Category Archives: Race

Conflicts

Confession: I stink at community conflicts. For one thing, I overwhelm easy. Not that this keeps me from raising hell – if anything, I’ll go right for the oppression vector and start (metaphorically) swinging at it, even if it’s burning me out. I tend to wind up in polarized positions — I’m good with that, but it also means that the stakes are higher.

Autistic organizing feels different to me than anything I’ve been a part of politically, though. The closest thing I can think of is the trans community, but even that’s a coalitional effort, and while all of us are marginalized (seriously so), some of us are more oppressed than others, in fairly direct ways. The social dynamic seems to map to being completely fucked, a pretty big apologist, or worse – and from there, the usual range of oppression dynamics apply. Women are more disadvantaged than men, people of color are more disadvantaged than white people, poor and working class people (which is most of us) are more disadvantaged than wealthy people. My running “not a joke” joke about not being sure if it’s the 1950s or the 1590s seems more and more apt, the more I learn. There’s a lot of shit going on against us that’s horrible enough that I don’t even know to what degree I should put it on blast; if anything, the message I get back is “That’s so completely horrible, I don’t even know how to process it”. I didn’t, and I’ve been through some heavy shit. So it’s no surprise that things can wind up very, very polarized.

It’s not like other situations I’ve been in, where I was the one pointing out the inconvenient truths that nobody in some group or collective house or affinity group or whatever didn’t want to address — this is like the truths are right there on the table, in some sort of “Sauron? (Y/N)” sort of way. “Well, let’s try to be reasonable and hear all sides” doesn’t carry much weight, nor should it.

The self-check I’m doing here is that I tend to be a polarizing force in a lot of situation; it’s likely part of my neurology, as well as my background. Which, in a room full of people with similar neurologies (and frequently similar tendencies towards very strong views and tendencies to be all in, do or die as mine), could get…contentious. I’m down for it, though. ✊🏽

There are problems here that I’d love nothing more than to avoid, but I’m pushing myself to stay aware and ready about. There’s no magic potion that makes everybody who’s autistic (or another other category of marginalization and oppression) free of oppressor behavior, nor is there any spell that can make people automagically not have a social impairment.

That said, I think that trying to address social conflicts with more social rules, when someone is “impaired” in a way that affects that, is some sort of sinkhole. Saying “grow a pair” (regardless of gender) isn’t always going to work. There’s approaches that address this, they’re getting underutilized. Presuming a workable level of good faith (as in: I’d actually like to change, but I don’t know how), telling someone why their behavior is harmful, and how that can affect people as a result, works. We learn social situations, we don’t abstract them.

People can use disability to excuse oppressive behaviors as well, though. The current example I’m referring back to these days is “Brooklyn Becky“, who turned out to be alt-right, apparently.

That’s a pretty clear line, even if someone “doesn’t get the rules”. “Anybody who isn’t alt-right: come get your friend and talk some sense to them in a way that they’ll get”. Or just ignore them, because that’s crossing a line that I’m not gonna put up with, nor should anybody else, in my opinion.

The classic “Oh, that’s what that’s about! I didn’t understand how that works. Thank you.” learning pattern is a real thing — it’s just that it’s not *always* true. White people are notorious for playing “I don’t have a problem, you have a problem” games with people of color — and if that doesn’t work, they’ll start making up problems to try to force people into silence. This is far from something that’s unique to the disability rights community, I’ve seen white people in a variety of activist communities do it for years. As much as I’d like there to be an easy solution to this, I think we’re dealing with the same dynamics that exist in the society at large. It’s not pleasant to see allistic social norms, racist social norms, sexist social norms, even ableist social norms being acted upon, but what I keep reminding myself is that it’s not surprising, either — it just needs to be addressed, just as it does in any liberation movement. That’s what I’m here to fight for — the right for *all* of us to live our lives in ways that we want, free of oppression.

That Time I Got Jumped

TW: extreme violence, attempted murder, transphobia

I got jumped in high school. I could have died.

Me, once I broke free of the stranglehold: “Why did you do that?”

Him: “Because you’re different.”

Me: “Different? What kind of different?”

His friend, who watched the whole thing and did nothing: “Come on, let’s go. No, let’s *go*.”

They ran off.

Going back through it, “you’re different” wasn’t just over being trans (and starting to wear more femme clothing to school, and growing my hair out, in order to start trying to come out), or being mixed (although i got attacked for that as well, all the time), but because I didn’t pick up on the “…what are you doing” socially layered cues that were a sort of “danger: cease autism” warning against defying the norms, as well.

I now strongly suspect that not reading the warning cues (someone asked me “what’s this about”, and i didn’t get the “concerned, but oh well” tone and expression they had, at all), was what pushed things over the edge into my being attacked. Teenagers talk. What about? They didn’t tell me — I’m sure they assumed I’d figure it out on my own, or if not, that it was on me.

If I had known how to read the body language and facial expression of the person who tried to warn me, I’d have been like “oh shit, this is high school, and I’m…something they don’t like, obviously, they keep assaulting me, got it” and either closeted myself until I could get free, or figured out a means of resistance with my high school “beyond the outcasts” social cluster. ✊🏽 (Note: if I grew up when teaching “life skills” was more common, I doubt it would’ve helped much. My assumption is that doesn’t work for the same reasons that sex ed in the U.S. frequently doesn’t work, either. Labeling a curriculum a particular way doesn’t mean that it’s addressing the needs that the label infers.)

As it was, I was perplexed. I thought to myself, “Are you unhappy about the way i’m presenting? You don’t seem angry, so…well hunh, no idea. I guess you were just curious. Oh well.”

Shortly after that, I got jumped. I took the proficiency exam, split that gd place and never looked back. 💃🏽

The Allistic Gaze

TW: allistic violence, conformity, ABA, murder

I don’t know if anybody has written about this in these exact terms, but it’s fairly unmistakable — it happens when you don’t adhere to allistic social norms, in terms of eye contact, speech or social interaction. It’s the “wtf is wrong with you” look.

The worst version of it is someone institutionalizing an autistic person, committing acts of violence (including ABA) against them, or murdering them outright.

The more common versions are looking at you sideways, verbally questioning, correcting, or patronizing you, or jaw-dropping silence followed by deflecting/changing the topic/making a “joke” out of things.

It’s a form of compliance insistence. It’s triggering. It leads to us being rejected from work positions (or fired from them), failed relationships (with allistics), or in some cases, arrested, assaulted or worse.

I wish I could just say “come on, try harder” and have that be enough, but I see the same thing happen from white people towards people of color, men towards women, and against disabled people in general.

As always, we need to create our own media, and act collectively in our own self-interest. It’s up to us, not them. It should be better, but as with so many movement-level shifts in society (let alone liberatory and transformational ones) it’s not going to come through mere awareness. It’s up to us to make it happen.