Autism diagnoses among Canadian children have surged by over 1,500% in just two decades. Let that sink in. This isn’t a small uptick — it’s a generational shock. Yet there are no emergency debates, no national addresses, and no serious urgency from those in power.
Just before Christmas, updated government data quietly confirmed what parents and teachers already know: autism is everywhere now. Classrooms are overwhelmed. Therapy waitlists stretch for years. Families are burning out. And still, politicians shrug and move on.

The official explanation is always the same: “better awareness” and “broader definitions.” Sure — those factors matter. But they don’t explain an explosion of this size. When numbers rise this fast, serious questions should follow. Instead, they’re avoided.
Why? Because asking hard questions is expensive. It means funding services, investigating causes, and admitting the system is failing families in real time. So the issue gets buried in spreadsheets while parents are left to struggle alone.
This isn’t normal. And it isn’t being treated like an emergency — even though it should be.
Canada doesn’t have an autism awareness problem.
It has an accountability problem.
DOES IT MEAN THAT “BEAUTIFUL” TRIDEAU CANADA’S OWN MAID SERVICE is the ONLY SOLUTION
( ORGAN HARVESTING ?????)
DOES IT MEAN THAT CANADA BECAME S.ITHOLE THANKS to CORRUPTED POLITICIANS?









