Friday, January 27, 2017

Awwwwww-tism

Say, there's a GOOD reason why this blog has a WARNING on it.

It has objectionable material.

Like THIS post.

This is another post in which I say: What the FUCK are you assholes thinking? You think that a person with AUTISM is just like anyone else?

You can't have it both ways. You either understand that NOT EVERYONE WITH AUTISM is "just like everybody else" or you ACCEPT THE CONSEQUENCES.

DEATH.

Death for a few dozen innocent children in Connecticut because an Autistic monster gunned them all down with Mommy's assault rifle.

Death for THIS unfortunate kid. Que lastima. Que fuckin' lastima.

Time for the parents to SUE THE SCHOOL!

Si! SUE THS SCHOOL, after crying on GOFUNDME for money to squeeze the water out of him and bury him.

JESUS.

That's pronounced HAY-SOOOOOOOOOOS.

This kid would be alive if his parents and the rest of the coddling kooks were willing to fess up and admit: THIS IS NOT A NORMAL KID.

A "special needs" kid has SPECIAL NEEDS. You have to watch him.

Did this kid attend regular classes? Was he told he was just like everyone else? Were his teachers told they shouldn't be condescending, or worry when he gave a blank look to them?

Obviously, thanks to the shitty state of reporting (how many reporters can any newspaper or website hire), we don't know for sure what the fuck was going on. But it seems like this kid didn't have the emotions or the sense of reason to know that going off into a pool by himself was dangerous.

We know that Adam Lanza, the kid who killed his schoolmates in Connecticut, was treated like everybody else, and his shitty mother didn't think he was a threat, so she let him play with guns. His father had already said "Enough," and moved out.

It's important that SOME "special needs" kids be allowed to mix with everyone else, usually under supervision. It's also important that kids who are merely "handicapped," like missing a foot or having a stutter or whatever, be treated like everyone else, so that they aren't inhibited, and their idiot classmates learn that NOBODY's perfect.

But it's also important to know when a kid is at risk, and this kid obviously was. Who failed him? Was it the parents in denial? Was it the school system with no budget to monitor every "special needs" kid who might wander off? And was this kid even IN a "special needs" classroom or did his parents insist he was just like everybody else?

The victim is the kid. The cause: not autism, but stupidity.

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