I know.
You girls were just looking for a place to flex your outrage muscle and I'm a kill joy.
You should break up with me and stalk someone who interests you then.
I wasn’t aware that there was a Let the Autistic Babysit! movement. In my experience, that isn’t a thing.
I wouldn’t care if he was in the same school or class as my kids. They would be very well equipped to interact with him, both by nature and personal experience.
I wouldn’t be uncomfortable to have him live in my neighborhood. I have a profoundly and similarly disabled child living in my neighborhood now. You probably do too.
Dealing with autistic kids isn’t rocket surgery. And the only issue in the matter at hand is whether the school already fulfilled its duties or should be forced to do so now. It’s before an ALJ. No apparent complaint that the kid isn’t being permitted to babysit.
The public schools are currently tasked with educating the disabled. Whether that should be the law or not, it’s hardly a recent development. Anyone who has spent time with autistic kids growing up knows they require a certain type of handling and intervention. The school is basically being accused of ignoring multiple red flags, its legal responsibilities, and foreseeable problems until things manifested tragically. Let it play out.
I'm sure you'd all do a better job than these parents with this profoundly disabled child.
Explosive anger is a very common companion to autism. Many of us know that from personal experience. A simple internet search on the subject produces page after page of directly responsive hits. If, as the complaint alleges, the aide and the teacher chose to speak to each other about this kid's behavioral issues in his presence and in front of his class, I'd say maybe even you wouldn't have handled that very well. And I'm assuming you don't have a neurological disability—at least not a diagnosed one.
Fairly straightforward complaint that the district repeatedly failed to provide required services and train its personnel when you actually read the filing. Whether the schools should be tasked with the burden is a reasonable question. Currently they are however and it’s hardly a mystery that autism and explosive behavior are often seen together. Trivializing the case is easy, of course.