Pauline Hanson on autistic kids in school

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stui magpie
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Post by stui magpie »

^

She's not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by Tannin »

stui magpie wrote:Some challenged kids benefit from being part of the norm, some don't, and some are just too disruptive to the rest. Horses for courses.
Spot on, Stui. (Again!)

The other thing which hasn't been mentioned here is the moronic, reflexive scorn and disgust heaped on Hanson no matter what she says. She could come out against eating babies and every man and his dog would pile in to say how stupid and ignorant she is.

Well, OK, she is stupid and ignorant. Freely granted. But the mindless shock horror reactions to everything she says - whether or not it makes sense - is disturbing. (And sometimes, possibly by mistake or fluke, she does make sense.)

We - by "we" I mean the rest of Australia, old or young, left, right, or muddled - we are supposed to be better than the likes of her. Sadly, it seems that most of us are not.
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stui magpie
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Post by stui magpie »

^

Agree.

I just had a 10 minute conversation explaining Autism to the old girl. Got the Project on TV, up comes hanson and mum says she agrees with her. FMD.

So I tell her to watch the piece, then I explain. She's had no experience of autism, no understanding at all. She pretty much equated them with kids with Down Syndrome.

Daughters partner has a brother who's autistic. Told her to quiz him on Sunday when he comes over for dinner about the behavioural characteristics.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by watt price tully »

stui magpie wrote:^

She's not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
She just doesn't know how to articulate what she means. If only she went to a separate school so she can truly get the help she needs as her attempts at mainstreaming doesn't seem to have helped her too much.
“I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman
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Post by Mugwump »

Tannin wrote:
stui magpie wrote:Some challenged kids benefit from being part of the norm, some don't, and some are just too disruptive to the rest. Horses for courses.
Spot on, Stui. (Again!)

The other thing which hasn't been mentioned here is the moronic, reflexive scorn and disgust heaped on Hanson no matter what she says. She could come out against eating babies and every man and his dog would pile in to say how stupid and ignorant she is.

Well, OK, she is stupid and ignorant. Freely granted. But the mindless shock horror reactions to everything she says - whether or not it makes sense - is disturbing. (And sometimes, possibly by mistake or fluke, she does make sense.)

We - by "we" I mean the rest of Australia, old or young, left, right, or muddled - we are supposed to be better than the likes of her. Sadly, it seems that most of us are not.
We live in an age where people decide what they feel, usually on the basis of their desire to feel nice, then adjust their reasoning to meet it. We have, as a result, a mindless, sentimental and brutal society. The reaction to Hanson, who occasionally says things that are worthy of consideration, is symptomatic of this.
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stui magpie
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Post by stui magpie »

^

As a society, we have people who feel their own beliefs very strongly and personally and attack anyone who disagrees. They pick individuals who characterise what they hate and actively seek every opportunity to attack that person, with no actual consideration of what they do and say.

It's particularly obvious from some on the outer left fringes but applies across the spectrum.

I can see them, following hanson on twitter, waiting for the next mention in the media, so they can launch into their social media tirade then leaning back happily in their chair knowing in their heart that they just made the world a better place.

the sad thing is, if anyone does exactly what they do, to someone who's opinion they agree with, the trolling and insults fly. Talk about intolerance, we're living it.

I don't understand or relate to the mentality, but I see it every day.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by Pies4shaw »

watt price tully wrote:
stui magpie wrote:^

She's not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
She just doesn't know how to articulate what she means. If only she went to a separate school so she can truly get the help she needs as her attempts at mainstreaming doesn't seem to have helped her too much.
Actual LOLs.
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stui magpie
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Post by stui magpie »

^

and proving tannin's point. :P
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by Mugwump »

The other nteresting thing about this little controversy is the role played by the media in policing the boundaries of speech. The media have relentlessly focused on the outrage and on people attacking her in highly emotional and sentimental terms, while providing no one at all to defend or discuss her point of view rationally.

Since she said something relatively debatable when taken in context, this is interesting. It creates the impression that she said something unconscionably wrong and even evil, when In fact she said something that should be assessed in the light of evidence. Thus are the limits of permissible speech enforced.
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Post by Dave The Man »

swoop42 wrote:I don't believe Pauline was really meaning to offend but like the vaccination comment it was ill informed.
She did not seem that way Today.

IF is not great with Words then maybe she needs to find someone else who is better with words to get the Idea Accross.

But I doubt that is the case
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Post by Pies4shaw »

Dave The Man wrote:
swoop42 wrote:I don't believe Pauline was really meaning to offend but like the vaccination comment it was ill informed.
She did not seem that way Today.

IF is not great with Words then maybe she needs to find someone else who is better with words to get the Idea Accross.

But I doubt that is the case
Like, for example, someone who can read and write and is fit to represent us in Parliament? If she should happen to find someone, she should feel free to step aside for them.
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Post by Skids »

Nah
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Post by Skids »

Tannin wrote:
stui magpie wrote:Some challenged kids benefit from being part of the norm, some don't, and some are just too disruptive to the rest. Horses for courses.
Spot on, Stui. (Again!)

The other thing which hasn't been mentioned here is the moronic, reflexive scorn and disgust heaped on Hanson no matter what she says. She could come out against eating babies and every man and his dog would pile in to say how stupid and ignorant she is.

Well, OK, she is stupid and ignorant. Freely granted. But the mindless shock horror reactions to everything she says - whether or not it makes sense - is disturbing. (And sometimes, possibly by mistake or fluke, she does make sense.)

We - by "we" I mean the rest of Australia, old or young, left, right, or muddled - we are supposed to be better than the likes of her. Sadly, it seems that most of us are not.
I like this post alot 8)
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Post by David »

"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
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Post by Tannin »

Nonsense. Hanson deserves to be laughed at and ridiculed. Ridicule is an essential part of democracy and no-one ix exempt from it. Especially not politicians. Especially especially ignorant bigoted ones.

There is a difference, however, between laughing at a stupid, dangerous, evil tool, and blanket rejection of any and every issue that person raises simply because of who raised it. This isn't a trivial or minor difference, it's the crucial difference between the normal and healthy rough and tumble of political life on the one hand, and mindless, bigoted group-think on the other. One preserves and is an essential part of democracy, the other is imperils the democratic process and is an essential part of hate speech and mob rule.

Is the difference clear? Let's use your example to make it so.

Hanson makes clumsily-worded statement about Halal.

(a) People ridicule Hanson as a stupid, obsessed bigot. Harsh? Yes. Unkind? Yes. Unfair? Of course. Harmful? No. It's just making a fool look like a fool, which is both a democratic right and a democratic duty. (Sometimes people use this same method to make a decent, intelligent person look bad. That's unfortunate, and I hate it, but it's the price we pay for free speech.)

(b) Mobs of people rush in to defend halal killing simply because Hanson criticised it and poison all debate or opinion on the matter (other than their own). They allow their (perfectly reasonable) contempt for Hanson the Bigot to trick them into a form of bigotry every bit as bad as and probably worse than hers. They are no longer criticising Hanson or disagreeing with her point, they are crucifying anyone (no matter how civilised and decent) who dares to question their one-eyed, polarised view and making the subject impossible to discuss in public

"Do not make any small criticism and do not ask questions" they are saying, "because if you do, we will nail you to the cross and paint "Hansonite" across your forehead".

This is not healthy democracy. This is shutting down the debate in a way which would have made Senator McCarthy proud and Stalin happy. Can you smell the pink triangle? The "Juden" tattoo? This is where it starts. Not with ridicule and humour at the expense of politicians (that's natural and healthy) but with the mob-rule crucifixion of ideas.
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