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Phil Hawkins's avatar

I read your article on American Thinker this morning. I could not comment there, because I am not a paid subscriber. I do read AT daily, but as a retiree on a fixed income, I can't afford to subscribe to everything. I do have some opinions on the autism "epidemic."

I am on the high-functioning end of the autism spectrum myself--what they used to call "Asperger Syndrome." I have ten grandchildren; all of them have been diagnosed. Why do we have so many? What we figured out, (after the children started getting diagnosed) was that in my family and my ex-wife's, we have been marrying other people on the spectrum for at least 3 generations. It may go back farther, but we don't know enough about the behavior of the earlier generations to be sure.

As for the modern "epidemic"--when I was growing up (born in 1950), no one was looking for us at all. Autism was only identified as a condition in the 1940s--by Leo Kanner in the US, and Hans Asperger in Austria. I went to elementary school in a rural area about 50 miles east of Cincinnati, OH; so it wasn't surprising that no one was looking for us there. But I went to junior high and high school in a very good school district in the northern suburbs of Cincinnati, and no one was looking for us there, either. And they weren't looking for us for a long time after I finished high school. I never even heard of Asperger Syndrome until the summer of 2005! When my son, who worked as a computer programmer, brought me material he had printed out from the OASIS website, it was like the lights coming on for a lot of things in my life, both in childhood and as an adult.

As for vaccines being a cause: growing up, I only had two vaccines--smallpox, and the polio vaccine after it came out in the mid-1950s. There just weren't that many vaccines given children at that time, because most of the vaccines we have now did not exist yet. I came down with--and survived--measles, mumps, and chickenpox. So vaccines are not a likely cause of my autism.

And when they finally started looking for us...do you recall the term "learning curve"? Just because you start looking for an item, that does not guarantee that you'll be good at finding it immediately. Any skill can take some time to be developed--and a complicated skill may take a long time. The British have been better than the Americans on autism for some years--one of the world's best authorities is Tony Attwood, an English psychologist currently living and working in Australia. But I saw a report last year of a study conducted in several schools in England; they went back through schools where they had already evaluated students for autism, and found that for every three they had identified the first time, there were two more they had missed!

Add to that, for over sixty years it was assumed that autism was mostly found in Caucasian boys. The book "Aspergirls" by Rudy Simone, was only published in 2010. (My daughter found the book and realized she is on the spectrum, too.) In recent years, it has also been found that other races besides white can be autistic. But they are still having to catch up.

Here's a couple of pieces I have written on my own Substack about these issues:

https://autisticredneckphilhawkins.substack.com/p/do-vaccines-cause-autism

https://autisticredneckphilhawkins.substack.com/p/more-thoughts-on-autism

I do see some issues with modern vaccines; I suspect children are being given too many, too soon, and too young. And some are being pushed that may not be needed at all for many people. But even the CDC, years before the Covid mess, was saying that autism was 70-80% genetic--you get it from your parents. Hans Asperger was suspecting that back in the 1940s--he noticed that traits he was seeing in the children he worked with were also present in their parents. Leo Kanner, who was the first to identify autism in the US, postulated that the cause was mothers not being affectionate enough, coining the term "refrigerator mothers." My daughter and her children have still run into that idea in some therapists in recent years!

To sum up my thinking: if you aren't even looking for something, the odds of finding it are very small; and when you do start looking, it may take quite a while to get good at it.

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