You just hit the nail on the head. "On Nonmonetized Together, I view myself as being on everyone's side." So am I. The only problem is I recognized early on that I cannot advocate personal experience, for example, of someone who is African American, because I do not possess the lived experience of racism, prejudice, marginalization, or falling into gang violence (as I know an autistic friend of mine in California has) because opportunities to succeed were not fairly there due to ongoing racial (or gender) disparity.
That is why, after writing my Autism & Denial Series' Parts 5 and 6, I found that being autistic doubles the marginalization that minority groups experience. You have the traditional demographics and prejudices. Adding autism compounds the neurotypal prejudices. When the world one day finally comes to terms with this, it could potentially cause a rift throughout all of society based on a demographic that spans all others: intellectuality.
But being true to my core devotion, no one should be left behind, last year I wrote about autism and women, minorities, youth, and the diversity of the autism community as a whole to make sure they had their issues known to the world. I don't just advocate for one group with autism. I seek to represent as many as I can, which is no easy feat. One way that I believe I have been able to, though, is by being increasingly *observant* of the autism community on a large scale. How I accomplish that is actually rather simple.
Twitter.
It is as Elon Musk described, the market place.
All you have to do is pay attention, keep your mind open, and observe. You won't catch everything, but as autistic people often are, by our natural inclination for pattern recognition, I have been able to recognize patterns of lived experience and support needs while also empathizing with every one. Including the autistic people who bullied me in the last year.
It is as I listed so many of the demographics in No One Should Be Left Behind. Because no one should be. Or I wouldn't be able to live with myself or sleep at night. But, as it turned out, I had to focus mainly on myself because I was in the midst of such profound and neglected life issues (i.e. integration) that I had no choice. I am still in that situation presently...