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Vicious: Aac

Allistic (non-autistic) children learn to be vicious at age three. They yell "I hate you!" and slam doors. They call their sibling a "poopy head." They learn that words have power—to hurt, to reject, to get a reaction.

If we program a non-speaking person’s AAC device to only say "Please," "Thank you," and "I need the bathroom," we are raising a robot, not a human. vicious aac

But there is a shadow side to this technology. We don't talk about it enough, but we need to: What is Vicious AAC? Simply put, Vicious AAC is when a non-speaking individual uses their communication device not for polite requests or academic testing, but for brutal, unfiltered honesty, sass, and revenge. Allistic (non-autistic) children learn to be vicious at

If you have spent any time in the disability community, you know the magic of AAC (Augmentative and Alternative Communication). It’s the iPad, the dedicated device, the picture board that gives a voice to non-speaking or minimally speaking individuals. If we program a non-speaking person’s AAC device

Here is the hard truth:

And frankly? In a world that constantly infantilizes disabled people, a little viciousness is exactly the right amount of rebellion.

We celebrate the "first words." The "I love you." The request for a favorite snack.