Sorry,
I misspelled it. Think of those commentators who post 12 paragraphs of text in response to a 1 sentence comment, who go on and on and on, who seem to be tone deaf to decorum or how people feel about them, who don't realize all their posting accomplishes is to get people to ignore them, who come with wacky off the wall ideas, who generally act in off-putting or unattractive ways.
They are annoying and they turn people away from participation. So no one misses them when they are gone. My first impulse is not to care when they leave; things are better without them. And often they are destined to leave regardless what we do when we don't all bow down to their perfect wisdom and join up with their hobby horse ideas.
Oh, 'sperg.' I have a 25-year-old son who has Asperger's, which, in my way of thinking is much more appropriately placed, as is the case in DSM-6, in the autism spectrum (attempts to create boutique diagnoses generally represent some heavy dose of denial). My first college-degree-related job out of college was working with people who were profoundly autistic. So I'm familiar with the term, etc.
It did come across to me, though, as ironic and funny that, while you spoke of "commentators who post 12 paragraphs of text in response to a 1 sentence comment, who go on and on and on, who seem to be tone deaf to decorum or how people feel about them," I would place large bets on the likelihood that significant numbers of people here on BF would consider that characterization as applying to both you and me!
But they are still people who need our help; probably more so than others. (Whether we as a community should help them or not is above my pay grade.)
Here's my arrogance again: it's not above
my pay grade.
And here's my assessment:
- People with autism need help, but while they require a different approach, they are not immune to what I described in my previous message about desire to change.
- People with autism (a) want to refuse to believe they have autism, and (b) they tend to dislike others with autism more than anyone else dislikes them.
- People with autism are generally even less interested in getting help than the average person. They want magical fixes (don't we all!), but at least, once you engage them in such a conversation, autistic folks are much more likely to just acknowledge, "Oh, if it takes all that, then forget it!"
- So we're back to, if we're grounded in reality, having to recognize that helping is a waste of time if it's not being actively sought out.
And the way we handle them can make it worse...
1. Picking a fight with them in their intro thread because they evidence some wacky idea. An intro thread is a place to get to know someone. Picking a fight just makes them feel unwelcome and us look unwelcoming. Try to find common ground, or just keep your mouth shut other than to say 'hi'. There will be time enough to talk about the other issues. If you really really must register your objection to someones idea, start a new topic about that. This is just basic politeness. You wouldn't do that to someone you first met in person.
2. You don't have to jump down their throat every time they say something crazy. Challenging them on every little thing only makes them act out worse. Just because they say something you find objectionable doesn't mean you have to pick a fight. We're not conformists, no one expects everyone to think alike. The impulse to eject 'bad think' and make sure no one will think we're guilty by association and enforce conformance is a feminine, not masculine one.
3. You know that phenomena where the pretty girl in school decides to put in their place or even destroy some unattractive guy or girl who 'stepped out of line' and tried to hit on her or act as an her equal? That same sinful impulse may be at work in how people sometimes respond to these types.
I've also seen #3 at work with other's who've been driven away that aren't so much classic sperges but rather just unattractive or socially autistic in some way.
I'm going to assume for the sake of this discussion that you're at least partially talking about the situation with James. Publicly, he was probably
a bit overreacted to, but, without beating a dead horse, he behaved in ways that probably very properly inspired a better-safe-than-sorry approach.
I can also assure you that, in private messages between James and me, I offered my high-pay-grade and very appropriate help --
because just bantering with him to dissuade him from publicly going out on the limbs he was going out on wasn't dissuading him. In our private conversations, his words said he wanted to participate in getting constructive feedback, but his actions (and most especially his dramatic exit from Biblical Families) spoke more eloquently. My heart goes out to him in a big way, but, again, if someone is unwilling to accept help from someone capable of providing it and instead shifts over into inspiring others to sympathize and interpret that he's been victimized, then the result shouldn't be surprising.
The problem with autism is that it always represents a voluntary and purposeful disconnectedness from normal social norms, and the degree of this is what predominantly places a person on the particular point on the autism scale that they inhabit. The problem that compounds the first problem is that the parents of autistic children generally have no idea what to do, and this is further compounded by the fact that, even if they seek help, they are most likely to get it from the public school system, which
also has no clue what to do to actually
help autistic kids but instead uses them as cash cows, because the feds provide 2:1 student:teacher ratio for autistic children, so school systems everywhere are reclassifying developmentally-delayed students from their 4:1 ratio into supposedly being autistic. This results in all social and academic expectations being dropped into the basement for autistic children.
Then they become adults, uninterested in personal insight but incapable of creating lives for themselves the way their parents did.
I wish James would come back, sooner rather than later. But giving him some feedback about how inappropriately he's behaving is far more kind than being gentle about it.