unless you get bra!n damage or someth!ng.
 
We’d like you to meet 100 people who will help dispel the many misconceptions about autistic people that seem to be driving a false narrative,” the company wrote, inviting Kennedy to visit its offices in Chicago. “We’d like to talk to you about how the idea of a cure feels like you don’t want autistic people to exist. Autism is a birth-to-death condition, and many diagnosed autistic people view it as a critical piece of their identity.”
"We would like you to visit our social justice Potemkin village before you give us more grant money in perpetuity rather than fund research to identify and possibly prevent the disease."

Activists are ghouls.
 
Im a sperg and I see nothing wrong with RFK finding out the cause and a possible treatment for the tism. Its frustrating as it is to live with sensory issues, so it would be a godsend to live life with a higher quality. These autism activists just want to keep people stuck in a hard life.
 
"We would like you to visit our social justice Potemkin village before you give us more grant money in perpetuity rather than fund research to identify and possibly prevent the disease."

Activists are ghouls.
Im a sperg and I see nothing wrong with RFK finding out the cause and a possible treatment for the tism. Its frustrating as it is to live with sensory issues, so it would be a godsend to live life with a higher quality. These autism activists just want to keep people stuck in a hard life.
I want to see the activists suffer.
 
Autism is the only fucking disorder/disease that has provoked a "pride" movement.

What in the fuck is "prideful" about having a shittier lower quality of life?
I’m proud of watching people speed run video games all day while shoving an old Gummi Bears action figure in and out of my rectum!!

AUTISIM STRONG!!!
 
I want to see the activists suffer.
Me too, buddy. Me too.


I see them doing a lot of pearl-clutching about 'how he spoke' of autists, but no actual direct quote. What did he say that has them so offended?
Pretty sure they’re mad about this:
But Kennedy has rejected that concept, instead pushing the idea that autism is “preventable” and part of a “chronic disease epidemic” that “destroys” children and families.

“These are kids who will never pay taxes. They’ll never hold a job. They’ll never play baseball. They’ll never write a poem. They’ll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted,” Kennedy said Wednesday.

The thing they’re REALLY mad about is that the sperg activists base their entire identity around being a sperg, and they see attempts at a cure as attempts to destroy their identity. It’s like if you were to suggest to a tranny that the dysphoria is what should removed not their cocks and balls. This would also be the same reaction if they found a cause for and a cure to homosexuality. This is what they all mean by “erasure”
 
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What really chafes my ass is that the high functioning types are shit out of luck if they want to live a normal life and have a career. The organizations that supposedly help are useless and you are stuck suffering.
What chafes MY ass about it is when you're high functioning but obviously autistic enough to struggle with sensory issues and/or certain information processing, as an adult in any situation. Most people do not have disabilities so their gut instinct isn't to consider that. Their instinct is to assume we're children. And it certainly doesn't help when certain autistic people act like children and refuse to grow up, or when attention-seeking cunts pretend to have autism and steal those scant few resources we have - But you figure that shit out, grow some skin and try even when it hurts. I've struggled with it my whole life, it's not going away and I'm not going to be a a self-hating loser about it.

I honestly think that's where 90% of the victim mindset comes from in the autistic community, that hidden self-loathing that comes with internalizing that. And now they think that they're marginalized simply because some stroked out boomer fuck said something about muh vaccines. Do people with autism get a shit hand by society? fuck yeah. But bitching about other people's opinions of you isn't going to improve your life or change things for the better. Rant aside, I've said my piece.
 
This is why the 'non neurotypical' movement is fucking cancer. Being normal, aka neurotypical, should be the standard. Becoming as close to it as possible should be the goal.

This is also why modern therapy sucks ass.

It's extreme midwittism applied to all schools of education and psychology, the most midwit professions.

I saw multiple professional educators and therapists say that being extremely intellectually advanced in any way is inherently a "spectrum trait" and makes them "non-neurotypical."

It's a term that encompasses both a kid in a vegetative state who will never breathe on his own, and a kid who is doing high school level schoolwork in elementary school. It's the world as seen by midwits. "It's the normals like us, and then everyone else."

When some smart people realize that the model of "typicality" being used here is teachers and psychologists, they happily declare themselves non-typical and then proceed to be the people who talk about what it looks like to not be typical, because they're more verbally talented and charismatic than literal retards.

But my username's namesake would love how schools handle all this shit now. The "autism spectrum" label is slapped equally on a kid with a 60 IQ and a 160 IQ and everyone acts like this is normal and totally the same condition in both kids.
 
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