Parents trying to cure an autistic child are making a great mistake, they should be celebrating the way he is, because autism is ... well, normal. That is the claim of the neurodiversity movement - we’re all wired different and autism, ADHD, dyslexia and whatnot - they’re all normal. Nothing to worry about if you’re child is sitting in a corner, silently banging his head against the wall for hours.

Neurodiversity - the name says it all, because this movement is nothing but a branch of the greater globalist diversity program trying to alter our society. On the surface, it might even make sense - removing the stigma associated with autism, being more understanding when an autistic child has a public tantrum - I suspect many parents would feel better if society would be more supportive and they wouldn’t have to deal with strangers staring at their ‘weird’ children. But - and that’s a huge but - neurodiversity has a profoundly evil side to it. By claiming that being autistic is just a matter of different brain-wiring and therefore normal, it follows that there’s no one to blame for the sharp rise of autism cases over the past few decades. Especially not Big Pharma, how can you blame vaccines for something that’s totally normal?! Or environmental pollution. Or the tons of crap in our food! Today's children are not sick - they're diverse!

Just as evil as the idea that autistic persons do not need treatment, but ‘support systems’ to live their lives as they are. Because autism is be beautiful - with sly references that Nikola Tesla was probably autistic. Einstein, too, to some degree. We cannot really know which genius of the past was on the spectrum, but there’s a huge difference between high-functioning autism and severe forms of this disease. (Well, neurodiversity does not agree autism is a disease, obviously). It’s very easy to say accept autistic children as they are if were talking about some odd behaviour and minor quirks - on the spectrum, as they call it. However, I think it’s atrocious to tell parents to simply accept their child will spend his life in a world of his own, unable to establish any meaningful human contact. According to neurodiversity advocates: So what the child won’t ever look you in the eye or call you mother? What if they won’t call anyone anything? It’s normal. Rather than try to cure these children, make sure they have an adequate environment where to lead their ‘normal’ lives - rocking back and forth for hours, sorting marbles and socializing with their peers by banging their heads against the wall in sync.



Notice the rainbow LGBT colors. Diversity, right!?

I had no idea such movement even existed until I read an article about a new book on autism - ‘How to end the autism epidemic’by J.B. Handley. The father of an autistic child himself, Handley was shocked to see his book attacked even before it was out not by Big Pharma itself, but by neurodiversity groups which claim to have the best interests of autistic persons in mind. In my opinion, Handley is wrong in making a distinction between the two. The neurodiversity movement is most obviously supported and manipulated by Big Pharma. ‘Sure, autism is normal, just a beautiful example of mother nature making us different, nothing to do with our vaccines’.

Some go as far as calling autism a blessing and a gift, like a certain Steven Silberman who in 2015 won a lot of praise and prizes for his book 'NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity'.

“Whatever autism is, it is not a unique product of modern civilization. It is a strange gift from our deep past passed down through millions of years of evolution”

Your child rocking in a corner is not sick, he’s a genius and a product of human evolution.

The research I did on this topic unearthed a ton of materials promoting the neurodiversity idea, posts on parenting sites, books - like this one, obviously written by someone with only minor autistic traits (if any).



Notice the happy face of autism

They all prey on the fear and confusion a parent with a recently-diagnosed autistic child will feel. Such a parent will obviously go online and try to find information - and there it is neurodiversity saying autism is, in fact, evolution - ‘no need to worry your child is autistic, it’s fine, we’re all different. And above all, don’t try to find what caused it - we tell you it’s just mother nature. Oh, and make sure to vaccinate your other children. Tell you’re friends it’s OK to vaccinate theirs!’

Thanks for reading