@delphinidin4β your transcript:
Transcript note: This transcripts the verbal exchange, which occasionally differs Β from the text captions on the video in minor ways (e.g., caption may say βthis is also why I suspectβ while the verbal dialogue says βwhich is also why I think.β)
Person 1: Iβm coming around, but what about gender and autism?
Person 2: I havenβt secured data, so this is purely anecdotalβ
Person 1: Real life headcanon?
Person 2: Cute. There seems to be a significant overlap between trans-nonbinary and autism, and while this is partly our neurochemistry, I suspect social conditioning plays a significant role.
Person 1: Harder for your peers to police your behavior when they donβt want to be near you.
Person 2: Which is also why I think autism βflies under the radarβ more with girls [note: caption says βthis is also why I suspectβ instead of the verbal βWhich is also why I thinkβ]
Person 1: Social expectations to be caregivers making adults less tolerant of girls excluding their βlame ducksβ and CAFAB autistics spend more time being socially conditioned by their peers.
Person 2: That said, autistic people donβt seem to gender good.
Person 1: Because gender expression is more cultural than inherent.
Person 2: And when not performing, autistic people tend to experience and express themselves outside of, unguided by, or in defiance of societal folkways, mores, and norms.
Person 2: Oh yeah! So itβs just interesting to think of the mask Bruce Wayne as the autistic performance of gender and Batman the real person as an experience outside of, and not interested in, gender. But because gender is fake we can be a bit cheeky and sayβ
Persons Β½, voices overlapping: Batmanβs gender is bats.
Person 1: His name is BatMAN, though.
Person 2: It was the 1930s.