Have some more unnecessary rabblerousing, courtesy of moi!
There's a delightful southern suburban single mom on my Facebook contact list who seems to love nothing more than sharing "this totally happened" stories about the amazing experiences that happen in supermarkets and on crowded buses, along with the occasional status update that is quite clearly a personal snipe against a specific individual, but she's just gonna put it out there as a general message "to whom it may concern".
This individual recently linked a wonderful and absolutely not-at-all flamebait post talking about the propagation of ableist culture and prejudice through the thoughtless appropriation and reuse of certain words. A few handy flashcards are provided as examples, with the #endthestigma hashtag prominently applied, because that's all people communicate with these days.
I was mainly just flipping past this thing because it didn't seem very interesting to me, but then I noticed a couple of the example cards. It starts off innocuously enough with "I am meticulous, not OCD", "The weather is fickle, not bipolar" (which I've never actually heard, but alright), stuff like that... But then it goes off the deep end with some zingers.
"That party was intense, not crazy. #endthestigma"
"That movie was thrilling, not insane. #endthestigma"
"That joke was corny, not lame. #endthestigma"
"That show was so dull, not dumb. #endthestigma"
...what stigma are we trying to end here, exactly? It seems less and less like you're trying to promote acceptance and tolerance of "mental health communities,invisible illness communities, as well as Neurodivergent communities (who do not understand their lived experiences as mental illnesses or disorders but rather as a natural form of human neurocognitive variation)", and more like this is just a blatant troll that would be hilarious were it not for the people actually buying into it.
Which would make sense, seeing as this whole piece was apparently written by a "Neurodiversity activist, scholar and disability justice advocate". There are some other great tidbits in the general body about how using these words is harmful and bad, including a straight-faced recommendation to use the term "handicapable".
The lady who shared this is legally blind, but I'm beginning to think she may be legally stupid as well. Y'know, to use a bigoted term.
Oh, yeah, and someone had a whoopsie and lumped "classicism" in with racism, sexism and xenophobia. Because fuck the classics.