FLFreeThinker

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FLFreeThinker

FLFreeThinker

@ThinkerFl

Wife, Mom, Autism Advocate, Free Thinker, Pro Medical Freedom, Pro Informed Consent & tired of corruption, censorship and greed!

Katılım Ekim 2022
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FLFreeThinker
FLFreeThinker@ThinkerFl·
This is a spectacular response to @AlisonSinger former member of IACC. Definitely time for NEW committee members!
Sylvia Fogel MD@FogelSylvia

The April 28 IACC meeting was a meaningful step forward for the profound autism community. I welcome dialogue and I welcome scrutiny. Both require accuracy. A response to Ms. Alison Singer at the Autism Science Foundation @AutismScienceFd I look forward to continued, respectful dialogue with all members of the autism community.

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FLFreeThinker
FLFreeThinker@ThinkerFl·
@FogelSylvia Holy cow. This is such amazing and important information! Thank you for advocating for families like mine and holding people accountable.
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Sylvia Fogel MD
Sylvia Fogel MD@FogelSylvia·
Dear Ms. Singer, Your April 28 press release identifies several areas of agreement with the proposals adopted by the IACC on April 28 — among them, the urgency of wandering and elopement, inadequate medical care attributable to diagnostic overshadowing, and the persistent under-representation of individuals with profound autism in both research and federal policy. That common ground is real and valued and it is precisely because we share these priorities that the significant inaccuracies in your statement warrant a careful and direct response, in the interest of an accurate public record and the integrity of the work before us. On wandering and elopement specifically — associated with at least 7–8 preventable deaths per month, estimated from media reports in the absence of active surveillance — the April 28 proposals built directly on years of prior IACC presentations and public comment. Families and advocates have raised this issue before the Committee repeatedly, and for years the urgency of those voices was not translated into concrete action. The April 28 proposals represent exactly that translation — finally moving from acknowledgment to recommendation. That progress deserves to be recognized for what it is. Because we share common ground on these issues, I want to address several significant inaccuracies in your statement, in the interest of ensuring that the public record is accurate and that our shared goals are not undermined by mischaracterization. The Statutory Authority of the IACC Your statement asserts that the IACC's proper role is solely to "develop a strategic plan for the conduct of and support for autism research," and that the April 28 proposals fell outside that mandate. This is incorrect. I understand that this view may reflect the operational practice of the Committee during prior service periods, in which the strategic plan functioned as the primary — and at times, effectively the sole — vehicle for Committee output. That history is acknowledged. It does not, however, define the statute. The Autism CARES Act, reauthorized in 2024 (Pub. L. 118-267), establishes a broad, lifespan mandate for the IACC that extends well beyond the strategic plan requirement. While the Committee is required to develop and update a strategic plan for autism research, that requirement exists alongside, not instead of, the Committee's authority to advise the Secretary of HHS directly, coordinate federal autism activities, and make recommendations addressing prevention, identification, intervention, treatment, services, supports, and real-world outcomes across the lifespan. These are co-equal statutory functions, not subordinate ones. Contrary to the assertion in your statement, translating lived experience and urgent community needs into actionable policy recommendations is therefore not outside the Committee's role — it is central to it. The authority to make direct recommendations to the Secretary — outside of and in addition to the strategic plan — has existed since the Committee's authorizing legislation was first enacted. Whether that authority was exercised in prior cycles is a matter of historical record that this Committee does not presume to characterize on behalf of those who served before us. What is clear is that a thorough reading of the statute informed the April 28 recommendations from their inception. The Committee acted within its authority because it understood its authority. The families who have waited years — in some cases, decades — for action on these issues did not require the Committee to discover new powers. They required the Committee to exercise the powers it has always possessed. April 28 was that exercise. Profound Autism Designation and the Hughes et al. Study With regard to your critique of the Committee's recommended criteria for the "profound autism" designation, we agree that continuous (24/7) support is the central defining criterion — emphasized by both the Lancet Commission (Lord et al.) and the INSAR Delphi process (Siegel et al.) in which you participated. It is therefore particularly notable that Hughes et al. — a study on which you are an author — did not operationalize this criterion at all. I want to address both that methodological problem and your claim that excluding IQ would eliminate nearly half the profound autism population. Your press release states that 42.7% of individuals in Hughes et al. qualified for profound autism solely on the basis of IQ. What that figure does not reflect is that the study's alternative criterion — being "nonverbal or minimally verbal" — was defined so narrowly as to exclude many individuals who would be considered minimally verbal in standard clinical practice.* In other words, the 42.7% figure is an artifact of an unusually restrictive speech threshold, not evidence that IQ is the only reliable way to capture this population. Had the study used a clinically representative definition of minimally verbal, the proportion qualifying on speech criteria alone would have been substantially higher — and the case for IQ as an indispensable criterion correspondingly weaker. There is a further methodological problem with Hughes et al. that bears directly on this debate: the study did not operationalize the requirement for continuous, 24/7 support — which is widely understood to be the defining feature of profound autism. IQ appears to have served as a substitute for that criterion, not because it is the conceptually correct measure, but because continuous support needs were not assessed. Where a study does not measure what matters most, the proxies it uses in its place should not be held as the standard. Additionally, approximately 20% of participants in Hughes et al. had no IQ data available. In those cases, IQ was imputed using functional and behavioral measures — including the Vineland and the presence or absence of self-injury and aggression. This is precisely the kind of functional proxy the IACC's criteria are designed to use directly. It is difficult to argue that IQ is essential when the study itself relied on functional measures to estimate it for one in five participants. This is not unique to Hughes et al. The 2018 CDC ADDM surveillance report (Maenner et al.) — one of the most comprehensive autism datasets available, covering over 5,000 eight-year-olds across 11 states — found that nearly 40% of children with ASD had no cognitive ability data at all. If IQ is unavailable for four in ten children in a rigorously conducted federal surveillance study, it cannot reasonably serve as a required criterion for identifying profound autism in research or policy contexts. While the INSAR Delphi process included support from approximately two-thirds of participants for incorporating IQ, a substantial minority of qualified experts did not consider it necessary. IQ testing is resource-intensive, variably available, and may not be feasible or reliable for individuals with significant communication and motor challenges. In more than two decades of clinical experience, I have not encountered a single individual with a measured IQ below 50 who did not require continuous or near-continuous supervision for safety. That relationship exists — but it exists because low IQ tracks with high support needs, not because IQ is the construct we actually care about. The IACC's criteria are designed to measure that construct directly. I recognize there may be genuine disagreement here among qualified researchers and clinicians. What I hope we can agree on is the underlying purpose: ensuring that individuals with the highest support needs are no longer excluded from research and policy. A definition grounded in functional support needs — directly measured rather than proxied — is more likely to achieve that goal, not less. FACA Compliance Your allegation that the Committee did not operate within Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA) requirements is serious, and it is inaccurate. I would ask that you review these claims with counsel experienced in FACA before making such assertions in a public press release. I address each claim in turn. Your assertion that materials were "marked final" is factually incorrect as framed. Materials carried "final" in their working file names solely to distinguish them from earlier drafts and to ensure the correct version was transmitted to ONAC on April 20. The decision by ONAC staff to post documents to the public website using the original working file names — without relabeling them appropriately, as would be standard practice — was entirely ONAC's, not the Committee's. This was not a trivial oversight; it created a misleading public record for which the Committee bears no responsibility. Moreover, the claim that documents were treated as final and not subject to amendment is directly contradicted by the record. Committee member Elizabeth Bonker added language to Attachment C on profound autism during the meeting itself — precisely the kind of deliberative amendment that characterizes an open, functioning advisory committee. Members were specifically instructed to read each attachment and offer their views. That is not the behavior of a committee rubber-stamping pre-determined outcomes. It is the behavior of a committee doing its job. The procedural record is equally clear. The meeting agenda was developed in collaboration with the Designated Federal Officer (DFO). The Office of National Autism Coordination (ONAC) received proposals for full Committee deliberation on the evening of Monday, April 20. IACC members received the agenda and proposals on Thursday, April 23—five days in advance of the meeting, which is typical for a FACA committee. The agenda and proposals were made publicly available on the IACC website as part of standard transparency practices. As is customary, the distribution and posting of materials were handled by ONAC, not Committee members, and ONAC had intended for materials to be distributed on Thursday, April 23. The proposals then underwent more than two hours of open Committee deliberation, including the amendment of one proposal, before being adopted by a clear majority that included many federal members. This is precisely how a deliberative body is supposed to function. Families and advocates had brought the issue of wandering and elopement before the IACC for years, and for years it was heard and not acted upon. This meeting acted. Given your extensive twelve-year experience with the IACC, I am sure you are aware that FACA requires transparency and public access to advisory committee materials but does not establish a minimum advance distribution period. There is no specified number of days by which materials must be provided prior to a meeting. Likewise, FACA requires that advisory committee meetings be open to the public, ensuring that proposals are discussed in a transparent forum, but it does not prescribe any minimum duration for deliberation. It does not require that votes be deferred to subsequent meetings. These are the actual requirements of the statute. The April 28 meeting met all of them. I encourage you to issue corrections on both points — the "marked final" assertion and the allegation that FACA requirements were not followed. More importantly, the urgent real-world needs of the autism community — and the thoughtful, evidence-based recommendations that emerged from the April 28 IACC meeting — deserve to be celebrated and built upon. The individuals and families we both care about are best served when we direct our energy there, rather than toward assertions that do not withstand scrutiny. Looking Forward We are aligned on the issues that matter most — wandering and elopement, diagnostic overshadowing, and ensuring that individuals with the highest support needs are seen and served by research and policy. I hope we can build on that common ground. The families who have waited years — decades — for action on these issues deserve nothing less than our full collaboration and our most rigorous work. There is far more that unites us than divides us, and I remain committed to keeping the focus where it belongs: on the individuals and families who are counting on us to get this right. Regards, Sylvia Fogel M.D. Chair, Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee These statements are made in my personal capacity and do not necessarily reflect the views of the IACC or any federal government entity. *Footnote — Technical Note on the Hughes et al. "Minimally Verbal" Criterion The criteria used to define "minimally verbal" in Hughes et al. were considerably more conservative than the way the term is typically used in clinical practice. In the study, children were categorized as "nonverbal" if they had no words or word approximations — that criterion is straightforward. "Minimally verbal" was defined very narrowly: either speech consisting primarily of echolalia or jargon, or a history of administration of ADOS Module 1, which is specifically designed for individuals who do not consistently use phrase speech. The ADOS defines phrase speech as flexible, non-echoed three-word utterances that include a verb. In practice, an individual who uses a limited number of simple phrases — such as "wanna go potty" or "wanna go out" — may be administered Module 2, yet still lack the generative, flexible language expected even in early childhood. In clinical settings, such individuals would commonly still be considered minimally verbal. Importantly, the study did not use Module 2 administration as the threshold — it used Module 1 — reflecting a particularly narrow definition that does not fully align with how the term is used in clinical practice. The real-world significance of this distinction is considerable. An individual may have some simple, context-specific speech and still lack the functional communication needed for safety — for example, the ability to call 911 and effectively seek help in an emergency. The IACC's broader definition of minimally verbal is designed to capture this population accurately, rather than exclude them on the basis of a speech threshold that does not reflect functional communicative ability in the ways that matter most for research and policy.
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Sylvia Fogel MD
Sylvia Fogel MD@FogelSylvia·
The April 28 IACC meeting was a meaningful step forward for the profound autism community. I welcome dialogue and I welcome scrutiny. Both require accuracy. A response to Ms. Alison Singer at the Autism Science Foundation @AutismScienceFd I look forward to continued, respectful dialogue with all members of the autism community.
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FLFreeThinker retweetledi
Joshua Hall
Joshua Hall@JoshHall2024·
🚨BREAKING:🚨SCHIFF THE SEXUAL PREDATOR - DISGRACED US Senator Adam Schiff has been accused by MULTIPLE MEN AND WOMEN of SEXUAL MISCONDUCT related to his alleged involvement in now former Congressman Eric Swalwell's SEX RING. The two California Democrats were reportedly performing DEPRAVED SEX ACTS on many of the same individuals WITHOUT THEIR CONSENT, with much of this disgusting behavior alleged to have been IN VIDEOS ON SWALWELL'S LAPTOP, which is reportedly now in the possession of federal authorities. There are said to be photos and videos of Schiff with UNDERAGE MALES AND FEMALES as well as DRESSED IN DRAG on the Swalwell laptop. The two men are accused of being a part of A MASSIVE SEX TRAFFICKING RING involving A LAUNDRY LIST of prominent DC and California politicians, largely fellow Democrats. They allegedly transported prostitutes across state lines, many of them teenagers, for the purpose of engaging in LEWD, HUMILIATING AND ILLEGAL SEXUAL ACTIVITIES - which is a serious federal crime that carries A LENGTHY PRISON SENTENCE. Schiff is now reportedly under FEDERAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION along with Swalwell and a barrage of other WELL-KNOWN DEMOCRAT POLITICIANS for these HEINOUS CRIMES. Do YOU believe that Adam Schiff should be ARRESTED NOW AND BROUGHT TO JUSTICE? 👊🏻🇺🇸
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Bernie Sanders
Bernie Sanders@BernieSanders·
Congress needs more voices from America's working class. @claireforny has the experience and vision we need to take on the oligarchy and fight for unions, Medicare for All, and affordable housing. I’m proud to endorse her campaign for Congress.
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Pascal Najadi (USSF)🇺🇸
Pascal Najadi (USSF)🇺🇸@JfkPascalNajadX·
🚨 BREAKING: In a huge announcement, Tom Homan says MOST of the 3rd world migrants let in WILL be deported - because it's not even possible to "vet" them WE WERE LIED TO! "I think most of them will end up being DEPORTED, because we won't be able to properly vet them." "There's no way to clearly vet these people 100% that they're safe...reviewing every one of these people who came in under Biden." "Most terrorists aren't in ANY database! We don't know who they are!" "These 3rd world nations don't have systems like we do...no travel documents, no identification. And we gonna count on the Taliban to provide us information on the bad guys?!"
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FLFreeThinker
FLFreeThinker@ThinkerFl·
We need to control our own food supply! Support local farms!
Rapid Response 47@RapidResponse47

.@SecRollins: "Half of these meatpacking giants, including the largest meat packer in the world, are either foreign-owned or have significant foreign ownership and control, making them a threat not just to our cattle producers, but a threat to America itself."

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Right Pulse News
Right Pulse News@RightPulseNewss·
🚨BREAKING: Sec. Marco Rubio DROPS THE MIC on the EU accusing President Trump of violating "international law" by striking narco-terrorists "I find it INTERESTING all these countries want us to send nuclear-capable Tomahawk missiles to defend Europe. But when the United States positions aircraft carriers in OUR hemisphere, where we live, somehow that's a PROBLEM!" "I don't think that the European Union gets to determine what international law is. They CERTAINLY don't get to determine how the United States defends its national security!" "The United States is under attack from organized, criminal narco-terrorists in our hemisphere - and the president is responding in the DEFENSE of our country." "So I would say that the United States and this president has made very clear his job is to protect the United States from threats against the United States...and THAT is what he's doing in this operation." Do you firmly support Marco Rubio on this? A. Huge Yes B. No IF Yes, Give me a THUMBS-UP👍!!
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FLFreeThinker
FLFreeThinker@ThinkerFl·
@johnpavlovitz How is stating the obvious- this is one ugly ass building - racist? 🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️
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DFF
DFF@DumbFxckFinder·
Gavin Newsom proves he’s a real man
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James Woods
James Woods@RealJamesWoods·
Newsom looks like he’s waiting to get a prostate massage, not operating a power tool.
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Today Updates 🇺🇸
Today Updates 🇺🇸@TodayUpdates0·
Question for MAGA from a liberal woman. "Hi, I'm just wondering if you guys who voted for Trump — did you vote for the Department of Education to be dismantled? Because that's what he's doing right now. MAGA?
Today Updates 🇺🇸 tweet media
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FLFreeThinker
FLFreeThinker@ThinkerFl·
I guess these billionaires are ok?? Where is the “tax the rich” crowd when it comes to PedoWood events like the Met Gala or the fake awards shows?
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