Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins

38% of Stanford Students "Disabled" (I Was One Of Them) Disability-Maxing

Dec 9, 2025
Simone and Malcolm explore the alarming rise in disability accommodations at elite universities, citing that 38% of Stanford students are registered as disabled. They share anecdotes about students gaming the system for advantages like untimed tests. The hosts discuss the implications of these trends, including learned helplessness and the normalization of diagnoses by families and schools. The conversation challenges listeners to consider who genuinely needs support and proposes universal accommodations to mitigate exploitation and stigma.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Gain From Early Accommodations

  • Malcolm details the accommodations he received: private testing, computer use, extended time, and stimulant use.
  • He credits these supports for enabling his academic success and later life skills.
INSIGHT

Gaming Systems Is A Marketable Skill

  • Gaming bureaucratic systems can be a transferable real-world skill valued by employers.
  • Malcolm argues that manipulating rules predicts success in many professional roles.
ADVICE

Adapt Instead Of Moralizing Rules

  • Don't refuse modern tools or rule-navigation on principle; adapt to new competitive norms.
  • Malcolm warns hiring managers to prefer pragmatic navigators over deontological purists.
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