Open letter to Wikipedia about THAT ‘controversy’
Dear Wikipedia,
I write with reference to this page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Williams
regarding this extract:
Diagnosis controversy
In a 1996 report, Kathy Gollan (a producer for Australian Broadcasting Corporation) raised questions about whether Williams is autistic or characteristic of persons with autism.[1] In phone interviews, Kathleen Dillon (a Professor of Psychology at Western New England College in Massachusetts) said she thought “Donna’s symptoms owe more to the abuse she suffered as a child than to autism”,[2] and Fred Volkmar, an autism expert and director of the Yale Child Study Center commented ” … it’s hard for me to know what to make of Donna Williams. Donna Williams’ books in my view, while very interesting, are not typical of the experience of at least the 20, 30 or 40 higher functioning autistic people that I have come to know fairly well”.[3] Gollan herself stated that there was “serious doubt about whether Donna Williams is autistic, and her books should be read with that in mind”.[4]”Autism – a special report by Kathy Gollan”. Radio National Transcripts: The Health Report. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 1996-07-29. Archived from the original on 2011-11-28. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
Gollan had no professional qualifications to challenge my diagnosis and Dillon and Volkmar had never met me. Both Dillon and Volkmar have since retracted their statements and apologised for the misuse of their comments. Two people featured in the interview were later edited out as one was found never to have been my teacher and the other objected to how her comments were used.
I was informed by my publisher that the person inciting the interview (Chris Eipper) did so following rejection of his novel by them after introducing himself to them as a ‘friend of mine’. Another person featured, Marcia Devlin, was already written about in my second book (not pleasingly) at the time of the interview.
All bias if not libel issues aside the interview was from a time before Aspergers was a diagnosis and the breadth of autism has expanded from 4 in 10,000 at the time of the interview to 1 in 50 people today. In other words the interview is outdated, biased, misleading and libelous (I never bothered to sue as ABC is too big and would have bled me dry dragging it out).
The ongoing promotion of this article on my Wikipedia page has lead to ongoing hate mail including threats, and several stalkers determined to ‘expose’ me as a fraud. As such it is more than damaging.
When dealing with breast cancer recently, one of my greatest distresses is that my haters would continue to post and repost this section on the Wiki page by which I would be remembered.
I add here for your perusal associated articles that back up what I’m saying:
http://blog.donnawilliams.net/2008/03/17/diagnosis-autism-and-a-untidy-boxes/
http://blog.donnawilliams.net/2009/05/11/when-is-a-doctor-not-a-doctor/
http://blog.donnawilliams.net/2012/05/09/donna-williams-diagnosis-controversy/
and example of the sort of ongoing hatred it has regularly reinforced and incited:
plus, here are my full details of diagnosis:
http://www.donnawilliams.net/diagnosis.0.html
ACTION
What I’d like is to see the controversy section removed as there was no VALID controversy (ie by those who were
A) qualified to challenge my diagnosis
B) qualified and had actually met me (essential to any ability to professionally challenge a diagnosis and
C) were professionally qualified to challenge a diagnosis, had actually met me and were giving an objective opinion not motivated by any ulterior motive.
I hope you can do something about this.
Sincerely,
Donna Williams
Author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter.
Autism consultant and public speaker.
http://www.donnawilliams.net
I acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the Traditional Owners of this country throughout Australia, and their connection to land and community.
I tried to delete this reference on Wiki just now. I have no pull with or connection to Wikipedia, but the whole thing smacks of bullying, which I hate. So I hope whoever wrote it can get their facts straight and leave it alone.
I never heard back from wikipedia. I do wish, however, they would take even the tiniest look at the damage they have allowed to be done, redone, redone again through failing to moderate the page. People have said they find wikipedia so smattered with trolling they no longer find the information reliable. I think they need to take charge of that, especially if they are seeking donations or counting their pages as ‘reliable’, ‘current’, even valid information.
The page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_autistic_people still contains a claim in the introductory paragraph that people doubt Donna Williams’ diagnosis. Someone might want to check that out. I also think there is a double standard in that their page on people speculated to have been autistic only allows historical figures because it is against their BLP policy to report speculation that a living person is autistic, yet they can report speculation that a person is not autistic.