AITAH for saying my autistic cousin deserved to get punched in the face?
A family Thanksgiving erupts when one cousin tells another—autistic, rigid, and freshly punched—that he had every bit of the fist coming. John’s first week in a shared house ended with cops at the door, a roommate jobless, and Marc in cuffs, all because John smelled weed and dialed 911 without a word of warning. The punch landed days later; the fallout hit the holiday table.
What began as a well-meaning move toward independence spirals into a boycott threat: John, his parents, and their Christmas plans hinge on a single apology the poster refuses to give. Parallel lives collide—Marc’s temper, John’s rules, and a family split over who truly deserved what.


Strict adherence to rules has long defined cousin John, pushing others away.



Independence arrives via a rented room among strangers.

A familiar face shares the lease—and a hidden habit.


Conflict ignites over an open jar and zero conversation.




Thanksgiving delivers the verdict—and family demands.



Autism explains rigidity; it never excuses endangering others. John’s literalism—dialing police over a smell—derailed Marc’s livelihood in one call. The punch, while illegal, stemmed from real loss, not random rage.
Some argue violence is never the answer and John lacks social filters. Yet the knot is parental enabling: years of shielding him from consequences left him unprepared for shared adult space. Beyond that, Marc’s temper met a wall of inflexibility; both paid prices.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Tony Attwood notes, “Rigidity can be managed with explicit social coaching; without it, autistic adults risk isolation or conflict”. John needed that coaching before the lease, not after the bruise. Society expects accommodation, but not at the cost of others’ safety or stability. The poster’s blunt truth may be the wake-up John’s parents avoided.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Social media overwhelmingly backed the poster, framing John’s actions as reckless and the family’s boycott as a gift.


![[Reddit User] − Let them boycott. This sounds perfect for you. Let them throw their toddler tantrums. Your holiday will be better without this a__hole who uses autism as an...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1761982459193-3.webp)


A couple of replies urged empathy without excusing the snitch.



Witty one-liners turned the boycott into a punchline.


Some other comments from readers.














The poster stands by the harsh truth: actions have consequences, autism or not. A quieter Christmas looms as both punishment and prize. Have you ever watched family enable bad behavior until it exploded? Where’s the line between supporting neurodiversity and demanding accountability? Share your stories below.
