What is Autism?

I walk around assuming I know what autism is, but whenever the topic arises, I am hard-pressed to define it. I found this video to be helpful: Peter Boghossian inverviewing Jill Escher:

I transcribed part of the interview:

PB:

First of all, who are you? How did you get into it? . . .

JE:

Sure. Well, thanks so much for having me and and for addressing this really important subject that even your son knows something about. So I'm Jill Escher. I wear a bunch of hats in the autism world. Most importantly, I'm the mother to two children with severe non verbal autism. Johnny's now 25 and Sophie is 18. I have another son as well, who's 27 but he's not diagnosed with autism. And over the years, I've become increasingly involved in the autism community on many, many levels. Right now, I serve as president of the National Council on severe autism, which, as the name implies, is a national advocacy group. I been president of Autism Society San Francisco Bay Area, and I'm still on that board, and I'm I run a philanthropy called Escher fund for autism that funds and promotes autism research, especially in the realm of causation and some other things too. But that's enough.

PB

What is it?

JE

Maybe we'll start there and then go into prevalence. What autism is is a very sticky, tricky question, but generally, what it refers to is a bunch of different characteristics and traits that kind of hang together in a kind of syndrome, like way, but it's not a syndrome, so it's classically defined in the DSM five as really two co occurring traits. One is abnormal social communication and the other is repetitive behaviors. And those can occur in many ways and to many different degrees, which is why we see all this heterogeneity. But in addition to what you see in the DSM V, there are a lot of other things that tend to cluster, you know, with autism. For example, sensory sensitivity. Like, you know, my kids are constantly plugging their ears. I have to put headphones on them. For example, anxiety, and my son suffers a ton of anxiety, which can become incredibly explosive. Other things such as difficulty learning, in flexibility in behaviors, lack of abstract thought is really another kind of foundational part of autism. So it's really a lot of different things, and they tend to hang together. And for lack of having a better diagnosis. Clinicians slap autism on a bunch of different presentations, clinical presentations that have these combined to one degree or another and with different traits.

PB

So you've you've written that the prevalence of autism is increasing, and so I was wondering if it's possible the diagnostic criteria changing or expanding, rather than the rates of autism increasing, right?

JE

So that seems to be one of the most fundamental debates in autism. Are the rates truly increasing of this psychopathology, of this neurodevelopmental disorder, or are we just changing the diagnostic criteria to encompass a greater number of children? And I strongly argue that it is the former that we are actually seeing a very dramatic, very obvious increase in neurodevelopmental pathology among children in the US,

PB

just, yeah, I was just gonna say cross culturally, or

JE

In the industrialized countries, that where we've done this epidemiological work, it's very evidence that evident, that this is true, even when we hold the definition constant, right, Even if we're looking at the objectively same criteria for inclusion, we see these dramatic increases. I can give you one example here. I'm in California, and we keep very good data on our developmental disability population. We've done so for decades, really, since the 60s and 70s, because we have a specific legislation that their states don't have. But what we've seen, for example, is an increase in autism in our developmental services system, which only serves the more severe portion of the autism population, from about 3,000 in the mid 1980s to over 180,000 today. Right? And that is obviously increasing at a rate much higher than the general background population increase. When we look at the CDC data again, they're holding the case definition constant and other other federal. Role data, we see an increase from less than 1% 20 years ago to about 3% today. So this is, and I can cite, dozens of studies across from epidemiology to education to social services to other forms of data that we see from, for example, hospital systems, the same exponential curve, even when we're holding the case definition constant. Now that's not to say there isn't also an increase, especially in that very high functioning level that we're including that wasn't included before. I will also say that is true. So I think both are true. But what's so alarming is that even rates of the more profoundly impacting autism has increased,

PB

so that causally, that the reasonable person can infer fact, the inference would have to be that it's environmental,

JE

yes, so I would argue that this raises very important, urgent questions about what might be raising these rates of abnormal neurodevelopment. Because what autism essentially is, I talked about the behaviors and how it manifests, but what it is on the inside is abnormalities and dysregulation of early brain development, starting when the baby is a fetus, mid gestation, when the brain when the neurons are being born and they're growing and they're proliferating and they're migrating and creating the brain and what we've seen in the field of neuroscience is very, very strong evidence that autism, for the most part, there are exceptions, of course, but for the most part, is the result of Abner, abnormal and dysregulated early brain development. So what is causing that? That is the $64 billion question in autism today. . . if we're going to talk about neuroscience, your autism is complex, and they find, you know, different parts of the brain are affected differently in different people. There's not one thing, but there is one. If there is one bottom line, it is in the cerebral cortex, especially with the frontal cortex, they find abnormalities in how the layers of the cortex are formed and how those neurons connect and how those synapses work. Now, I don't know. I mean, we probably don't want to get too deep into neuroscience. This is not a science podcast, but I would start there when we think about what's happening with autism and how it develops early in utero, and how that relates to as I said, you know, there's these dysregulations that could be genetic, but could also have other causes as well.

PB

Now you use the word before, and then I have a few questions that are just pounding out of my brain that I have to discharge, but you use the term before disorder? Yeah, and I know that that is not that must not be without controversy.

JE

So language has been highly controversial in autism, as it has been in other areas of the culture war. So autism has been caught up in the culture war, just like so many other things, and it's been really unfortunate, in my view, because I don't think autism is a culture war question. I think autism is a question of, you know, pathology, you know, of neuropathology, and how we address that scientifically, and how we deal with it in terms of policy. Of course, everybody wants the best for our children with autism. I certainly want the best for my children. I want the best for our community. I literally spend hours every day serving our community to make sure our kids are included to the extent possible, that they get access to the best programs possible, the best therapies possible, can live the best lives possible. I'm on board without 100% what I'm not on board with is this kind of systemic trivialization of autism, which is a what you see in the scientific literature, which you see in the neurodiversity movement, where they're trying to wipe away words like disorder, like risk, like, oh gosh, there's, there's so many of them. We're not allowed to talk about, you the severe behaviors of our children. We're not allowed to talk about the aggression. The property destruction, the self injury, the elopement, you know, the pica, like my daughter does, the ingestion of inedible objects. You know, these things, apparently we're not allowed to talk about because they cause stigma. Well, okay, autism itself is not stigmatizing. That's not stigma comes from something else, other than an essential part of your disorder, right? Stigma comes from, you know, society or individuals, you know, deciding that you are lesser than Well, that's a secondary question, but we're what a lot of the neurodiversity advocates in academia, really entrenched in academia, are trying to do is kind of obliterate the vocabulary of autism, so that we only have these neutral terms left. And those neutral terms do not adequately describe people like my son, my son Johnny, who's 25 and nonverbal, has a functional level of probably an 18 month old, if that, probably less than that, maybe more like a 12 month old. He can't really do anything for himself. He can't dress himself. He can't prepare food, he can't take care of his own hygiene. He can't read, he can't write, he can't talk. He can't use a phone. He can't functionally operate anything he before he was on the right medication.

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The Claim That Vaccines Have Been Carefully Tested

In a recent article, attorney Aaron Siri makes extraordinary claims based on litigation he has handled. An excerpt:

After decades of Dr. Stanley Plotkin and his vaccinologist disciples insisting vaccines are the most well studied products on the planet, they just penned an article admitting precisely the opposite.

They just admitted vaccines are not properly studied—neither pre-licensure nor post-licensure. They admitted, for example, “prelicensure clinical trials have limited sample sizes [and] follow-up durations” and that “there are not resources earmarked for postauthorization safety studies.”

That is an incredible reversal. But let me provide context so nobody is fooled at what they are clearly up to:

For decades, the medical community insisted vaccines are the most thoroughly studied product ever; for example, Dr. Paul Offit said, "I think we should be proud of vaccines as arguably the safest, best tested things we put in our body.”

For decades, parents of vaccine injured children, vaccine injured adults, and other stakeholders contested these claims only to be shunned and attacked by the medical community and health agencies.

In 2018, I had the unprecedented opportunity to depose the architect of our vaccination program and the Godfather of Vaccinology, Dr. Plotkin, and lay bare the evidence that showed what these authors are now finally admitting about the utter lack of vaccine safety trials and studies. See https://thehighwire.com/ark-videos/the-deposition-of-stanley-plotkin/.

After this deposition is made public, Dr. Plotkin goes on a tirade, making demands that FDA add “missing information on safety and efficacy” in vaccine package inserts and that CDC exclude harms from its Vaccine Information Sheets, “lobbying the Gates Foundation to support pro-vaccine organizations,” working to have WHO list vaccine hesitancy as a global threat, lobbying AAP, IDSA and PIDS to “support training of witnesses” to support vaccine safety, etc. See https://icandecide.org/article/dr-stanley-plotkin-the-godfather-of-vaccines-reaction-to-being-questioned/.

The problem is, it doesn't work. It doesn’t work because, at bottom, there are no proper safety studies. So, there is no safety data to add to the FDA package inserts, and hiding harms by removing them from CDC inserts doesn’t make them go away. Parents and other adults don’t simply stop believing what they have seen with their own eyes because CDC, WHO, the Gates Foundations, etc., won’t acknowledge them, or worse, they attack them.

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Why Isn’t the COVID Origin and Cover-Up the Hottest Story Around?

Our government working hard to prove that they don't give a shit about us. Revelations by Rand Paul. Corporate media, fascinated by the COVID pandemic, avoids this this story like the plague.

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Real History of COVID and Anthony Fauci’s “History” of COVID

We now know more than ever about the origin of COVID, but you wouldn't know this if you stick with the corporate news, the biggest cheerleaders for Anthony Fauci. Here's a summary of the testimony of Stephen Quay from the recent Senat Homeland Security Committee's hearing on the "ORIGINS OF COVID-19: AN EXAMINATION OF AVAILABLE EVIDENCE."

Stephen Quay (M.D., PH.D.) is former Faculty at Stanford University School of Medicine). As John Leake summarizes Quay's testimony, "He presented highly persuasive arguments that SARS-COV-2 was the creation of American scientists working with partners at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV)."

First, the virus was spreading in Wuhan in the early fall of 2019, two to four months before the first case in the Hunan Seafood Market. This is supported by fourteen observations or evidence. This should be sufficient to dismiss the Hunan Market as the source of the outbreak.

Second, I look at the data from the market, including human infections, animal samples, and environmental specimens. This involves looking at eight observations or evidence. None of these data are consistent with an infected animal passing SARS2 to a human at the market.

Third, documented events at or related to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, or WIV, beginning in March 2019, are consistent with the expected activities of a virology lab in which a laboratory acquired infection has occurred. I will go through that timeline.

Fourth, the evidence that is found in a natural zoonosis with respect to the animal host, the virus, and the human population in the vicinity of the outbreak is missing for the COVID pandemic. Each of these three components of a zoonosis will be examined separately and each will be found wanting.

Fifth, the genome of SARS-CoV-2 has seven features that would be expected to be found in a virus constructed in a laboratory and which are not found in viruses from nature. The statistical probability of finding each feature in nature can be determined and the combined probability that SARS2 came from nature is less than one in 1.2 billion. These same features were described in a grant application submitted to DARPA in 2018 by scientists from the WIV, together with US collaborators.

Sixth and final, the earliest genomes of SARS2 were unstable and could not have come from an animal host without the stabilizing mutation, the so-called D614G change, that appeared in human viruses beginning January 1st, 2020. The consequence of this is that I can conclude that the first human infection occurred soon after the insertion of the furin cleavage site in the laboratory and before extensive animal testing. Otherwise, the first human cases would have had this stabilizing mutation. It also means that the unstable version of SARS2 could not have been circulating in animals, otherwise it would have acquired the stabilizing mutation. If any virologist can find an animal host that can transmit the unstable ancestral SARS2 five or more times without obtaining the stabilizing mutation, they have found a hypothetical candidate for a spillover host. All testing to date of potential hosts has failed this test.

Natural spillovers have multiple markets. SARS-CoV-1 , which emerged in China in 2002, and was found in at least 11 markets. 192 animals showed a 100% infection rate for SARS-CoV-1. This starkly contrasts with 457 animals that were tested for SARS-CoV-2, with zero found to be infected.

Leake also offers further summary and analyis regarding the hearing, including the testimony of Professor Richard Ebright (PH.D. Rutgers University):

The “smoking gun” evidence for a lab origin of COVID-19, came from a separate EcoHealth proposal to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)—which deemed it too dangerous—presenting the exact feature of a furin cleavage site in the virus.

SARS-CoV-2 is the only one of more than 800 known SARS viruses that possess a furin cleavage site.

All the while, Anthony Fauci is making the rounds again, pushing the natural zoonosis (zoenetic, non-lab) origin. In fact, he is doubling down on his claims that COVID spontaneously emerged out in the wild. Why? Brett Weinstein explains:

Brett Weinstein:

Fauci has to keep the ridiculous “natural origin” idea alive for 2 reasons:

1. If SARS-CoV2 came from the lab, he can’t hide the harms with accounting tricks—ALL the harms of Covid and our response belong to him.

2. His legacy and kingdom depend on irrational fears of zoonosis.

 

Continue ReadingReal History of COVID and Anthony Fauci’s “History” of COVID