Minorities

IN 1860, AMERICA went through a major economic crisis in which tens of millions of people lost their jobs and homes, ended up on the streets, and turned to begging. This caused great irritation among the wealthy, who wanted to remove these people from the streets as cheaply as possible. Psychiatry discovered that if you lock people up and abuse them, they are too afraid to run away.
PSYCHOLOGISTS began locking up homosexuals in psychiatric institutions in 1880 and treating them for abnormal behavior using abuse. The Human Rights Commission put an end to this fraud in 1973 and explicitly prohibited psychologists and psychiatrists from using the terms normal and abnormal because they are not scientific. In 1973, the mental health care sector changed its name; before that, it was called psychiatry and had an extremely bad reputation. Since 1973, the mental health care sector, just like Shell, has spent billions of dollars a year on marketing.
WHEN you hit neurotypicals, they duck away. In 1943, a gentleman in Germany discovered three children who naturally glared angrily at the perpetrator. He subsequently discovered that these children shared a few other typical traits. Curiously, some of this information never made it into the literature.
PSYCHOLOGISTS began locking up transgender people in psychiatric institutions in the 1950s and treating them for mentally disturbed behavior using abuse. In 2012, the Human Rights Commission put an end to this fraud.
PSYCHOLOGISTS began locking up autistic people in psychiatric institutions in the 1960s and treating them with heavy medication for severe mental disorders they did not have. In 1998, this fraud was publicized. In 1999, several million clients of the mental health services were told that they had been sabotaging their treatment for thirty years and should just fuck off.
A FRIEND of mine also received his autism diagnosis through the justice system. For about 15 years now, the parents of autistic people have been screened. At least one of them must also be autistic. That means that autism is not only hereditary, but that it is also the dominant trait. (I suspect that tens of thousands of people received their autism diagnosis through the justice system. These people don’t talk about it. So if there was anything strange in the screening…)

My personal experience
Between 1976 and 1999, I was under treatment at the mental health services for longer than a year on six occasions. The treatments consisted of small talk, jokes, and funny experiments performed by psychologists. The treatments did not help. Nevertheless, the mental health services charged the insurance company several hundred thousand euros per year.
In the late 1990s, I was treated for seasonal affective disorder (winter depression). Three years of heavy medication and weekly sessions with a psychiatrist who told me at length about his own problems. He spoke, among other things, about the many sexual encounters he had had with men during his teenage years. Nevertheless, he thought he was not gay because he was married.
In early 1999, the medication was suddenly tapered off. In mid-1999, he suddenly became ill, and I was sent to another gentleman who did not feel the need to introduce himself. This gentleman told me that I was certainly addicted to treatments and should just fuck off.

Possibly a genetic test
In 1940, a boy with a dog discovered a cave complex near the French town of Lascaux containing 600 cave paintings https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lascaux that had been painted there 17,000 years ago, depicting the animals that lived in that area at the time.
In the 1970s, it was discovered that severe autistic people can draw much better than neurotypicals and Asperger autistic people. Give six-year-old children photos of four-legged animals, and severe autistic people will make drawings comparable to the cave paintings in the Lascaux caves. Neurotypicals and Asperger autistics draw two circles for the head and torso and a few vertical lines for the legs.
Since the 1970s, six-year-old children have been given an intelligence test. The problem with that test is that the standard intelligence test assumes a linear relationship between age and language development, whereas autistic people only start talking at age six and always have a language delay.
In 1980, a test was developed to diagnose the severe form of autism. But there is something strange about this test. It is customary in psychological tests to look at whether people possess certain traits. But this test examines whether people have mastered a skill that has been taught in the Netherlands on Sesame Street since 1976 (in America since 1969).
Artists such as Rembrandt van Rijn (the painter of The Night Watch) have been taught for several hundred years in composition classes that all people in the Western world view drawings, paintings, and photographs from left to right because that is our reading direction and we are accustomed to making that movement with our eyes. (If artists do not take this into account, it affects the quality of their art.) Since 1976, children in the Netherlands have been taught on Sesame Street that when describing a drawing, one must start from the subject. Before that, children learned this from their parents. When being read to, the pictures in the storybook were also described. However, severely autistic individuals do not start talking until they are six. By that time, they are receiving reading lessons, so reading to falls by the wayside.
In 1979, only severely autistic individuals aged six and older described drawings from left to right. In 1999, only severely autistic individuals aged 36 and older described drawings from left to right. In 2026, only severely autistic individuals aged 53 and older will describe drawings from left to right.
To prevent it from becoming noticeable that people diagnosed with “severe autism” were getting older, the test for the severe form of autism was abolished in 1999. As a result, 40% of severely autistic people are wrongly diagnosed as intellectually disabled.
In the 1990s, research was conducted to determine whether modern humans possess Neanderthal DNA. Neurotypicals were found to have a maximum of 6%. Autistic people were skipped because mental health services claimed that autism is a recent hereditary disorder. However, given that autistic people have been living in France for 17,000 years, that is clearly not true.
If autistic people have more than 6% Neanderthal DNA, then not only is it clear where we come from, but we also immediately have a genetic test for autistic people.