Will DOGE Come for the Disability Community? - Parents are terrified that school and state programs for disabled people will be cut

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Last night, a local mom called and asked for school advice. Usually, I nudge parents to set up daytime appointments and become formal clients for my autism business; I need to put some boundaries on my time. But I helped this mom for free because she’s a sweetie and she promised to make me dinner.

During our one-hour conversation about IEP legalities and other matters, she mentioned three times that thought DOGE was going to hurt kids like ours. She echoed the worries of all my clients and friends. Always in a vulnerable position and marginalized in their communities, parents with disabled children are stressed out. Big time.

Honestly, I’m fielding questions about DOGE and disability issues all day long. Will there still be college programs for kids with autism next year? What will happen to that funding for state disability services? Will these cuts embolden others to independently cut school programs for disabled kids? Even if DOGE doesn’t cut programs, will they create a hostile environment for our kids?

I can’t answer those questions or assure parents that they’ll be okay because we live in weird times. Democracy isn’t operating normally, and the big dude in the White House is renaming the Gulf of Mexico. While I think most people think that a streamlined government is a good thing, the speed and the Hulk-ish methods of DOGE are resulting in great uncertainty and fear on the ground. Families don’t trust this government to protect vulnerable kids, because compassion isn’t efficient.

What Happens to Special Ed Kids If There’s No Department of Education?

Normally, parents of disabled kids are too overwhelmed to be plugged into national politics. National politics never comes up on Facebook group chats or client conversations. If they have the bandwidth, they might get involved with local issues, where they can see the direct connection to their children’s education.

But these aren’t normal times.

One of their worries is centered around the Department of Education, which has been on Trump’s bulls-eye since the campaign. One of the main jobs of the Department of Education is writing checks to local schools to help supplement the costs of special education.

Some of what Trump says is nonsense for the MAGA base. For example, he said that he would end DOE’s control over American schools and give that power back to the states. He must know that the states already have that power, with only 10 percent of all school funding coming from the federal government. So, that “giving it back to the states” stuff is just red meat for MAGA.

Trump could close the department (if he circumvents basic democratic procedures) and pass along the check-writing power of the DOE to Health and Human Services. Presumably, HHS would hire new people to write those checks, so I can’t see how closing the DOE will lead to any savings. This proposal might happen, because Trump has to feed the MAGA beast, but it’s not going to save any bucks.

Now, parents don’t care about who writes the checks, they just want the funding to continue. They believe that Trump’s next step will be to cut funding. Even if he doesn’t do it, they think that his win has emboldened far-right-wingers who want to cut services to disabled people. There is much discussion online about a new Texas law case and a (defeated) bill in the Oklahoma legislature, both of which are attempts to reduce services to kids with disabilities.

Parents aren’t the only ones who are nervous. The feds are already not doing their share to cover special education expenses. Only 13 percent of total funding for special ed comes from the federal government, rather than the promised 40 percent. Still, those dollars are precious to local schools.

Local school budgets have zero cushion in their budget. Most funding goes towards salaries and benefits. If local school boards saw any reductions in federal funding, bad things would happen — schools would go bankrupt, high-needs kids wouldn’t be adequately supervised, and teachers would be let go.

And More

Adult services are funded at the federal level by Social Security and Medicaid. Those agencies cover the costs for group homes for folks with Down syndrome and autism, for home care workers, daycare programs, and supportive work settings.

A little change in these departments is probably warranted. The system is convoluted, for sure. Third parties dip their fingers into the honey pot. For a long time, it was impossible to talk to a real person at those agencies, because they all worked from home. For me, the biggest problem is that the system is too difficult to access, so only the most determined people can access services.

Musk is going to hack those departments apart. They will be mincemeat. Maybe it will be good for the recipients, but who knows?

I help parents fill out the paperwork to get these services. Getting money for people is a surprising and lucrative talent that I’ve discovered late in life. I worked with five families this week, and all of them worried that there would be no money left when they finished the paperwork.

Kindness Isn’t Efficient

Now, Trump hasn’t said a word about cutting funding for special education or disabled adults. There isn’t any buzz about it among other MAGA types in DC. So, why worry?

When efficiency is elevated above other values, vulnerable people lose out. That’s what makes people nervous. After all, there is nothing about disabled people that is efficient.

What if a 24-year-old DOGE worker starts asking questions about the best use of resources? He might say, given the fact that we have finite education resources, doesn’t it make sense to pile those limited resources all on the highest achievers? Why should taxpayers take care of other people’s disabled children? Wouldn’t it be more efficient to pile up all the inconvenient people in one place?

The disabled community sees themselves as DEI-adjacent. While the disabled community didn’t directly benefit enough from DEI, there was always the possibility that DEI could be used to generate more neurodiverse workplaces. DEI did help create new programs for autistic kids in colleges.

DEI also lowered the stigma around neurodiversity. Half of my friends now identify as autistic or ADHD. I’ll have to write about that another time.

The vocal attacks on DEI make the disabled community worried about being next on the chopping block. First, they came for the trans kids and DEI, and then they came for me.


All We Have Is Silence and Fear

While there may not be a concrete reason to fear cuts in education and disability — no public statements or even whispers — folks are still worried. And that should be addressed. Sure, legislators and DC folks aren’t calling for eliminating vital programs, but they are also not assuring families. Silence can be threatening.

As someone who has publically discussed his autism, Musk should assure Americans that certain groups are safe. I would love for Democrats to say that they will fight to the end for kids like mine. Instead, there is silence and fear.
 
Why does everything have to be a "community"? Go fuck yourselves.

I am now a part of the "go fuck yourselves" community.
Yeah, it pisses me off too. You get these losers who are almost always biological females or stinkditched faux females from wealthy Jewish families who happily parade for journalists who chronicle them as the only TRUE and HONEST spokescritters for their "community" of fellow tards. So because I have autism I have to accept some random 23 year old faux autist bitch from the DC suburbs (conveniently located) as my Goddess Empress and fall in line with the opinions she's spewing from the cheat sheets her folx have provided for her to impress drug addicted journoscum who are also from wealthy Jewish suburban DC families? Fuck that, to fucking hell, nobody tells me what to believe in and nobody rams their POV down my throat simply bc of a diagnosis.
 
One of their worries is centered around the Department of Education, which has been on Trump’s bulls-eye since the campaign. One of the main jobs of the Department of Education is writing checks to local schools to help supplement the costs of special education.
I guess the states and local school districts are going to have to decide which is a better use of their limited tax dollars: funding Special Ed programs or funding useless, do-nothing administrators.
 
people weren't clutching their pearls when "gifted" programs were cut so that schools could spend money on ESL and sped.
It's worse than that. Gifted kids get diagnosed with ADHD or Autism because they are bored. I've seen it a lot. Especially with boys who usually have more energy and find it harder to supress when they are bored from not being challenged.
 
If you're missing a limb, you're disabled. If you're missing an eye, you're disabled. If you're confined to a wheelchair either by injury or birth defect you're disabled. If you're developmentally stunted, you're disabled.

But if you're "sad sometimes" or have the ability to name every single Pokemon in order, you're not.

Some of the people from the first category who are missing limbs or might be a little slow can still work. Some of them actually do, and some can achieve great things. Not all of them can work however and we should strive to help them and their family/caretakers.

The people in the second category? Every single one of them can work -- the kicker is they don't want to. Nobody on this planet wants to fucking work buddy, if I could wake up every morning at 10 AM and walk to the beach and spend the entire day grilling and drinking beer I would but that's not the world we live in. "Not wanting to work" isn't a disability and we should call that out for what it is. SSDI scamming and "UBI" shit needs to be zapped.

Social Security will not remain solvent if we allow workshy parasites to game the system.
 
I don't really understand why there is the pretense they are being educated. If it's to spare the parents feelings I doubt it works. In the cases where is does... they shouldn't pretend their kid is normal.
 
It's worse than that. Gifted kids get diagnosed with ADHD or Autism because they are bored. I've seen it a lot. Especially with boys who usually have more energy and find it harder to supress when they are bored from not being challenged.
Now add in cutting those programs because it makes the underachieving minority students look bad. Sure they are just as capable of learning but just don't, or they simply can't learn but that's a conversation we can't have, but rather than nurture those special talented students to reach their full potential, we'll just throw them back into the one-size-fits-all classrooms and let them get bored and stop caring and become apathetic about education because Jamartavious and Pedro's self-esteem is more important than helping Cayden go on to bigger and better things.
 
an IEP in high school and none of my teachers would follow anything on it whatsoever and I literally had to explain what was on it to my teachers who were supposed to read it and everyone treated me like I was mentally slow even though I got better grades than they did it's generally 100% completely and utterly not trying to help people it's just trying to create little broken people so you can display them around your house so you can look like a good person metaphorically.
 
An enormous amount of money gets squandered on trying to force education on kids who honestly belong in a facility. Here's a story from last summer, even the "success story" featured isn't a success if you read to the end.
I can't find how much money this "nonprofit" was sucking in per year, they have facilities, so assume at least a few million. All to do futile therapy on a small handful of violent tards who are ultimately destined for a jail cell. If local governments had to prioritize funds, maybe they could triage out the angry pants shitters who don't even belong in a classroom. It's entirely different if the kid can realistically pass classes and appreciate their diploma as something more than a participation trophy.
 
there we go folks thats the line i came looking for, took me 30 seconds to find it.
being a scatterbrained freak who cant shut up for a millisecond and cant do basic adult tasks doesnt mean you are disabled or that you have adhd and should qualify for bennies, it generally means you are a moron and a burden on others and shouldnt be trusted with important tasks. whoda thunk that being a fuckup can hurt your career? you cant even make your way through undergrad level college because "muh adhd!!!" and you expect to be accepted to a highly valued expert position? wow thats tough bro i guess the taxpayers should all fund your inadequacy. dont forget to go visit your local reddit approved adhd psychiatrist to get your speed prescription, thatll fix you up.

I have a myriad of small mental issues that compound and affect my daily life. I just maneuver around it and get the fuck over it. No one except my family and very very close friends know about them, I don't bring them up; and compensate for them by trying a little harder.

The payoff is that my perception isn't stunted and I can make normal healthy decisions everyday and don't depend on anyone.

Americans are truly brainwashed into learned helplessness.
 
The rates of suicidality and mental illness in people with IQs significantly over the norm are very high. Imagine how much good we could do for the world if we gave potato kids kind-but-not-"educational" caretakers and babysitting only (rather than millions in the latest technologies and seventeen therapies), and used the saved money to avoid the best and brightest deciding they're so bored they should drop out of life.
 
An enormous amount of money gets squandered on trying to force education on kids who honestly belong in a facility. Here's a story from last summer, even the "success story" featured isn't a success if you read to the end.
I can't find how much money this "nonprofit" was sucking in per year, they have facilities, so assume at least a few million. All to do futile therapy on a small handful of violent tards who are ultimately destined for a jail cell. If local governments had to prioritize funds, maybe they could triage out the angry pants shitters who don't even belong in a classroom. It's entirely different if the kid can realistically pass classes and appreciate their diploma as something more than a participation trophy.
A lot of money also gets spent on keeping kids in school who don't want to be there, are just disruptions, or are violent but nobody wants to be the bad guy who expels them because of the optics of the whole thing.
 
DEI also lowered the stigma around neurodiversity. Half of my friends now identify as autistic or ADHD. I’ll have to write about that another time.
Looks to me like not only is there not "stigma" but we have incentivized self-diagnosing or diagnosis-seeking among affluent white females, specifically.

It's a prestige thing, now. Most of the time when you hear someone "has adhd" or "is autistic" the best way to figure out if it's true or not is to scan over the rest of the demographic profile. A quirk chungus female in her 30s? Definitely not syndromic. Just a basic bitch with FOMO.
 
So if a large majority of school funding comes from states, then what’s the problem with defunding the Dept of Education. I fail to see one.
The usual response is, "What about the states that are poor?! They need federal funding!" The irony is those who make that retort also bring up how the poorest states in the country are Republican ones.
 
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