Well. That's treatment of autistic people I've not run into, thankfully.
In terms of insult, I NEVER see autistic used. Its too many syllables and letters. Au-tis-tic. Funky to spell, annoying to say. Retard is used far more often, simply because its easier. The whole autism thing I've only seen used IRL as a questioning insult of someone who behaves very, very peculiarly - to put things lightly.
In terms of people, someone reasonably close to me is autistic. He hasn't had it easy, though he hasn't been abused either. More, he was taken advantage of by other children at the school he went to, and ended up doing a lot of stupid things like eating a whole packet of laxatives on a dare, because you could make him do pretty much anything. Wasn't treated well.
Take him out of school, and the teenage way of things there, and he's better. Doesn't really get a lot of flak from people, its just he's fairly... shy is probably the best way to put it, and still does stupid things when at parties - though that's not too uncommon among teenagers.
Have I ever seen him as not human? No. I've seen him as different, though that's in the same way I see everyone who is more sports/athletics oriented as different. As a gamer and IT/Maths/Physics/Chem nerd, its kind of my antithesis.
Same goes for anyone with any kind of disability I see. They're people. They've got their problems, but so do we all. What matters isn't that we have them, but how we deal with them. Most people I know of think the same.
Granted, most people I know aren't your average person, having a generally higher level of education, as well as a higher level of interest in the IT/gaming side of things, but in my local main city, they have the poor and disabled selling newspapers on the streets as a kind of mercy job. No-one that I've seen abuses them. More often, people just take a break and talk to them for a bit instead.
So, in general I haven't seen the kind of abuse of autistic people you mention at all, though I don't doubt it happens. Either way, for what I think, people are people. Some people are dicks, others may as well be saints. You can't judge that based on how someone looks or sounds, or how much or little they understand. You can only judge them based on their actions. If someone's nice, I'll treat them nicely. If someone's a dick, I'll try to avoid them. There's nothing more to it than that.
In terms of insult, I NEVER see autistic used. Its too many syllables and letters. Au-tis-tic. Funky to spell, annoying to say. Retard is used far more often, simply because its easier. The whole autism thing I've only seen used IRL as a questioning insult of someone who behaves very, very peculiarly - to put things lightly.
In terms of people, someone reasonably close to me is autistic. He hasn't had it easy, though he hasn't been abused either. More, he was taken advantage of by other children at the school he went to, and ended up doing a lot of stupid things like eating a whole packet of laxatives on a dare, because you could make him do pretty much anything. Wasn't treated well.
Take him out of school, and the teenage way of things there, and he's better. Doesn't really get a lot of flak from people, its just he's fairly... shy is probably the best way to put it, and still does stupid things when at parties - though that's not too uncommon among teenagers.
Have I ever seen him as not human? No. I've seen him as different, though that's in the same way I see everyone who is more sports/athletics oriented as different. As a gamer and IT/Maths/Physics/Chem nerd, its kind of my antithesis.
Same goes for anyone with any kind of disability I see. They're people. They've got their problems, but so do we all. What matters isn't that we have them, but how we deal with them. Most people I know of think the same.
Granted, most people I know aren't your average person, having a generally higher level of education, as well as a higher level of interest in the IT/gaming side of things, but in my local main city, they have the poor and disabled selling newspapers on the streets as a kind of mercy job. No-one that I've seen abuses them. More often, people just take a break and talk to them for a bit instead.
So, in general I haven't seen the kind of abuse of autistic people you mention at all, though I don't doubt it happens. Either way, for what I think, people are people. Some people are dicks, others may as well be saints. You can't judge that based on how someone looks or sounds, or how much or little they understand. You can only judge them based on their actions. If someone's nice, I'll treat them nicely. If someone's a dick, I'll try to avoid them. There's nothing more to it than that.