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Celerity

(43,510 posts)
Wed May 20, 2020, 07:55 PM May 2020

Trump Supporters Almost Assaulted My 12-year-Old Autistic Son Because He Was Wearing a Mask

This is Trump's America.

https://thebanter.substack.com/p/trump-supporters-almost-assaulted



My wife regularly gets annoyed with me because I do two things that get on her nerves on a fairly consistent basis: 1. I know what she’s thinking way more often than she’s comfortable with, and 2. Things I tell her are going to happen do, more frequently than not. You would think the first thing would be awesome. After all, a common complaint among women is that their significant other doesn’t understand them. But after 23 years together, I’m way better at reading her than she is at reading me and it vexes her to no end. Also, when I’m really on the ball, she feels like I’m reading her mind and the feeling of exposure is aggravating. The second is a little more complicated. Once I started paying very close attention to politics, it became very easy to predict certain things that would affect us. Recurring government shutdowns? Yeah, we knew that was coming and we prepared for them as best we could, learning with each shutdown. Remember, Debbie is the primary breadwinner and a government worker. We never know if a particular shutdown is going to affect her but we always prepare like it will. Even so, the long one at the beginning of 2019 was difficult.

I can’t even imagine what people who were blindsided went through. Another example of my not-so-amazing divination skills was back in 2016. I told Debbie that antisemitism was going to, you’ll forgive the expression, spread like a plague when Trump was elected. Within a year, Nazis marched in Charlottesville, a woman was murdered, and a notorious neo-Nazi had moved into our small city to be closer to the centers of power in Washington DC. I also told her that Covid-19 was going to be the kind of disease you see in the movies and that we needed to stock up before people panicked and stripped the stores bare. Each time, I was met with skepticism and then mounting irritation as my prediction came to pass. You would think she would be more trusting by now but I think she simply doesn’t want to acknowledge how fucking awful people can be. Which is why she didn’t really believe me when I told her a few weeks ago that Trump humpers were going to start harassing people for wearing masks.

“I Hate When You Are Right”

Most days, Debbie takes the kids down to the creek behind our apartment for 20 minutes or so. It gets them outside for fresh air and gives me a few minutes of much-needed solitude. While I’m adjusting well to being a full-time stay-at-home parent again, I’m struggling a bit with being around people 24/7. After several years of spending most of the day alone, this has been an abrupt change and a few minutes of peace and quiet are very welcome. On this particular day, though, I was out food shopping with Claudia while Debbie took Jordan, Anastasia, and Dominic (the kid across the hall whom we’ve been watching while his parents work) down for some exercise. I was on my way home when I received a text from Debbie: “I hate when you are right.” I get those texts from time to time and I knew she would explain it to me when I got back. These conversations are usually funny as I fake try not to be fake smug. But this was not one of those conversations. Turns out that when she and the kids were down on the trail next to the creek, two teens and an adult were coming down the path at the same time.

The two teens decided to take offense at Jordan wearing a mask and walked right up to him, demanding to know why he had one on. Now, autism comes in a lot of different flavors. For some, it’s super obvious at a glance that they’re on the spectrum. But for most, you have to spend some time with them to notice that they’re not neurotypical. Even moderately impacted kids like Jordan don’t immediately present as autistic, especially if you don’t know what you’re looking for. One of the ways Jordan’s autism manifests itself is that he does not respond to people unless they call him by name. And by “respond,” I mean he does not acknowledge your existence. Not in a mean, dismissive way (that would require Jordan to have a single mean bone in his body, which he does not), but in an almost literal sense. If he does not know you, you’re more or less invisible to him unless you say his name. That’s when he “sees” you and you enter into his world. So these two little shits were in his face trying to bully him and Jordan didn’t acknowledge them in any way whatsoever. One of them was insulted by this and said, “Do you speak English?!” Jordan continued to not respond and the two teens realized that Jordan was not exactly ignoring them so much as not responding at all. Presumably, it occurred to them that it wouldn’t be any fun if they couldn’t provoke a reaction and they left.

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11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Trump Supporters Almost Assaulted My 12-year-Old Autistic Son Because He Was Wearing a Mask (Original Post) Celerity May 2020 OP
If this happens to ME, they will get a face full of Mace... Ferrets are Cool May 2020 #1
Good idea. Buckeye_Democrat May 2020 #9
Looks to be just the right size for a MAGAT Ferrets are Cool May 2020 #10
Too bad the rest of the story is behind a paywall. sinkingfeeling May 2020 #2
I posted as much as I could, but copyright rules prevent me from posting the entire article Celerity May 2020 #3
Something I Noticed sfstaxprep May 2020 #4
good catch Celerity May 2020 #5
I don't know about this article. But as to watching the kid situation, GulfCoast66 May 2020 #6
True sfstaxprep May 2020 #7
Agree it increases their chances. GulfCoast66 May 2020 #8
The parents work and have no place for their 8-year-old kid to go Justin Rosario May 2020 #11

Ferrets are Cool

(21,110 posts)
1. If this happens to ME, they will get a face full of Mace...
Wed May 20, 2020, 08:01 PM
May 2020

then they can go cry in a corner somewhere about something real.

Buckeye_Democrat

(14,857 posts)
9. Good idea.
Wed May 20, 2020, 10:33 PM
May 2020

I only have bear spray at this time -- i.e, a BIG canister of pepper spray -- so it might be overkill if I used it on someone.

sfstaxprep

(9,998 posts)
4. Something I Noticed
Wed May 20, 2020, 09:13 PM
May 2020

Aside from the obvious point of the story. He says they are watching the kid across the hall while his parents work. That kind of defeats the quarantine purpose, doesn't it? If the parents catch the virus at work, and transmit it to their kid at night, then the kids goes across the hall and infects that whole family.

What am I missing?

Celerity

(43,510 posts)
5. good catch
Wed May 20, 2020, 09:25 PM
May 2020

I would guess they are banking on the parents not catching it. Seems risky. The only way it would be totally safe is if the people watching the children for their neighbours already had the virus and are now immune and cannot transmit it to anyone.

GulfCoast66

(11,949 posts)
6. I don't know about this article. But as to watching the kid situation,
Wed May 20, 2020, 09:31 PM
May 2020

We all have to make various decisions based on circumstances we can’t control. They are obviously close to the family and perhaps if they don’t watch him then he will be left alone or a parent will lose their job and thus their home.

We are refraining from socializing with one exception. A good friend of ours comes over and stays every weekend for beer and cooking. Plus she is the only person we take fishing on the boat. She is single, in her 40’s and lives alone in a 700 ft apartment. We see her every weekend and decided to continue after the lockdown. She is not working and not socializing with anyone else. Is it a risk. Of course. But so is going grocery shopping. Or to work when we get called back.

People are not going to stay locked in their homes for 3-6 months. We just have to be prudent about the decisions we make.

Unfortunately, too many people are not even trying.

sfstaxprep

(9,998 posts)
7. True
Wed May 20, 2020, 10:07 PM
May 2020

But at least it sounds like your friend is not around anyone else

I know that they likely have a reason for watching the kid. But if his parents are out in public, perhaps encountering the virus, they are putting themselves at risk. And they won't know until it's too late. If they are willing to accept the potential consequences for their good deed, then that's their choice I guess. But that's exactly how this virus spreads.

GulfCoast66

(11,949 posts)
8. Agree it increases their chances.
Wed May 20, 2020, 10:17 PM
May 2020

But what we are doing now is about mitigating risks.

While they add to their risk, nothing like if they were going to bars, nail salons and ignoring social distancing.

As we learn more it appears almost all spread is about being in close, prolonged indoor exposure to infected people. Even surfaced don’t seem to spread it much which is not surprising

If everyone kept this and mind and let it shape their behavior we could get this under control and not shut down everything. Unfortunately, I’m not optimistic. Trump politicized it and now his crazies see taking precautions as a political statement.

11. The parents work and have no place for their 8-year-old kid to go
Thu May 21, 2020, 04:56 PM
May 2020

You're not missing anything. Neither parent can afford to quit their job and there is no daycare they can send him to. At least one in their price range. It's not ideal but we do what we must.

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