Autism Confidential

Autism Confidential Podcast

Autism Confidential shines a light on the hottest issues in the world of autism, including topics often shunned by conventional media. Who cares for autistic adults after their parents die? How can we fix our broken care system? What interventions help, or hurt? Join hosts Jill Escher, Amy Lutz and others from the National Council on Severe Autism as they take on the hardest questions of autism with leading thinkers and doers.

  1. Special: Mothers Day 2026 - Amplifying Mothers

    May 11

    Special: Mothers Day 2026 - Amplifying Mothers

    Across seventeen separate kitchens and living rooms, the same patterns surface. Children who cannot describe their own symptoms have aggressive behaviors read as "just autism" instead of as pain, neuroinflammation, catatonia, or seizure activity. Inside these families, profound autism arrives with company: Whitney on tuberous sclerosis complex, Lydia on type 1 diabetes, Heather on SYNGAP1-related disorder, Jillian on PANS/PANDAS, Erica C. on Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Elena on Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and tonic-clonic seizures, Michelle on gastrointestinal disease. Whitney and Christine describe catatonia severe enough to require electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), a treatment most listeners have never been told is part of profound autism care. The same response keeps coming back from too many clinicians, a psych med and a restraint order in place of a workup. Diagnostic overshadowing has a body count, and these mothers can name it. Three other themes repeat. Trust yourself; you know your child best. Fierce love is a clinical skill. When the system has no service that fits your child, you build one. Mothers in this episode fight schools and therapy centers after their children are harmed or their rights are trampled. Other mothers describe building transportation services, programs, and supports from scratch because no one else would. NCSA exists because this population has been missing from the public conversation about autism. These mothers are the correction. Mother's Day 2026, NCSA released a short reel on the hour from 10am-6pm CT on Facebook and Instagram. We conducted interviews with mothers who had been nominated by the community. This podcast episode is a compilation of the 17 short stories shared. Articles for each mother with more detail will be coming soon on the NCSA website. NCSAutism.orgCHAPTERS:00:00:00 Stephanie00:02:50 Renee00:05:46 Whitney00:08:47 Susan00:10:41 Kim00:12:24 Erica P.00:14:36 Lydia00:16:48 Jen00:19:52 Heather00:23:44 Christine00:27:37 Amy00:29:29 Jillian00:32:43 Keynote: Kiki00:42:11 Erica C.00:45:44 Zuheil00:48:20 Elena00:52:44 Michelle

    59 min
  2. Autism Wars - After Action Review with Jonathan Machnee

    Apr 21

    Autism Wars - After Action Review with Jonathan Machnee

    Jonathan Machnee did close to a decade inside the neurodiversity movement as a true believer. Then his military intelligence training kicked in. He started analyzing the battlefield, mapping the factions, writing the reports. He left the movement, but he didn't leave the work — he turned it into a Substack called Dispatches from the Autism Wars and a podcast called Christianity on the Spectrum. In this conversation, Jonathan joins NCSA Executive Director Jackie Kancir for a wide-angle, two-hour after action review of where the autism discourse has been, where it's gotten stuck, and what an honest path forward might require. We trace the inflection points from Jim Sinclair's 1993 "Don't Mourn for Us" speech through the importation of the social model of disability into autism advocacy. We unpack a Rawlsian framework for autism ethics — the veil of ignorance applied. We borrow from Bonhoeffer, Hannah Arendt, and Aldous Huxley. We name the linguistic tricks (jingle fallacies, Mott-and-Bailey arguments, manipulative underspecification) that have hollowed out the words we need most. We sit honestly inside the conversations the autism community has been told it's not allowed to have — about facilitated communication, about vaccines, about whether to split the spectrum diagnostically. Jackie shares her daughter's story: a sixteen-year diagnostic odyssey that ended at a SYNGAP1 genetic mutation. Jonathan shares why he no longer believes that one word — autism — can carry the weight we keep asking it to carry. They disagree, civilly, exactly once. Mentioned in this episode: Jim Sinclair, "Don't Mourn for Us" (1993) The social model of disability The Lancet Commission on Profound Autism The SPARK study and de novo genetic mutations Amy Lutz, Chasing the Intact Mind The Autism Science Foundation Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the wheel of injustice Hannah Arendt on the loss of common language John Rawls's veil of ignorance About the guest: Jonathan Machnee is the writer of Dispatches from the Autism Wars on Substack and the host of Christianity on the Spectrum. He is a former U.S. Army military intelligence officer with a graduate background in counter-forensics, and a Level 1 autistic adult. About the host: Jackie Kancir is the Executive Director of the National Council on Severe Autism (NCSA), a national nonprofit advocating for individuals, families, and caregivers affected by severe forms of autism. Connect with NCSA: https://www.ncsautism.org

    1h 51m

About

Autism Confidential shines a light on the hottest issues in the world of autism, including topics often shunned by conventional media. Who cares for autistic adults after their parents die? How can we fix our broken care system? What interventions help, or hurt? Join hosts Jill Escher, Amy Lutz and others from the National Council on Severe Autism as they take on the hardest questions of autism with leading thinkers and doers.