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Another Perspective

Playing With Words

Is 1 out of 88 American children really autistic?

(Page 2 of 2)

Why are they called “poor” then?

For the same reason that autism, the national debt and many other things are redefined in completely misleading ways — namely, to justify draining more money from the public in taxes, expanding the government, and allowing politicians to give handouts to people who are expected to vote for their reelection.

If we keep buying it, politicians will keep selling it.

COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

Page:   12

About the Author

Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com. To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (26) |

Appleby| 6.6.12 @ 7:06AM

Plenty of children who are labeled with "Syndromes" are victims of the fact that their parents never had any responsibility for younger siblings and don't know anything about the vast spectrum of normality among chldren. I was foster grandmother to a little boy once whose mother had adopted him and had no experience even babysitting; she read books and labeled him with every kind of syndrome, when in fact his main problem was that he was a highly energetic little boy who was not the sharpest knife in the drawer regarding schoolwork but who had many other talents and abilities that would serve him well...once he was given an outlet for his excess energy. I'm sure many other children are labeled autistic who are simply high-energy kids.

Albert Constantine Jr.| 6.6.12 @ 7:31AM

I think that you may be correct, though I believe the high energy children get labeled as Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder(ADHD), and the ones we used to call shy or quiet are the ones being included with the truly autistic.

c. j. acworth| 6.6.12 @ 8:07AM

That was my thought as I read the article. An ungodly number of young children (mostly boys) are being given powerful mood-altering drugs because thier teachers are to lazy to deal with a bit of high spirits and maintain order on thier own, and the parents are only too happy for the diagnosis of ADHD because it qualifires Johnny for extra tutoring to boost his grades. And the drugs keep him quieter at home, too.

c. j. acworth| 6.6.12 @ 8:11AM

And if you check my spelling in the above comment, you will probably think I was on drugs in school. (thier, qualifiers, for heavens sake!)

Nina in MA| 6.6.12 @ 1:47PM

You all have a pretty good opinion. I agree along with the rise in diagnosis of autism, the rise in ADD/ADHD. I agree with appleby too that too many parents don't know how to parent, read books and think it's supposed to be either black or white, no gray areas....and it's unfortunate because that's what children are...gray areas...they can go either way and with the right encouragement and education, and parents knowledge, go the other way. Anyone remember Dr. Spock with his idiotic rationalizing with a 2 yo!? I've seen many parents trying to reason with a toddler about why they shouldn't be doing something like eating rat poison (not really rat poison) or something just as ridiculous instead of taking the child out of harms way....and instead of using their own good judgement or intuition, they read and read and then think if their child shows ANY sign of what they are reading about, then their child has it!

Brooksifier | 6.6.12 @ 2:15PM

Sowell is an economist, not a scientist.

Dave Williams| 6.6.12 @ 3:55PM

....and that makes the rightness of his comments suspect how?
Typical lefty response -- can't challenge the substance, so you go make the personal attack. Troll.

Drunken Sailor| 6.6.12 @ 4:03PM

So what? your a troll and not a idiot but we still let you post. I'll take Dr. Sowell's opinion over yours anyday.

Brooksifier | 6.6.12 @ 5:42PM

"I'll take Dr. Sowell's opinion over yours anyday."

Oh WOW! then you must really like the old coot.
Autism is a very scientific topic, don't even think about it without a science background.

Drunken Sailor| 6.7.12 @ 8:36AM

Why yes, I do like him very much. Glad to see his regular contributions. Your's? Not so much. By the way Economics is a science you bufoon. What is your scientific background?

Ruckweiler| 6.6.12 @ 10:25AM

Sounds like the scam that was the number of "Homeless "on the streets, global warming, or other such contrived issues. If it's really autism then that is sad but re-defining the issue to get more money from the taxpayers is intellectual fraud. Follow the money.

TLP| 6.6.12 @ 3:46PM

I saw a questionnaire about ADHD that said: If you answered Yes, to 3 out of the 10, you have ADHD.

I answered Yes, to all of them.

My Grade School Teachers told my Mom that I was a Day Dreamer.

I'm not sure, but I think I have a Lawsuit.

Brooksifier | 6.6.12 @ 5:49PM

"Sounds like the scam that was the number of 'Homeless' on the streets"

Homelessness doesn't bother me: most of the homeless I meet (80 percent) are Rightwing extremist white trash who would only bring their booze, ciggies, and bad sex, bad religion, bad politics into a home if they had one-- so why not just remain 'homeless' and drink, smoke, and ball white trash hos? No worries about losing the key if a white trash Rightist nut is 'homeless'.
I watch them, they have a good time-- "Party Hardy, Marty (hic)"

TLP| 6.6.12 @ 8:42PM

Really?

Cause most of the homeless that I meet, are Black, or Hispanic, or Liberals who actually bought into the Liberal Crap, that you can sit on your ass, and somebody else will take care of you.

You know, like The Muslim.

Cobalt| 6.6.12 @ 11:26AM

A study has linked fetal testosterone levels with autism in children. Fine.

However, not all children act the same at a given age of 3 0r 4 0r 5, etc. So how can you control children, and "modify" their behavior? Drugs.

Little boys are different from little girls, even if some feminists don't approve of this difference.

Germaine Greer (Australian feminist), "I think that testosterone is a rare poison."

Bill84728| 6.6.12 @ 11:46AM

Autism has ALWAYS been a loosely-defined and amorphous condition. There are certainly people who suffer from a disability that makes them impossible to participate in social settings and makes them self-destructive to the point where they have been institutionalized and made to wear football helmets to keep them from battering their heads against the wall. Those are the obvious cases. Then we have the "Rain Man" cases that are not so extreme. Beyond that, we're treading near or across the boundaries of antisocial personalities or borderline personalities.

Given the history of psychology and psychiatry in the past, I'd be VERY VERY careful about classifying people as autistic if they're not banging their heads against the wall compulsively.

TrueBlue | 6.6.12 @ 1:28PM

Careful, Conservatism is the next big psychological condition on the board. They'll just meld it into one current definition or another to "prove" we're all actually crazy.

Bill84728| 6.6.12 @ 2:11PM

It's already being said that conservatives are excessively rigid and cling to outmoded ways because they find new ways too bewildering. It's not all that far for a certain kind of psychological thinking to take the rigidity and resistance to change and turn it into one or another form of paranoia.

JD| 6.6.12 @ 3:31PM

They would never do that. Doing that would require them to give us some of our tax dollars back! Diagnoses are restricted to those to whom they want to give money.

JimH| 6.6.12 @ 2:20PM

If we cure everyone with Autism or Asbergers, who will program the computers and go to Comic-Con?

TLP| 6.6.12 @ 8:44PM

Obviously, you've never been to Comic-Con.

It's a scene, man.

JimH| 6.7.12 @ 8:12AM

I am myself a programmer and a charter member of the MMMS (ask Occam if you don’t know what that is). The point of the comment was that people who may only act a bit different socially are now being diagnosed with mental conditions.

Trish Trotter| 6.6.12 @ 4:02PM

I have not been diagnosed with autism YET, but I am, according to my psych, bi-polar, and I have a "touch of Tourette's," as he puts it. Interesting article, shithead.

Bob K| 6.7.12 @ 10:27PM

This article was about words and the ideas they create and the changes they make by the people who make a living from them.

Autism was the one the author chose to discuss.

The great contemporary historian John Lukacs observed that "the history of ideas (indeed, of all human thought) is inseparable from the history of words." From 'Democracy and Populism' page 117. Published 2005 Yale University Press.

This article illustrates that observation about as well as good be.

Bob K| 6.7.12 @ 10:29PM

Please make that "good" be in the last sentence "could" be! It is getting late!

More Articles by Thomas Sowell

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