Incel_Doomer
Officer
★
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2023
- Posts
- 587
No exaggeration I have probably applied for 1,500 jobs. 99.5% just get no answer, although occasionally I get an interview. Then they ask me questions, the answers to which are in my CV, and sometimes you have to submit a CV, and also manually answer questions, answered in the CV, to submit your application. Then obviously I don't get the job, although sometimes they do send a boilerplate rejection message at that point.
Anyway I have applied for jobs, got ghosted, then gone in the shop later and they have hired a person in a wheelchair, or a butch, obese lesbian with a nose ring and short rainbow hair, or a fresh Third World immigrant speaking broken English. It's ridiculous. The message from society is clearly just go and kill yourself, subhuman garbage. Bear in mind, as I've discussed elsewhere, I'm not someone in a helmet and hi-vis vest, I turn up clean and tidy, decent suit, reasonable physical shape, neat hair/facial hair, polite, on time etc. Everything under my control is on point. Normies just hate autists. We creep them out and although they won't admit it, they really just want us to FOAD.
I do sometimes wonder if part of the reason we exist is as a backup social system though. For when, as currently, evil people take over the command posts of society, not everyone just blindly follows. Maybe the tribes which survived and reproduced most successfully had like 95% normies who just obey authority unquestioningly, and 5% autists/schizos as an emergency backup system for when that fails.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has published new data that shows just 22% of autistic adults are in any kind of employment. This is a shocking figure, which is even lower than previously suggested in surveys our charity has run.
The Disability Employment Gap is still too wide, with around half of disabled people in work, compared to over 80% of non-disabled people. But the autism employment gap is even wider, with just 22% autistic people reported in paid work. We are really worried that out of all disabled people, autistic people seem to have the worst employment rate. While not all autistic people can work, we know most want to.
Unemployment has consistently been found to have a negative impact on a range of health outcomes. Reviews have found links between unemployment and self-rated health, with worse effects for men and those unemployed due to health, and ameliorated by strong social networks. There are similar relationships with mental health, including depression, anxiety, and self-esteem.
Anyway I have applied for jobs, got ghosted, then gone in the shop later and they have hired a person in a wheelchair, or a butch, obese lesbian with a nose ring and short rainbow hair, or a fresh Third World immigrant speaking broken English. It's ridiculous. The message from society is clearly just go and kill yourself, subhuman garbage. Bear in mind, as I've discussed elsewhere, I'm not someone in a helmet and hi-vis vest, I turn up clean and tidy, decent suit, reasonable physical shape, neat hair/facial hair, polite, on time etc. Everything under my control is on point. Normies just hate autists. We creep them out and although they won't admit it, they really just want us to FOAD.
I do sometimes wonder if part of the reason we exist is as a backup social system though. For when, as currently, evil people take over the command posts of society, not everyone just blindly follows. Maybe the tribes which survived and reproduced most successfully had like 95% normies who just obey authority unquestioningly, and 5% autists/schizos as an emergency backup system for when that fails.
New shocking data highlights the autism employment gap
The Office of National Statistics (ONS) has published new data that shows just 22% of autistic adults are in any kind of employment. This is a shocking figure, which is even lower than previously suggested in surveys our charity has run.
www.autism.org.uk
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has published new data that shows just 22% of autistic adults are in any kind of employment. This is a shocking figure, which is even lower than previously suggested in surveys our charity has run.
The Disability Employment Gap is still too wide, with around half of disabled people in work, compared to over 80% of non-disabled people. But the autism employment gap is even wider, with just 22% autistic people reported in paid work. We are really worried that out of all disabled people, autistic people seem to have the worst employment rate. While not all autistic people can work, we know most want to.
Employment and unemployment
Explore trends and inequalities in employment, and what these mean for people's health.
www.health.org.uk
Unemployment has consistently been found to have a negative impact on a range of health outcomes. Reviews have found links between unemployment and self-rated health, with worse effects for men and those unemployed due to health, and ameliorated by strong social networks. There are similar relationships with mental health, including depression, anxiety, and self-esteem.
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