Category Archives: Violence against us

Autistic self-affirmation superstars vs. busy body identity policing bullies

TW: venting, community dynamics/conflicts, bullying, identity policing, gaslighting, curebies, counter-aggression, racism, ableism, police shootings, violent assault and murder of autistic people, “bad autie” stereotype

Fair warning: this is a much harsher tone than what I usually post here.

Every community has their self-appointed identity police, that constantly ride people for not being <thing> enough. I’ve been carefully considering the situation around this, at times in detriment to my own health and well-being. Given that I appear to be far from alone in this unfortunate outcome, here’s my carefully considered summation:

Fuck off, you abusive curebie dungnuggets. I don’t care what you think.

I know that there’s people who think the opposite: that there should be far more gatekeeping of who is and isn’t Autistic, not less, but frankly, again: I don’t care. You don’t get to control the rest of us like that, it’s cruel, if not sadistic. I refuse to even entertain this sort of assimilationist, supremacist, gaslighting as fuck garbage thoughts past that. If every once in a blue moon, someone sincerely questions if they’re autistic, then finds out that they’re something else, that’s *COMPLETELY FINE AND HAPPENS IN ALL COMMUNITIES*. A few very annoying VOCAL members of our community act as if there’s never been a single straight person who was “lesbian in college”, and *SOMEHOW*, the LGBTQIA+ community is doing just fine, despite this. (Don’t assume that coming out as LGBTQIA+ is less life-changing and critical than “coming out” as Autistic, either. They’re both significant life decisions, with their own benefits and costs.) Autistic-questioning people aren’t flooding the gates, that’s some terf-like nonsense, settle the hell down, please.

I’ve seen this happen in the LGBTQIA+ community as well. “Who gets to belong? Who is really trans? Do you have to have surgery to *really* be trans? Are enbies valid? Is “autism is a gender” valid?” Sometimes, it can feel as if Tumblr has taken over the whole damn planet.

That said, I got this sort of thing cleared up for myself years ago, when I read this article. (Fair warning: it’s long. 6,000 words long.) We may or may not be past the point of having to guardedly form ourselves as a (figurative) nation, but I’m very certain that policing who gets to be Autistic is toxic, and benefits nobody, including the people insisting on trying to do so. (If this is you: think of all the times you could’ve been stimming or happily enjoying interests instead of obsessing over who does or doesn’t belong.) I much prefer Amy Sequenzia’s approach, which is also the position that ASAN takes, and that many members of our community (and researchers) share as well. *This* is how we learn how to share and grow together as a community – and in turn, increase the probability of being able to shift public opinion of us in our favor, by fostering a mutually supportive and beneficial community for *all* of us. What policing who is or isn’t autistic does is reinforce the idea that being Autistic is something undesirable, because <sarcasm>after all, we’re made up of sufferers and Potentially Dangerous Visual Clickbait, erm, Persons™</sarcasm>,  not a vibrant community of individuals, each with our own unique life experiences.

“But really, what if someone’s just faking because they think autism is a fad?” Are you kidding me? Autism has never been a fad. (I swear, if you compare this to white people appropriating Black or brown experiences, my mixed-race ass is personally going to stuff a smelly tube sock in your “stfu, racist” mouth.) Every group of marginalized and oppressed people has their “what if we’re all like you, a little?” moment in the media spotlight, and that moment has mostly passed for us (and was barely a moment – a mostly shitty moment – to begin with). I’m a *lot* more concerned over the tendency to frame us all as dangerous or even murderous (cliff’s notes version: we’re not only not dangerous, we’re far more likely to be violently assaulted or murdered than the other way around). This is patently obvious to anybody who uses their preferred search engine to find out.

There is a standing bias against people self-dxing. This shows up in subtle ways as well as obnxiously obvious ones (as noted above). “Really, being clinically diagnosed was the best thing that ever happened to me. It’s the way forward.” No, *informed self-awareness and acceptance* is the way forward, how that happens depends on someone’s life situation. Not everybody gets “caught” (word choice deliberate) by the school system, not everybody can afford diagnosis, not everybody sees a reason to “confirm” what they’ve come to on their own, and who knows how many of us are in some sort of liminally autistic void between the societal goalposts. It shouldn’t be anybody’s job to decide that someone isn’t Autistic, “officially” or not. That ultimately is a personal choice, even if there are differences of opinion, clinically or on a community level. Go live your own life, we already have way too many people trying to control (or end) ours. Priorities.

What if we talked about being Autistic as a self-affirmation process, rather than diagnosis? By which I mean, whatever community-based tools and *actually supportive* community processes we have in place to figure out if you’re autistic, that’s fine, as is encouraging autistic-questioning people to take their time and do their research, and from that, choose whatever diagnostic pathway is best for them, including not getting clinically diagnosed (or even, depending on the person’s situation, even letting other people know that they’re Autistic, on the basis of *their* needs, not someone else’s). (BTW, this is no different than the process for people who come out as trans. Again: life-altering choice.)

Self-acceptance is where the actual healing happens, regardless of age or background. Whether that’s by doing a well-researched self-diagnosis, via a clinician, or both — no matter if you’re six, or 16, or 36, or 60, or 100, your life is yours, you Know Why, that’s enough. Welcome to our community.

tools vs. “cures”

TW: ABA, CBT, interventions, behavioralism, fake “cures”, restraints, institutionalization, murder of autistic youth, functioning labels

a tool is something that you control, either on your own or in conjunction with others, consensually.

a cure (including “cures” that don’t work) is a solution to a problem. it’s goal is to make whatever the presumed problem is – in this case, “autism” – go away. a cure can be chosen, but also, is frequently prescribed, if not forced or coerced.

given that autism isn’t a problem (and more specifically, a disease, injury, or despite the nomenclature, a “disorder”), but a type of neurology (as well as the social context surrounding that neurology), all “cures” for autism are in the “doesn’t work” category. some so-called “cures” may be helpful in relation to our support needs (or in the case of things like ABA, definitely not helpful) as disabled people – but again, that’s a tool, not a cure.

understanding the difference between the two is really important, especially for disabled people, as well as those who provide support for us. consider:

  • ABA: “cure”
  • toxic autism “remedies”: “cure”
  • CBT: both “cure” and tool (it depends on usage and context)
  • self-regulation: tool
  • interests: tool
  • music therapy: both tool and “cure” (although depending on the practictioner, neurological support is probably more appropriate than cure)
  • occupational therapy (OT): tool, solution/support, “cure” (especially if the OT is focused on “fixing stims”, rather than self-regulation.)

there’s a lot of bad information (and even worse practices) that come down to thinking that things that we do naturally, need to be fixed or “cured”. including in ways that can be trauma-inducing, even fatal.

this gets back to the need for self-advocacy. more specifically, support needs, as well as the ability to make our own choices about what those supports are.

consider this statement:

“”High functioning” is used to deny support.

“Low functioning” is used to deny agency.”

our support needs vary from situation to situation, over time.

the common denominator though is tools, as opposed to cures.

this is a huge issue for us, and could stand to undergo a fundamental shift in thinking. especially among allistic, ableist professionals who are providing education and support for us, but also, among each other in our community at times.

here’s to making that happen. ✊🏽

“you’re not disabled enough to use AAC”

TW: forced commitment, prisons

i used to buy into this. i don’t anymore.

as mel baggs explains, “don’t use AAC, you’re not disabled enough, not non-speaking enough” is the wrong way to approach things.

i’ve wanted to use AAC for years, and hid out a lot when i can’t speak, in part because of my assumption that i might offend someone if i used AAC, or learned how to fluently sign. it held me back, both personally and in terms of interacting in society.

the more people use AAC, the more common it becomes, which makes it better for *everybody* who can or might benefit from its use.

i’ve spent a lot of my life hiding being non-speaking, but i’m working on that being no longer the case. it messes with my communicating with other people (imagine having to rehearse most of your conversations, and what might happen as a result), and burns me out (imagine feeling like you’re trying to shift a large truck out of a stuck gear).

yes, i can script, and mask speech, at times. it doesn’t always work. i’ll be speaking, masking away, then…i can’t. so then i start trying to cover that up. until that doesn’t work either. so then, i’ll shrug, smile and silently hope for the best. then i’ll burn out, hide out or both.

go to the store? prepare in advance. go to a meeting? prepare in advance. meet a friend? prepare in advance. if i can’t script, mask. if i can’t mask, fake non-fluid speech. if everything shuts off, shrug and smile. pray not to get detained, arrested or 5150ed.

here’s to no longer hiding. 💃🏽

take the mask off

cw: twitter, discourse, criticism, assault, violence, murder

i deleted my twitter account a while back, but i lurked the web page for this campaign. twitter gives me hives. too much competition for attention, too many people, too aggressively interactive, too overwhelming. arrgh, arrgh, arrgh, arrgh. say it, Deanna.

A picture of Deanna Troi (Star Trek: The Next Generation) having an empathic meltdown.
A picture of Deanna Troi (Star Trek: The Next Generation) having an empathic meltdown.

so there’s that. here’s a post about the start of the campaign.

i liked #takethemaskoff‘s focus on neurodiversity, and education about the harmful effects of masking.

i’m still figuring this out, so i could be wrong here on this point, but one of the things i was seeing seemed like the flip side of saying “being on the spectrum isn’t a disability”; people who have become so good at masking that they’re experiencing personal trauma because of years or decades of being masked all the time. which is a recipe for social burnout, and eventually, autistic burnout.

in my opinion, one of the more positive aspects of things like “take off the mask” is that people who fit more within the “white aspie” social paradigm are starting to open up more about being – oh the ever lasting shocking horror – disabled. that’s where our real collective power is as a community, because it’s the truth. that part of the campaign was important, it just got framed in a “coming out day” sort of way that doesn’t really work, and is sort of offensive.

having Asperger’s be the framework for inclusion and acceptance (when that was possible, which definitely wasn’t, and isn’t, common, because of discrimination against us, no matter where we are on the spectrum) meant that it emphasized “high functioning” as a social paradigm. which is a very shaky foundation, because it’s not representative of anything, and because it can cover up that people are masking to “fit in”, and at a high personal cost. as an autistic person, i’m disabled, and i don’t fit in. i definitely don’t fit into tech culture (or office culture in general), i fare better in subcultures, but that’s because those spaces have a wider tolerance range for being “weird”, while still being ableist, sexist, racist, frequently classist as well. i have more in common with people who have difficulties fitting into society, who have long-term support needs, than someone like Temple Grandin or John Elder Robinson. (also, they didn’t “fit in”, either. they just become famous and successful. shrugs.)

unmasking as an individually practiced political strategy has its problems though.

i worry that this’ll come off as too critical, but here goes. i’ll all for people taking the risk to stim in public if they feel they can risk it — but as a trend? for everybody? absolutely not. i’m not sure that’s a guaranteed safe zone for any of us — in fact, i’m sure it’s not — but it’s definitely not that if you’re autistic and black. i think if you’ve been conditioned to suppress who you are — which a lot of us have — there’s a reclaiming process that is healthy, but starting an ad-hoc civil disobedience campaign around unmasking that prioritizes white autistics isn’t the same thing. it’s not safe to be encouraging this in this particular way for any of us, frankly, and the more at-risk someone is, the less viable (and more potentially harmful) it becomes. framing things in such a way that people are encouraged to choose between being closeted or risking getting shot, and in turn, stimming publicly or otherwise being visibly Autistic, with no plan, no precautions and no risk assessments, is not a good idea. good intentions don’t matter if someone else winds up dead from stimming in public. it’s the equivalent of street protests where nobody masks up and everybody is white, when it’s known that the cops are likely to go wild on people.

for the record, my brown, trans, autistic ass is terrified at the prospect of being pulled over by the cops, and your autistic ass (no matter what race you are) should be as well. i may – or may not – be at less risk of getting shot, but that’s not much of a consolation, when the second and third place prizes are being beaten or arrested. also, idgaf, but that’s definitely not much of a consolation at all. if anything, i’m not sure i trust that part of myself, depending on the situation. (i *really* do not like cops, for starters.)

that all said, being the fool that i am, when take off the mask started, i came up with a plan, and carefully tried out unmasking (as in, visibly stimming) in public.

speaking only for myself, here are my conclusions:

  • i was constantly afraid of getting stopped or harassed, including on side streets;
  • while it’s a nice feeling to stim in public, it’s also the sort of nice feeling that has a mind of its own, because i’m stimming. it’s not like i can necessarily say “i’ll just spin my hand on the side that’s not facing the street and hope for the best”, it depends on if i can suppress or “tone down” one hand while spinning the other (if i’m stimming with both hands). also, i encountered a few situations where my strong impulse was to start flapping my hands and arms as well, which ups the risk factor;
  • i already look somewhat “weird”, stand out for a number of reasons and already do visible things to be able to survive sensory overload, which is its own risk. i can mask that, but it messes me up. shrugs.
  • in terms of empowerment, i’m gaining a lot more from things that have nothing to do with being in public anyway, like sensory diet. i definitely don’t want to wind up punching a cop because my neurology spikes, i can’t suppress it in time, and a flailing arm results in me being critically injured or dead;
  • not all white people™ on the campaign were like this, but there were white people who said things along the lines of “i’m autistic and i’m in public! selfie time!” posts photo of themselves in public. i thought to myself “this is not gonna end well if this keeps up” because where else is left for that sort of thing to go, other than stimming in public in the most foolish way possible while white and having someone bail them out of jail, at best, or saying “woo hoo, coast is clear, i stemmed in public and everything was great!” on twitter. so then, even more foolish white people do even more foolish things, and it becomes like the time when fidget spinners were a craze, but with unfortunate outcomes, like injury or death.

conclusion: wtf? i’m not sure what the goal was here for this part of the campaign, other than “be visibly autistic”. a huge part of the problem is that we can’t do that, without risking being harassed or worse, and the more at-risk someone is (like if they’re black or brown), the greater the potential for being harmed. it’s like being visibly lesbian, gay or trans, in the most queer way possible. depending on where you live and how you’re read, it can either be a positive way of increasing visibility and acceptance, or a way for things to go completely wrong. knowing the difference is where shared community knowledge comes in, and that appears to not have been considered in this case.

i hope it is clear that my concern here is that more of us don’t wind up injured, imprisoned or dead, rather than being against us ending masking when it’s more harmful than helpful. there’s a difference though between rejecting forms of masking that do nothing but harm, and deciding to mask out of personal safety or sometimes, as a form of compensating in order to meet personal needs or goals. figuring out those differences and what they mean for us is part of community dialogue and growing together, in the hopes of creating spaces where we can safely live and express ourselves, in any number of ways. that’s going to take more work than a single campaign, and needs to be accomplished with safety for all people on the spectrum in mind.

Alternatives to ABA and behavioralism

This is a first draft. (Yes, I’m trying to set something off here.) I’m especially looking for feedback from Autistics, especially ones who went through ABA or ABA-like programs in the school system. (I’m in my 50s. I went through a whole bunch of behavioralist, ABA-like experiences, including assessment, but this was before inclusion of autistic children was mandated as part of the U.S. school system’s requirements.) “Play nice”, don’t flame me or others, but please feel free to leave comments and feedback.

For Autistic students:

— You have a right to play alone.

— You have a right to your interests.

— You have a right to say “no”, and be taken seriously.

— You have a right to your stims.

— You have a right to not make eye contact.

— You have a right to move your body.

— You have right to sit where you want, and that’s yours.

— You have a right to learn.

— You have a right not to learn.

— You have a right to make mistakes.

— You have a right not to trust people.

— You have a right to interact with who you want.

— You have a right to make friends of your own choosing.

— You have a right to respect.

— You have a right to self-determination.

— You have a right to self-advocacy.

— If nobody understands what you’re asking for, find a way to tell them. (This may take some time.)

— If doing something hurts, try to find something that doesn’t hurt that works just as well. (It’s ok if you can’t.)

— If you make a mistake and people get mad, ask why in whatever way is safe, if possible. (It’s ok to make your own decisions.)

— People say and do things for reasons other than you might think. Observe, learn, and if possible, ask. (You have a right to not respond.)

For parents:

Embrace the child who is front of you, not the one that you hoped for.

Reject ABA, both at a therapist’s office or center, and at home. Being assessed and aggressed upon by teachers messed me up, but not as half as much as having compliance forced on me at home did.  (This was before ABA was formalized as school-age “intervention” under IDEA, otherwise they probably would’ve subjected me to that as well, and fucked me up even more.)

— Advocate for your child. Parent and teacher-led advocacy is one of the things that helped me break free – not from autism, but from people who kept trying to “fix” me. Presume competence.

— If your child has affirming teachers who they have rapport with – let your child know that you support those teachers, and that you disapprove of the ones that deny your child’s humanity.

— Interests aren’t talents or career paths, necessarily. They’re interests, which is enough on its own. (If they wind up being career paths or long-term pursuits, that’s fine too.)

Never demand quiet hands. (This is part of what messed me up.) Suppressing stims, echolalia and interests is abusive. If you need a time out for yourself, take it.

Aggressive behavior is happening for a reason. Center your child’s needs, not their behaviors.

— Read the section for teachers below; it’s relevant to parenting as well.

For teachers:

— Dump ABA, including the “good” ABA. ABA is conversion therapy for autistics. Torturing children for being trans or gay isn’t acceptable, torturing us for being autistic shouldn’t be, either.

— Allow students to find their own interests.

— Don’t suppress student’s stims.

Explosive behavior (hitting, kicking) is communication and self-regulation. Find out what is being said.

— If students want to play alone, let them.

— Ask students about their interests, *gently*.

— Create a welcoming environment, full of things to explore and learn about.

— Create an environment that’s focused on learning.

— What you might think is important isn’t necessarily the same as what your students think is important.

— Don’t force gender expression. Let students express themselves in ways that work for them.

— If a student is swinging their arms, and not seriously injuring themselves: take a step back.

— No restraints! Restraints are violence.

— Every Autistic student is different.

— Every Autistic student is valid.

Erasure

Trigger warning: long read, anger, suicidality, ABA, trauma, functioning labels

This pattern: adaptive skill -> “intelligent” -> high-functioning. wtf.

Further, this pattern: need for support -> “lack” -> low-functioning. Again: wtf.

First off: it’s ableist. That’s a given. Functioning labels, intelligence and correlating adaptability to both (and its respective presumed opposites) are *all* flawed concepts.

That said, I’d like to talk about how this makes no sense. Not just because functioning labels are ableist, but how the entire pattern doesn’t make any sense.

A *lot* of being viewed as high-functioning is about masking, and possibly having some particular set of skills or talents that are viewed as “humanizing” (and under capitalism, valuable). I can do both (even if it’s sending me careening towards a meltdown while I do it), up to a point — then things fall apart. So, rhetorically speaking: what does that make me? It is virtually impossible to memorize every possible social interaction; even if some hypothetical person did so, new ones emerge regularly, if not constantly. No amount of scanning a database of situations and scripted responses, and affective empathy (if needed) can fix that. It’s as if those of us who get viewed as “high functioning” (or in some mixed state of high and low functioning, if someone is bothering to pay attention) are the opposite of the “puzzle piece” metaphor; instead of being a neurotypical person trapped inside an autistic shell, we’re autistic people trapped in a learned/assimilated neurotypical one, to varying degrees.

A huge part of this is due to viewing typed or spoken communication as a key marker of ability and intelligence, if not proof of intelligence itself. When I’m non-speaking, does my ability shift? When I melt down? When I’m non-compliant? Is an IQ test an indicator of anything at all? (If you answer is “yes”, consider: even the official WAIS site encourages people to study in advance for testing. So then, what is being tested? If your answer is speed of response as an indicator of intelligence, perhaps consider that this concept is also flawed and ableist.) Also, the lived experience of having a skill or talent in society is predicated on a complex set of social skills, and it’s rare for accommodations to be made based entirely on that skill or talent, especially if you’re marginalized or oppressed. <sarcasm> So much for talent being mapped to functionality with the inference of social acceptance and inclusion! </sarcasm>

That said, there’s also the problem of viewing “low functioning” as lack rather than difference, of equating challenges and the need for support through the lens of intelligence, if not correlating lack of speech to lack of intelligence to lack of capability. Everything from the rather condescending ways people approach facilitated communication on an individual basis, without allowing for context, training or the person’s ability to type independently, to the ways that exhibiting high-functioning traits is equated with being high functioning at all times (or for that matter, with “not really being autistic”) are rooted in biased assumptions about functionality, both “high” and “low”.

Here’s a deeper problem that I see, especially for autistic youth: either through adversives or positive reinforcement, ABA presumes making an allistic child out of an autistic one. This alone is abuse, but on top of it, there’s a presumption that you’ll ditch that “fake child” (the autistic one) and become the real one (the made-up allistic one) that was buried under a pile of broken puzzle pieces. It’s very abuser-as-false-savior-like, as a “therapeutic” approach.

The problem with this is that it’s a lie. The real child is the autistic one, (TW: ABA, coercion, violence) the rest is forced and/or bribed compliance. Further, if you remember who you actually are in adolescence and adulthood, this creates a tension between your real self and the fake allistic one — which is masking at its most harmful. It can lead to forgetting who you are altogether, so you know that your mask isn’t real, but you can’t get back to who you are before you masked, either. This was coming up a lot on the #takethemaskoff campaign: autistic people kept saying “I’ve been masking for so long, I don’t even know who am anymore.” I know what it feels like to start to forget. It’s like someone is murdering you, and you get to watch. There’s masking out of necessity and survival, as well as masking to get your wants and needs met — then there’s masking that can be overcome, safely, or that could if someone hadn’t been subjected to years of forced compliance. (These categories aren’t necessarily mutually exclusive, either.) In my opinion this is part of why there’s a link between suicidality and masking.

There’s a variety of ways that ABA and directly ABA-like things are foisted upon autistics. I know that ABA as a practice has been around since the mid-1960s, and the first assessment questionnaires have been around since then as well; my parents used behavioralist techniques that map to ABA more than closely enough to parallel ABA itself. Why that is, I don’t know (although I have my guesses), all I know is that it was traumatizing as fuck, and once the “compliance protocol” was established, it *never* went way. Not just in childhood, period. I have had to unlearn “people tell you what to do, you do it”. It’s a life skills anti-pattern.

What helped me find modes of expression and learning in the school system was *NOT* being assessed, and the more negative aspects of what my parents did at home. What did were teachers that encouraged students to find their own ways of learning and communicating, instead of trying to force us into a box. I thrived under these teachers, and didn’t otherwise. (It’s probably important to point out here that I was frequently what now gets labeled as combative, non-compliant or passive otherwise.) By high school, I learned how to coast, until I was forced out for other reasons. This wasn’t just educational, it was inter-personal as well. I was literally rescued from some personal hell, assessment included, twice — only to fall back into hell until I left the school system altogether, and I have no intentions of forgetting that.

Perhaps what is flawed here is both the entire concept of intelligence in the first place, as a presumed indicator of cognition as well as ability, if not sentience — as well as the idea of “functioning” being a fixed state, that can only be deviated from by regression or “cure”. Both of these assumptions are dangerously ableist, if not eugenicist in their world-views. This is the sort of never-ending array of conundrums that Melanie Yergeau talks about — the frequent assumption is that someone is either too autistic or not autistic enough to self-advocate. This basically is a toxic worldview, and deserves to be challenged as a pernicious threat to our well-being and survival. Self-advocacy is communication, and non-compliance is a social skill, regardless of how we have been labeled, how we communicate and express ourselves, and what levels of support we need.

Scripting and non-compliance

Scripting = making your way through a conversation based on memorized interactions.

This doesn’t include talking (or not talking) about interests, that’s its own dynamic.

It’s ok to not script because:

  • It’s painful
  • It’s exhausting
  • It’s overwhelming

That is hopefully a given, but also: it’s ok not to script because you don’t like doing it.

There’s a lot of social skills training materials around, including for autistic adults. scripting is a common topic. “How to do interviews.” “How to go on a date.” “How to keep a job.” What seems to get left out, especially in context, is that it’s ok *not* to script as well. Non-compliance is a social skill! It may not always be desirable, or even safely possible, but knowing how to not comply is a *critical skill*, every bit as much as scripting.

This has parallels to the community-based conversations around masking.

Sometimes, scripting (if possible) is necessary to avoid getting harassed, arrested or worse, but that’s not necessarily the same as doing it because it’s getting you something you want or need, past “surviving the moment”. Which is clearly important, and necessary (especially if you’re a potential target for harassment, abuse or violence, including from the police), but that’s only one facet of life (an important one). That’s a whole other conversation, though.

Scripting is usually somewhere between “massively boring” and “exhausting, sometimes painful” for me. My unmasked state of conversing is slow and with my eyes closed, or not speaking. Some sort of social make-believe conversation as part of a social transaction isn’t where I live, it’s a courtesy and an actual waste of my time and energy in most cases. It’s what I do to eat and pay the bills, as needed. Automation is a pretty strong curb cut for me.

It’s taken a while for me to be proud of bolting from shitty conversations, but i’m getting there. That’s non-compliance, too, and should be celebrated. Do I do my best if a cop stops me? Definitely, but that’s not fun, either. I don’t want someone to teach me how to “pass for the nice officer”, especially on compliance (rather than survival) terms. Work isn’t really any different, save for getting paid. ✊🏽