Summary of "MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+ Redditors HATE Autistic Redditors"
Quick recap
The creator reads and reacts to posts from an “LGBT autism” Reddit space and related threads, using sarcastic, often crass humor while occasionally showing sincere sympathy.
Main plot / flow
Intro
- Host sets the tone with jokey insults about Redditors and a few personal anecdotes (mom buying train ornaments; almost dating a woman who said “I am autistic” on Tinder).
- Brief plug for the show Love on the Spectrum as a wholesome counterpoint.
Diving into the subreddit
- The host scrolls through small, messy posts from a tiny community (the sub supposedly has ~8 weekly visitors).
- Reads awkward personals and short, odd threads—examples include “looking for a boyfriend 18–25 UK into cars” and “where is my son? help. he’s mine now.”
The big debate: should autism be part of LGBTQ+?
- A recurring post argues autism should be included in the LGBTQ+ movement.
- Thread splits:
- Proponents: point to masking parallels, identity overlap, and higher autism rates among trans people.
- Opponents: insist “autism isn’t a sexuality or gender,” argue Pride should remain focused on gender/sexuality, and worry about erasing LGBT struggles.
- The discussion grows defensive and combative; some dismiss adding autism as “silly ragebait.”
Dating and masking
- Several posts describe autistic people struggling in relationships—masking to fit in and being rejected after unmasking.
- Other commenters brag about being “direct” and claim they can quickly spot autistic people.
Harm, trauma, and faking
- One poster admits to self-injury during meltdowns, inability to form friendships, and PTSD from childhood bullying.
- Another thread calls out people “faking” autism or performing quirky traits online (TikTok/BuzzFeed attention-seeking).
Devastating parental post
- A mother of a severely autistic, nonverbal child describes exhaustion: no sleep, no help, repeated medical crises, and suicidal hopelessness.
- Host responds with blunt sympathy and an awkward aside about extreme cases and abortion, then acknowledges how impossible it is to handle alone.
Outro
- Quick thanks, subs, and a short sign-off.
Highlights, jokes, and memorable lines
- Host’s recurring snark: “your average Redditor has the IQ of a pitbull” (and pitbulls attacking red hats).
- Personal anecdotes used for comic timing: the train-ornament story and the Tinder date who “types fine” but is nonverbal in person.
- Love on the Spectrum shout-out as a wholesome contrast.
- Reading of ridiculous/awkward posts and the tiny sub stats (eight weekly visitors).
- The debate over autism in LGBTQ+ acronyms, which produced both thoughtful points (masking parallels, overlap with trans community) and exclusionary responses.
- The raw, heartbreaking parental post that shifts tone from joke to empathy.
Tone and host reaction
- Predominantly snarky and irreverent, with frequent insults and edgy jokes.
- Not entirely dismissive—host shows real sympathy for the parent and acknowledges serious situations, sometimes offering an uncomfortable but candid personal take.
- Video leans into shock humor while intermittently engaging seriously with the lived harms and complexities discussed.
People and personalities that appear or are mentioned
- The YouTuber / narrator (host)
- Reddit posters advocating inclusion of autism in LGBTQ+ identity
- Reddit posters opposing inclusion (defensive Pride members)
- A “high-functioning” autistic poster concerned about masking and dating
- An autistic poster describing self-injury, social struggles, and PTSD
- A parent of a severely autistic, nonverbal child (exhausted and despairing)
- Brief mentions: a Tinder woman who identified as autistic, the host’s fiancée, and the show Love on the Spectrum
Category
Entertainment
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