-As an autistic person I have this (possibly false) mental connotation between "This thing is possibly, we think, linked to autism?" and "Now that we can cure this thing, we can Cure Autism!" Curing autism is my Killer Gandhi Pill. I don't want to be cured.
I haven't really looked into the subject in detail, but I rather suspect that the camp in favor of finding a "cure" for autism is primarily thinking about low-functioning severe autism cases, whereas the "keep your neurotypical hands off" camp is disproportionately composed of high-functioning Asperger's syndrome cases. The desire of high-functioning Asperger's cases not to be "cured" is understandable, but I wonder whether extremely low-functioning autistic individuals (i.e. those not capable of independent living) would share that sentiment if they were capable of expressing their views.
ETA: I'm not autistic, but I am left-handed and sensitive to desires to "correct" atypical behavior.
Read up, all of these have standard answers. The best answer to this argument is probably the Oak manifesto.
Low-functioning people do not seem to want cures more, inasmuch as functioning labels make sense at all and aren't missing more important aspects.
The idea of a cure has problems.
"extremely low-functioning autistic individuals" lumps a lot of things together; many people can and do express political views while unable to live independently - that is, to depend on other people to grow, prepare and transport their food, but not to feed it to t...
I ran across this article that I think is interesting. It suggests that type 2 diabetes and the increase in autism may have a common link
http://www.frontiersin.org/Cellular_Endocrinology/10.3389/fendo.2011.00054/full