When Christina Buttons was 30, she was diagnosed with autism — and felt
immediate relief. The diagnosis explained her teenage mental health
crises, her social difficulties, her sense that something about her was
just "off." She joined the online autism community, started advocating,
and built an identity around it.
Then she started reporting on it. And what she found made her question
the diagnosis itself.
In this conversation, Christina walks through the broadening of the DSM
criteria, the "female autism phenotype," social camouflaging, and how a
clinical disorder became a social identity that almost anyone can adopt.
We get into the pipeline from autism to gender dysphoria, why both
diagnoses share the same demographic, and what happens to the kids with
profound autism when the label expands to cover everyone.
Then we go to California — where Gavin Newsom has restructured Medi-Cal
so federal mental health dollars now fund housing, groceries, drum
circles, and "radical inclusivity." Where schools have become psychiatric
clinics. Where a 12-year-old can receive a diagnosis and ongoing therapy
without their parents ever being told. And where the line between mental
health treatment and progressive activism has been deliberately erased.
Christina's reporting at City Journal and the Manhattan Institute is some
of the most important work being done on this beat. This is one of those
conversations you’ll think about for weeks afterward.
Chapters:
00:00 Christina Buttons on the Autism Social Contagion
01:19 Christina's Adult Diagnosis — and Why She Now Doubts It
11:02 The Real Harm of Overdiagnosis
19:50 Autism as Social Currency in LA
28:43 The Pipeline From Autism to Gender Dysphoria
31:07 Inside California's $15B Mental Health Scandal
41:00 How the Trans Agenda Hides in California Schools
50:19 Is the Internet a Trap?
1:01:53 Are We Becoming a Society Where Everyone Has a Disorder?
1:09:15 The Software-Hardware Trap of Modern Psychiatry
1:12:28 The Graceless Culture and the Loss of Agency
1:20:20 How Do You Want to Be Remembered?