On a cold afternoon in mid-March 2020, when the entire world began to shut down, "just for two weeks to flatten the curve," I got the call that my disabled son's March Break respite camp was canceled, "for his safety." It was the first clue that the world of most disabled persons—especially disabled children—was about to become infinitely smaller and more constricted, and exponentially more cruel. The rigid and frequently sadistic coronavirus mask and vaccine mandates went on to disproportionately affect the disabled. Parents of autistic children were forced off airplanes while those who could not wear masks or could...