The thing with Carolyn Fuentes’ resume is that, depending on which resume you are looking at that she has posted on the Internet, some things are included in one place while they are excluded in others. On Carolyn Fuentes’ resume for Orange Community Education & Recreation Pepper Pike Learning Center — where she provides 4 hours of private computer training in a client’s home or office for $179 (the fee is $159 if you’re a resident) — Carolyn Fuentes has added to her resume:
“Prior to teaching computers, Fuentes says, “she comes from a “jack-of-all-trades” family.” She has managed non-profit organizations, private sectors, and corporate businesses. Her work includes various positions such as a project document control manager, office manager, bookkeeper, desktop publisher, owned and operated a home-based partnership publishing business, transcription, and assisted in a home-based partnership music studio.”
While that all sounds impressive, considering that she is an AWN Advisory Board Member, it is not unreasonable to expect Ms. Fuentes to divulge which non-profit organizations she managed. If the non-profit organizations thrived under Ms. Fuentes’ management, one would think she would be more than happy to identify those non-profit organizations and the years she was responsible for successfully managing them.
But then, on her Blog Talk Radio page, Carolyn Fuentes’ resume is slightly different, stating that:
“Prior to teaching computers, Dr. Fuentes was a manager for non-profit and corporate businesses. She was once a project document control manager, manager of an educational facility for non-profit, bookkeeper for non-profit and private sectors for many years, desktop publishing tutor for non-profit, co-owner and operated a secretarial and desktop publishing business, private transcription business, and co-owner and operated a music studio.”
So the fact of the matter is that while her Orange Community Education & Recreation resume — which she paraphrases on her YouTube channel in the About Me section — implies that she managed non-profit organizations in a leadership role (i.e. Executive Director), it seems that her Blog Talk Radio resume implies she worked as a manager for non-profit organizations. Still, that’s quite a few jobs in a 20 year period and so it’s easy to see Ms. Fuentes why would claim in her Orange Community Education & Recreation resume she comes from a “jack-of-all-trades” family.
This post is not meant to be a continuation of yesterday’s perusal of contradictions in Ms. Fuentes’ CV, however, it is worthwhile to note that the contradictions themselves serve to offer an explanation about Carolyn Fuentes’ knowledge and understanding of Autism Spectrum Disorders, which can also be questioned as we shall see.
It’s a fact that Carolyn Fuentes trumpets what Skyhorse Publishing has written about her book AUTISM:
“Carolyn Fuentes’s book on autism is a useful, relevant compilation of the latest autism research as well as a helpful guide for those looking for an introduction to the causes, signs, treatments, and general background of autism.”
Skyhorse Publishing is a publishing house out of New York City. They publish a number of different books, however when it comes to Autism, the authors of choice for Skyhorse Publishing include Age of Autism’s Kim Stagliano, discredited former medical practitioner Andrew Wakefield, Ken Siri and Tony Lyons. Many who are part of the Autism community recognize these authors’ names because they are strong supporters of treatments that are not approved for Autism by any government body in many countries: chelation, vision therapy, sound therapies, IVIg infusions, special diets for autism, and more.
In reading sections of Carolyn Fuentes’ book AUTISM, it is easy to understand why Skyhorse Publishing speaks glowingly of Ms. Fuentes’ book. In fact, I would like to discuss some of the chapters in Carolyn Fuentes’ book based on the summaries of each chapter that are made available at Carolyn Fuentes’ Blog Talk Radio channel.
The summary for Chapter 2 states: “Dr. Leo Kanner, in 1943, released a report of eleven children who were highly interested in unusual aspects of the lifeless environment. The discovery was called the Kranner’s [sic] syndrome.”
I am not saying that this information is incorrect. I am curious, however, as to why Carolyn Fuentes did not mention Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler who first introduced the term “autism” in 1911.
Bleuler’s term was used to describe autism as an extreme withdrawal of oneself from the fabric of social life, but not excluding oneself. Bleuler also coined the phrases “autism disturbances of effect” (emotion) and “autism disturbances of association” (thought disorders) a generation before Leo Kanner’s use of the phrase “autistic disturbances of affective contact.” Surely including information on Eugen Bleuler would have been an important inclusion in Carolyn Fuentes’ book.
Keep in mind that children, youth and adults were being diagnosed with Kanner’s Autism at a time when vaccines did not exist.
I am also curious as to why Carolyn Fuentes excluded Hans Asperger from her book on Autism. After all, in 1944, Leo Kanner‘s “autistic disturbances” and Hans Asperger‘s “autistic psychopathy” became known in medical fields as syndromes. This information is important, especially regarding Hans Asperger, as a number of people in America are of the misinformed opinion that Asperger Syndrome is not a form of Autism and it only appeared in 1994 when it was included in the American DSM-IV. Clarification on this issue would be of great assistance to people trying to learn more about autism. Yet Ms. Fuentes ignored addressing this issue.
I would also ask that readers keep in mind that Leo Kanner‘s 1943 study observed children who had withdrawal from human contact as early as age 1 at a time when childhood vaccines did not exist.
The summary for Chapter 4 talks about Dr. Cannon and states that “sulfur [sic] is known to treat many disorders that tie into autism.” However, Chapter 4 does not address sulfur [sic] or its implication in the “many disorders that tie into autism.” In fact, the “many disorders” aren’t even identified.
The summary for Chapter 6 indicates that Autism usually begins before the age of three and is a lifelong disability. The fact of the matter is that 137 medical researchers and scientists in 50 medical and research centres in 9 countries studying 1,600 families with at least one child diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder proved that Autism is genetic. This means that children who are diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder are autistic from birth. That the degree of severity is identified as the child grows older does not mean that the child begins to be autistic at the age he or she first exhibits symptoms.
Think of it in terms of eye colour. All babies are born with blue eyes. The amount of melanin in the irises determines the final colour of a baby’s eyes. From most amount of melanin to least amount of melanin, the colour spectrum for eyes is described as: black, brown, amber, hazel, green, blue and grey. The melanin – which will determine one’s eye colour — is coded in the genes, just as Autism is coded in the genes. But Dr. Fuentes does not offer any counter-argument to provide scholarly balance to her viewpoint in order to fully inform the reader of opposing views.
The summary for Chapter 9 lends credence to an hypothesis that “anti-yeast” therapy helps in Autism. Additionally, Ms. Fuentes claims that “as antibiotic usage grows, the rate of autism grows as well. This disorder is of the antiobiotic era.” There is currently no empirical support for theories that implicate yeast and/or yeast infections as a cause of Autism. The evidence invoked in support of these claims involves uncontrolled case studies and anecdotal reports. The discovery of penicillin, the first antibiotic, was by Alexander Fleming in 1928, fully seventeen years after Eugen Bleuler’s use of the term autism in 1911. Thus if one accepts Bleuler’s use of the word “autism” as the start of the diagnosis of autism, autism predates antibiotics by 17 years. But Dr. Fuentes does not offer any counter-argument to provide scholarly balance to this viewpoint in order to fully inform the reader of opposing views.
The summary for Chapters 10 and 11 states that a mercury-based preservative in vaccines is responsible for a dramatic increase in Autism and many other disorders among children. This has been disproven in numerous studies by reputable and recognized medical researchers and scientists the world over. Andrew Wakefield who originally made this claim in the mid-90s has been sanctioned for his unethical practices, his flawed research, et al. In fact, the blog entry on Andrew Wakefield’s discredited study can be read by clicking HERE. But Dr. Fuentes does not offer any counter-argument to provide scholarly balance to this viewpoint in order to fully inform the reader of opposing views.
[As a parenthetical: The assertion that vaccines cause autism is one that is generally not accepted by the Autism Women's Network, and so one wonders why Dr. Fuentes is accepted as a board member.]
The summary for Chapter 12 states that free glutamic acid plays a role in the rise of Autism. A segment of the population, believing that free glutamic acid causes Autism, have determined that if items such as cheese which contain casein are removed from the diet of an individual with Autism, that person will recover from Autism to some degree. This is the theory behind the Gluten-Free Casein-Free (GFCF) Diet.
While a gluten-free casein-free diet may address a co-morbidity, countless studies by reputable and respected medical researchers and scientists have confirmed that such diets do not affect Autism. But Dr. Fuentes does not offer any counter-argument to provide scholarly balance to this viewpoint in order to fully inform the reader of opposing views.
The summary for Chapter 13 states that Dr. Carley learned how to reverse the damage with homeopathy and other natural supplements, and subsequently realized that inoculations of disease are causing the corruption in the immune system which leads to all autoimmune diseases and cancer. Actually, Dr. Carley states that she has “successfully reversed ALL autoimmune diseases (including autism) and cancer in over 2,000 clients (including pets) over the past 9 years” but these significant details are reported incorrectly in Dr. Fuentes’ publication.
To summarize for clarity: Dr. Carley claims she can cure cancer AND she can cure Autism AND she can cure ALL autoimmune diseases.
Dr. Carley has also “developed a course through the “Hippocrates Academy” where interested students can learn and be certified how to do the Hippocrates Protocol developed by Dr. Carley, which “reverses ALL autoimmune diseases and cancer in people and in pets using natural therapies.” If Dr. Carley has indeed found a protocol that reverses ALL autoimmune diseases, individuals and families dealing with anaphylactic-level allergies (allergies being an autoimmune disease) or Myasthenia Gravis (also an autoimmune disease) or any other number of autoimmune diseases would be heralded the world over as the saviour of children. But Dr. Carley is not heralded in this way. One can only wonder why that might be.
To better understand the immune system and how it works, this video — beginning at the 3 minute 33 second mark — gives an easy-to-follow correct explanation of the immune system and the cells involved in building a healthy immune system. But Dr. Fuentes does not offer this video, or any other counter-argument to provide scholarly balance to this viewpoint in order to fully inform the reader of opposing views.
The summary for Chapter 17 begins with a bold statement: “Amongst many famous people with autism was once Hans Albert Einstein.” The current claim by many that Albert Einstein had Autism is not based on an actual diagnosis but rather on piecing together anecdotal stories with actual intellectual achievements. The only individuals who can be identified as having an Autism Spectrum Disorder are those who have been conclusively diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder by a licensed and accredited medical practitioner. When referencing historical figures who may have had an Autism Spectrum Disorder, it is imperative to state that it is thought or believed that an historical figure may have had an Autism Spectrum Disorder. But Dr. Fuentes does not make this important distinction.
The summary for Chapter 22 states reads as: “Rachel Evans, bionetics [sic], and Jean Genet, Myths of Autism have written many materials related to autism in 2006. They have stated that autism increased by 172% during 1990s and is associated with 75-80% of individuals with retardation.”
But who are Rachel Evans and Jean Genet?
Jean Genet tells visitors to his website that he “might just be the most important person you will speak to concerning your child’s autism. Why? Because I grew up autistic, conquered it and funded the research to define how I did it.” He claims that he and his therapy can end a child’s “experience with Autism.” He goes on to claim that his program, Byonetics, is endorsed by medical practitioners but he does not provide the names of those medical practitioners who allegedly endorse his program.
There is no way to confirm his claim that his program is endorsed by medical practitioners and there is no way to identify the sort of medical practitioners to whom he is referring. Dr. Fuentes does not investigate the veracity of Genet‘s statements, but appears to blindly accept them as being true.
Are the people in Genet‘s program naturopathic doctors? Are they registered nurses? Are they chiropractors? Are they some other recognized profession that qualifies as a medical practitioner?
Where can the studies by respected and reputable medical researchers and scientists which confirm their assertions, research, and study results be found? Is their research peer-reviewed? Are the studies double-blind? Is the program approved by the proper governing bodies in the various states and/or countries in which he is marketing and selling his program? Dr. Fuentes does not inform us, but appears to expect us to take the studies as scientifically proven, peer-reviewed fact.
And Rachel Evans? What can be said about a woman who describes the “Five Autism Types” as being Asperger’s Syndrome, Kanner’s Syndrome (Classic Autistic Disorder), Pervasive Developmental Disorder – Not Otherwise Specified, Rett’s Syndrome and Childhood Disintegrative Disorder?
And why doesn’t Carolyn Fuentes correct the misinformation from Ms. Evans rather than continue to promote it without correction?
In a press release from 2007, Ms. Evans states that she was “embarassed [sic] at her lack of knowledge about [Autism]” and to learn more, she “turned to the experts, who helped her to understand what is known about autism, as well as the support and treatment options available to families dealing with Autism.”
Should Ms. Evans be embarrassed by her ongoing lack of knowledge about Autism? What Ms. Evans meant to describe were the “Five Pervasive Developmental Disorders” which are comprised of Asperger’s Syndrome, Classic Autism (Kanner’s Syndrome), Pervasive Developmental Disorder – Not Otherwise Specified, Rett Syndrome [no apostrophe-s as Rachel Evans and Dr. Fuentes erroneously spell the word], and Childhood Disintegrative Disorder.
And so, one can only wonder just how much research has Carolyn Fuentes done on the subject of Autism Spectrum Disorders. What’s more, how can she expect to be taken seriously as a (freelance) medical researcher on the subject of Autism? (NOTE: Click on image to open in a separate window.)
As we have seen from Dr. Fuentes’ resume, she is a busy woman, having gotten so many degrees, and having gotten so many awards and certificates, and having worked so many jobs in so many places. And so it is reasonable to believe that between all this activity, and a small claims court case for tax delinquency that took years to resolve, that maybe that Dr. Fuentes did not have time the time to devote to fact checking her “relevant compilation of the latest autism research as well as a helpful guide for those looking for an introduction to the causes, signs, treatments, and general background of autism.”
Still, despite this possible lack of time in her past, one thing can be said for certain: Ms. Fuentes certainly has plenty of time to write articles for the Autism Women’s Network on the issue of cyberbullying and to add additional information on cyberbullying on her website “Cops Focus” (as has been shown in previous blog entries) but she just cannot seem to free up enough time to respond to an e-mail with two words in it … the first and last names of the AWN Advisory Board Chair.
Elyse Bruce
Creator and Founder
MIDNIGHT IN CHICAGO

September 25, 2010 at 4:06 AM
For anyone interested in additional reading, be sure to check Jerry Sedlock’s Midnight In Peterborough blog, where he sends up Marc Rosen’s self-published book of poetry.
Sedlock, known for not answering questions about why he will not investigate his fellow AFAA Board Member for his inaccurate and inconsistent portrayal of education and military experience or theft conviction, and who, like Dr. Fuentes will not investigate Amy Caraballo’s possibly illegal use of copyrighted material to misrepresent MIC on a website of her own making, spends oodles of time parodying the MIC blog much the way Fuentes writes about cyberbullies implying that Elyse Bruce is one.
For those who do not know Marc Rosen, he is not only the esteemed editor of Perspectives, but also an ASAN activist and friend of AWN’s and AAFA’s Amy Caraballo, who penned these immortal words:
“Ladies, I really do think we should just out Elyse in a more humiliating fashion. We tried respect, and she isn’t being respectful. Let’s try knocking her down a couple dozen pegs, and emphasize her ties to Midnight In Chicago, and see if THAT doesn’t shame her into being a lady for once.”
What poetry! It’s not quite Tyger Tyger Burning Bright! but as another self-published work, it will do.
September 26, 2010 at 2:35 AM
I’ll tell you one thing Ms. Fuentes must be really pretty or very smart. It’s a cat fight and men like me know it.
September 26, 2010 at 2:50 AM
Nope. It’s a critical review of Fuentes’s book. Happens all the time.
September 26, 2010 at 3:07 AM
Aw man, life is not that serious.
September 26, 2010 at 3:20 AM
It’s serious when you are dealing with medical issues.
Sometimes treatments that are not medically accepted cause patients harm or kill them. It’s happened.
Fuentes writes that vaccines cause autism.
Well, in the autism world, some parents have believed this and tried what’s called chelation therapy to “cure” their child by removing the “toxins” from vaccines in their systems.
Some kids have died from that treatment.
Then there are the gluten-free diets. Their have been studies which show that not only do these diets not have an effect on autistics, but they can cause protien malnutrition when improperly administered.
So it IS serious stuff.
September 26, 2010 at 2:52 AM
Hey all jokes aside. I decided to look up Ms. Fuentes and really read her stuff and found her work is computers and other stuff. I tried to do some of her algebra and it was kind of hard. Well, I’m a subcontractor and my work is like hers in so many ways. I work as IT and business is like that. These days everyone has to work many jobs to make a living.
September 26, 2010 at 6:14 AM
You what all I see is that you are still [inappropriate language removed] again. You reply with the same stuff again. I decided to lookup my own stuff and I want to debate with myself. Why not! That’s what this site is for. The votes are not real. The site is set up for giving your own votes. This is [inappropriate language removed]. Don’t let me guess, the next reply will be about BLAH, BLAH, BLAH, BLAH, BLAH. Boring, boring, boring, boring. Don’t let me guess again, your next blog will be about the same people all the way until you write a diary on the same people. This is how you write. If you are getting tired of my writing, this is how tired I am about this [inappropriate language removed] blog that talks about the same stuff. I hope that you are married or have a boyfriend. Maybe take a vacation and see the sites. It might make you write about celebrities, public people like the president, or real stuff that readers would like to read about. Try it sometimes, this is [inappropriate language removed].
September 26, 2010 at 6:21 AM
This is fun watching a predictable person that writes me back with the same stuff. Is Mike the Elyse? I wonder because Mike writes like Elyse. Did you know that so I can predict that Mike is the same person. I bet since I said that there will be another persons name on the next one because I said that. Predictable and boring. Boring, boring, boring, boring, boring, boring, [inappropriate language removed], [inappropriate language removed], [inappropriate language removed], [inappropriate language removed], and [inappropriate language removed]. Man this is fun Mike, I mean Elyse, I mean Mike, I mean vote just because, I mean same stuff, I mean same stuff, I mean [inappropriate language removed]!
September 26, 2010 at 6:24 AM
Did you know that there are many autism books at the bookstore, library, and other stuff that have the same stuff you are talking about. But you are not talking about them because you are PMSing with a cat fight!
September 26, 2010 at 2:26 PM
Midnight In Chicago agrees that there are other books on Autism in bookstores and libraries that carry the same incorrect information as that found in Carolyn Fuentes’ book, AUTISM.
Midnight In Chicago would like to underscore that the authors of other books on Autism in bookstores and libraries that carry the same incorrect information as that found in Carolyn Fuentes’ book, AUTISM, are not members of the Autism Women’s Network Advisory Board.
Furthermore, authors of other books on Autism in bookstores and libraries that carry the same incorrect information as that found in Carolyn Fuentes’ book, AUTISM, are not libeling, defaming, parodying, copyright infringing or otherwise abusing or misrepresenting MIC and Elyse Bruce.
September 26, 2010 at 6:33 AM
This is why some women that like to hide behind blogs like this only get people like me to entertain them so they can write like you. I think I will start gossiping about people like you and call myself a writer too. Have you read books by famous writers like Dean Koontz, Walter Mosley, Debbie McComber, or James Patterson? You need to take tips from them. They are real writers that the public love to read about. Take a writing course on grammar before you write your next blog. That might add some spice in your life. This stuff is so [inappropriate language removed]. Pick up some courses in creative writing too. That will help you too. Elyse you are far from being a writer if this stuff keeps going on and on. Mike, I mean Elyse, I mean Mike, this is [inappropriate language removed], [inappropriate language removed], [inappropriate language removed]. You will reply to me as I predict, I predict, I predict that you will reply to a fish, reply with the same stuff to anybody that comes on this blog with the same stuff. Make up votes, replies by Mike/Elyse the same person, the same voters, boring, boring, and boring.
September 26, 2010 at 2:30 PM
Darnell wrote: “I think I will start gossiping about people like you and call myself a writer too.”
Midnight In Chicago acknowledges Darnell Mcloughton’s comment that he will be joining Amy Caraballo, Dave Wilde, ASAN Activist Marc Rosen, Heather E. Sedlock, Jerry Stephen Sedlock™ and friends in libeling, defaming, parodying, copyright infringing, abusing and misrepresenting MIC and Elyse Bruce.
September 26, 2010 at 6:38 AM
Mike now you have to reply 6 times to me and I bet it will be the same stuff on nothing. Have fun my man/Elyse/man/Elyse and vote number 20 now!
September 27, 2010 at 12:42 AM
This is not a competition, Darnell, at least as far as I am concerned.
Most of what you have written on this page and the previous page since I have last posted really doesn’t seem to have much to do with the topic, so it’s not worth it to me to answer any of it.
You are right when you say above that you can look your own stuff up, and you are right when you say there are plenty of books in the store that say just about anything. Anyone is free to buy them, or look at them, or believe them, or disbelieve them.
What’s funny though is that you don’t seem to care a bit about AWN-affiliated ASAN people going after Michelle Dawnson and her opinion of ABA therapy, but for some reason, you have a problem with Elyse Bruce critiquing what Dr. Fuentes wrote in her book, and you are going after Elyse much the same way the AWN people went after Michelle Dawson, from what I understand.
Most of this world is free, which means anyone can look at what’s been written and debate whether or not something that is posted is factual. That was what Elyse Bruce was doing, it seems to me. But maybe Dr. Fuentes would not even have fallen on MIC’s radar screen in the first place if Fuentes would not have blown off answering Elyse’s question and then started spreading the word on cyberbullies, as though Elyse Bruce is one.
If you read every single post on this blog that has to do with the Zakh Price case and all of those associated with it, and the people who raised money for the boy, you will see that every one of the folks associated with that case speaks freely about raising money for that poor kid, but a lot of those people tried to shut up anyone who asks why Zakh’s Grandmother needed the money in the first place, and then a lot of them started calling Elyse at home and hounded her, and spammed this blog, and they started calling up different places that were linked to MIC and trying to get them to drop the links. And they accused Elyse of cyberbullying when Elyse decided to defend herself.
Now Fuentes seems to have indirectly accused Elyse of cyberbullying when Elyse wanted to know who the board chair was of AWN.
Does it sound like these are honest people?
I don’t think so. And so that is why I am here. And that is why I tend mostly to post on this blog in response to folks who pick on MIC. Because I want to know the answers to these questions too, but I don’t want to post on their blogs, or their Facebook pages, because I don’t want them posting my personal information like they did Elyse’s and a few other people’s, and I don’t want them blasting me like they did Michelle Dawson, and I don’t want them calling up my house and bothering me, and I don’t want them spamming the places online where I hang out like you’re doing here.
It’s as simple as that. In my opinion, these people are bullies and I am afraid of them, and the more they post blog entries about MIC, or the more they spread rumors, or the more they try to make Elyse ONE PERSON, out to be the bully, the more afraid of them I get.
A whole gang of people against just one person looks more like a group of bullies to me than one person, especially the way they are behaving.
I am also scared when a board member of an organization like AWN does nothing to stop all this, but instead allows all this to happen and then seems to join in herself by allowing AWN’s members to post stuff about cyberbullying that she wrote all over the net pretty much implying that it is Elyse that’s the cyberbully.
AAFA won’t investigate these people because they ARE these people. There is a whole gang of them. All you need to be is a member of their online groups and Twitter and you see what they write. They don’t hide the fact that they use fake IDs and that this quote about Marc Rosen is true.
He really said he wants to humiliate Elyse.
It’s like they are bragging, and it’s like they are enjoying it. And Dr. Fuentes, a board member of an organization to which at least one of these people belong, won’t do anything about it.
If these people were picking on her kids, would she help them?
These people ought to be ashamed of themselves. But I am hoping that everyone who’s been picked on by these people feel that they can post HERE, because this is one of the few places where I feel safe to post. If I lead by example, maybe others will follow.
Some have. Like a couple of Mike Robinson’s clients. And no, I am not Robinson, and I am not Elyse Bruce either.
I am just me. A man, but a man who is frankly pretty scared of people who act this way. I might even get scared of you, Darnell, if you keep this up.
September 30, 2010 at 11:14 PM
Maybe Darnell M. could take some of his own advice and take courses in creative writing, grammar etc etc; then so many of his phrases would not contain inappropriate language, and be removed.
Writing styles of different authors can vary and also can have similarities, to accuse mike and Elyse of being the same person merely indicates that their styles have some similarities.
October 5, 2010 at 3:38 PM
Yes, this person that refers to herself.. or self proclaimed ‘DR’ should have some consequences for exploiting her own children for the promotion of herself. It is pitiful that she allows her children to believe it okay to build yourself up to be something or someone you are not. The truth is, at the end of the day, you are still you, no matter what you proclaim yourself to be online. Where are the facts of her supposedly credentials? Falsifying yourself, or living in a fantasy world, and allowing your children to do the same is pitiful. Why not spend the time that you use to make yourself up to really doing something that is important? Dr. Fuentes? Dr of what, from where???
April 13, 2011 at 8:31 PM
My parents taught me the Golden Rule ~ I love this video of Bing Crosby playing a priest teaching the Gold Rule via song. Temple Grandin always speaks of manners, not just nice, little ,cute, lets get along dialogue, but honesty and integrity… along with turn taking as Temple would say… I think most of the advocacy groups need to contemplate their ethics and those who are on their boards need to look at their role in enabling them… A psychologist who assisted me on a lawsuit defending a teacher from a crowd of dishonest parents, told me “Yvonne when you get into a P*ssing Match, everyone will get wet” I noticed how everyone ran away from the Pedophile AS psychologist… Golden Rule holds…
April 13, 2011 at 8:33 PM
I am a bit tired of many AS advocacy groups giving the impression that we should not improve ourselves, even NTs try to improve their skills.. So if you are Mule, Pig, Fish, don’t blame it on Aspergers or Autism, it was your choice. . Learn to swing on a Star..
August 2, 2011 at 2:21 AM
[...] Bonnie Ventura aka Ventura33) HERE and HERE and HERE; AWN Board Member, Carolyn Fuentes HERE and HERE; GRASP Chapter Leader and former ASAN Chapter Leader, Mark Haller HERE and HERE; Marc Rosen, [...]