Autistic boy lured to Florida house party and then beaten by teens vol. yup...Florida

Now I have no idea what you're talking about
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I don't care what your age is, you commit a crime to me you're a criminal.
Basically I was saying that age can be a determining factor in the "kids being kids" argument.

The relationship between criminal culpability and brain development is a real thing.
 
Got a autistic like cousin. I would've tied dude up and beat him til I can't beat him no more if that happened to my people
 
My youngest brother is autistic and this makes me so mad, man. I didn't even bother watching the video because I know I'd feel worse.
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the video/report made me sick to my stomach. reason being that I have a son that is autistic. I would be going to jail for a very long time if this ever happens to him.
 
the video/report made me sick to my stomach. reason being that I have a son that is autistic. I would be going to jail for a very long time if this ever happens to him.
My oldest son is autistic, so **** like this makes my blood boil,

I'm clipping whole families if you do something like this to him.
My son has mild autism. Don't really like to talk about it honestly. But **** like this I promise you I'll catch a body for.

That kids being kids comment. Smfh. This is beyond bullying. Picking on some with a mental handicap is kids play? Some of ya got some wild non realistic views on the world we live in. That's what scares me more.
@krushin  @CashBanks  @manny1 @AO Two 

Came across this today... Article from autismspeaks.org on some new research.

http://www.autismspeaks.org/science...ds-evidence-autism-involves-too-many-synapses 
[h1]Brain Study Finds Evidence that Autism Involves Too Many Synapses[/h1]
Date: 
August 21, 2014

Researchers propose that someday it may be possible treat autism with drugs that restore normal pruning of brain-cell connections

brain_synapse_hero.jpg
Researchers have found further evidence that an overabundance of brain cell connections may cause or contribute to autism.

A newly published brain-tissue study suggests that children affected by autism have a surplus of synapses, or connections between brain cells. The excess is due to a slowdown in the normal pruning process that occurs during brain development, the researchers say.

The study team also found that the medication rapamycin both restores normal synaptic pruning and reduces autism-like behaviors in a mouse model of autism. They propose that someday a similar medication might be used to treat autism after a child – or even adult – has been diagnosed.

The report, by neuroscientists at Columbia University Medical Center, appears in the journal Neuron.

Autism Speaks is currently funding several studies on rapamycin. It is also supporting atreatment study  using a medication with a very similar action for treatment of autism associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). This rare syndrome often, but not always, involves autism. Indeed, the laboratory mice used in the new Columbia study were developed as an animal model of this syndrome.

“There are many unknowns in translating research from mice to humans,” comments Paul Wang, Autism Speaks senior vice president and head of medical research. “But the data from mice suggest that such medicines could have a positive effect on behavior and cognition in patients with TSC. The findings of this newest study might also be relevant to a subset of other patients with autism.” Dr. Wang was not involved in the new Columbia study.

The insights from the new study also underscore the vital importance of post-mortem brain donations in advancing research on autism treatments, Dr. Wang adds.

Autism Speaks actively supports autism brain banking through Autism BrainNet.
Learn about donor registration 
here.

The vital process of brain pruning
During normal brain development, a burst of synapse formation occurs in infancy. This is particularly pronounced in the cortex, which is central to thought and processing information from the senses. But by late adolescence, pruning eliminates about half of these cortical synapses.

synapse_pruning.jpg
In examining brain tissue affected by autism, researchers found that brain cell connections, or synapses, did not undergo normal pruning during childhood and adolescence. The image on the left shows a brain cell from a person affected by autism. It has more-abundant synapses (at each spine) than those on a brain cell from someone unaffected by autism (right). Image credit: Guomei Tang and Mark Sonders/Columbia University Medical Center.In addition, many genes linked to autism are known to affect the development or function of brain synapses. Indeed, the idea that individuals with autism have excess synapses has been proposed before.

To test this hypothesis, Columbia researcher Guomei Tang analyzed brain tissue from 26 children and young adults affected by autism. Thirteen of the children were between the ages of 2 and 9 when they died. Thirteen were between 13 to 20. For comparison, she also examined donated postmortem brain tissue from 22 children and teens who did not have autism.

Dr. Tang measured the abundance of synapses in a small section of cortical tissue from each brain. She found that, by late childhood, the density had dropped by about half in the brain tissue unaffected by autism. By contrast, it was reduced by around 16 percent in the brains from individuals who had autism.

She also found clues to what may have cause the lack of pruning. The brain cells from the individuals with autism were filled with damaged parts and deficient in signs of a normal breakdown pathway called “autophagy.” Cells use autophagy (Greek for “self-eating”) to breakdown components – include synapse connections.

Applying findings to mouse models
Using mouse models of autism, the researchers traced the pruning defect to a protein called mTOR. When mTOR is overactive, they found, brain cells lose much of their self-pruning ability. As a result, the brain cells show an overabundance of synapses.

The researchers restored normal autophagy and synaptic pruning in the mice by administering rapamycin – a drug that inhibits mTOR. Treatment eliminated the mice’s autism-like behaviors. The treatment remained effective even when administered to older mice that had fully developed the autism-like behaviors.

The researchers cite this as hopeful evidence that similar treatments might someday be used to treat autism after symptoms have fully emerged. As further evidence, the researchers found large amounts of overactive mTOR in the postmortem brain tissue of the individuals with autism.

Though hundreds of genes have been linked to autism, the researcher conclude, many if not most of them may affect this mTOR/autophagy pathway.

Tags: 
 
 
MAN this took me back to my sophomore year in high school 2000, it was finals week and all the gym classes (i think it was three classes)were taking there test in the cafeteria so it was super packed like 90 kids maybe more or less... i walk in and theres this gang member that EVERYBODY WAS SCARED OF yelling at this dude(oliver) ii really don't know how to describe the guy thats getting yelled at so I'm just gonna say a dude thats slow, i sit down at a table and just watch this guy keep yelling at oliver and everybody around is just laughing at the whole deal..   then this bully just pushes oliver on the floor and pops him in the face AND THE WHOLE CAFETERIA JUST BURST IN EVEN LOUDER LAUGHS....without even thinking twice i got up and walked straight up to the bully and put a beating on that *** i left the dude on the floor bleeding helped oliver up since he was still crying on the floor and literally went back to sit down,when the teachers walk in about 10 min later and asked what happened i told mr stephens i ****** him up for picking on people... they took me to the principals office he asked me what happened and i told him he literally just smiled shook my hand and said everybody's scared of him i laughed and said not me..... olivers parents get there and they told me thank you like a million times then they said there son was autistic hell i didn't know anything about that then....i didn't even get punished for it the bully got suspended...the next day oliver came up to me and said your my friend i was like yea i go to dap him up but he missed lol we worked on it everyday till he got it right, after that day other people started talking to oliver and telling him hi even my homies started talking to oliver me and him are still good friends.... about 3 weeks after i beat that bully up his older brother shot me 3 times its all good though ill do it again if i had too.....sorry for the long read i just got really heated seeing this
Shame that you almost died for doing the right thing, that dude should have been going after his brother if anything. You're a good dude.
 
Thanks gonna read after I cook a quick breakfast.







@krushin
 @CashBanks
 @manny1 @AO Two 

Came across this today... Article from autismspeaks.org on some new research.

http://www.autismspeaks.org/science...ds-evidence-autism-involves-too-many-synapses 

[h1]Brain Study Finds Evidence that Autism Involves Too Many Synapses[/h1]




Date: 


August 21, 2014



Researchers propose that someday it may be possible treat autism with drugs that restore normal pruning of brain-cell connections



brain_synapse_hero.jpg
Researchers have found further evidence that an overabundance of brain cell connections may cause or contribute to autism.





A newly published brain-tissue study suggests that children affected by autism have a surplus of synapses, or connections between brain cells. The excess is due to a slowdown in the normal pruning process that occurs during brain development, the researchers say.



The study team also found that the medication rapamycin both restores normal synaptic pruning and reduces autism-like behaviors in a mouse model of autism. They propose that someday a similar medication might be used to treat autism after a child – or even adult – has been diagnosed.



The report
, by neuroscientists at Columbia University Medical Center, appears in the journal Neuron
.



Autism Speaks is currently funding several studies on rapamycin
. It is also supporting atreatment study
 using a medication with a very similar action for treatment of autism associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). This rare syndrome often, but not always, involves autism. Indeed, the laboratory mice used in the new Columbia study were developed as an animal model of this syndrome.



“There are many unknowns in translating research from mice to humans,” comments Paul Wang, Autism Speaks senior vice president and head of medical research. “But the data from mice suggest that such medicines could have a positive effect on behavior and cognition in patients with TSC. The findings of this newest study might also be relevant to a subset of other patients with autism.” Dr. Wang was not involved in the new Columbia study.



The insights from the new study also underscore the vital importance of post-mortem brain donations in advancing research on autism treatments, Dr. Wang adds.



Autism Speaks actively supports autism brain banking through Autism BrainNet
.

Learn about donor registration 
here.



The vital process of brain pruning

During normal brain development, a burst of synapse formation occurs in infancy. This is particularly pronounced in the cortex, which is central to thought and processing information from the senses. But by late adolescence, pruning eliminates about half of these cortical synapses.




synapse_pruning.jpg
In examining brain tissue affected by autism, researchers found that brain cell connections, or synapses, did not undergo normal pruning during childhood and adolescence. The image on the left shows a brain cell from a person affected by autism. It has more-abundant synapses (at each spine) than those on a brain cell from someone unaffected by autism (right). Image credit: Guomei Tang and Mark Sonders/Columbia University Medical Center.

In addition, many genes linked to autism are known to affect the development or function of brain synapses. Indeed, the idea that individuals with autism have excess synapses has been proposed before.




To test this hypothesis, Columbia researcher Guomei Tang analyzed brain tissue from 26 children and young adults affected by autism. Thirteen of the children were between the ages of 2 and 9 when they died. Thirteen were between 13 to 20. For comparison, she also examined donated postmortem brain tissue from 22 children and teens who did not have autism.



Dr. Tang measured the abundance of synapses in a small section of cortical tissue from each brain. She found that, by late childhood, the density had dropped by about half in the brain tissue unaffected by autism. By contrast, it was reduced by around 16 percent in the brains from individuals who had autism.



She also found clues to what may have cause the lack of pruning. The brain cells from the individuals with autism were filled with damaged parts and deficient in signs of a normal breakdown pathway called “autophagy.” Cells use autophagy (Greek for “self-eating”) to breakdown components – include synapse connections.



Applying findings to mouse models

Using mouse models of autism, the researchers traced the pruning defect to a protein called mTOR. When mTOR is overactive, they found, brain cells lose much of their self-pruning ability. As a result, the brain cells show an overabundance of synapses.




The researchers restored normal autophagy and synaptic pruning in the mice by administering rapamycin – a drug that inhibits mTOR. Treatment eliminated the mice’s autism-like behaviors. The treatment remained effective even when administered to older mice that had fully developed the autism-like behaviors.



The researchers cite this as hopeful evidence that similar treatments might someday be used to treat autism after symptoms have fully emerged. As further evidence, the researchers found large amounts of overactive mTOR in the postmortem brain tissue of the individuals with autism.



Though hundreds of genes have been linked to autism, the researcher conclude, many if not most of them may affect this mTOR/autophagy pathway.


Tags: 





 
This **** just ruined my morning... I hope that dude gets tried as an adult and does some time and gets gang raped in jail...
 
[h3]Teen with autism victimized in disgusting ALS ice challenge prank[/h3]
BAY VILLAGE, OH (WOIO) -

Ready to complete the ALS ice bucket challenge, a local teen waits to feel the shock of cold water, but what was poured on him instead has shocked the community. 

Bay Village Police are investigating a group of teens accused of playing a cruel joke on a classmate who has autism. Authorities say the victim is a 14-year-old boy.

The teens allegedly convinced the victim to do the ALS ice bucket challenge, but instead of dumping water and ice on the teen, they chose to fill the bucket with feces, urine, cigarette butts and spit.

"It shouldn't happen to any child with special needs or not," said the teen's father, David Mensen.

The teen's parents say on Tuesday night, a group of classmates invited their son to one of their houses to do the challenge, while just wearing his underwear.

"He didn't want to and they said, 'No, you have to. It's a challenge.' They had it all set up," said the teen's mother. 

The group then posted the video to Instagram. Meanwhile, the teen returned home and said nothing to his parents, until another friend brought it to their attention. 

"He was afraid to tell us what happened. He was embarrassed. He was afraid," said Mensen. 

After seeing the video, the victim's parents reported the incident to police.
I swear it's always Florida or Ohio 
mean.gif
 
 
that's messed up yo, my condolences to the fam

wish there were less ignorant people in general
 
I'm hoping to see this thread updated with REAL long term prison terms. No probation, no leniency nothing but hard prison time where they will be educated daily on what it's like to be a victim of a bully.

:smh:
 
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