I can tell you with experience that many of these "advocates" do not care about anything except the money and the awards they win. For what is supposed to be a noble cause, advocates are trying to be "the one who made the most impact; the most well known." They care very little about actually helping people. It's all fraud, ladies and gentlemen. It is a terrible shame. Many do not care about anyone else but themselves and what is best for their own pockets. Meanwhile the people who actually do work in the community and actually help raise participation in society never get the equal coverage as those who strive to be "the first." Call me a sore loser if you wish but that is what I personally have seen. I don't see much authenticity in many of those individuals at all. They bash each other behind their backs. If you think the whole disability community as a whole is united, then I have some beachfront property in Nebraska to sell you. It is all a lie. If they were about inclusion, they wouldn't be so convinced that only their worldviews were right. They made literally everything into a competition and pretty much "faked it till they made it." They have this delusion that by continuing to segregate and single out those with different features, orientation, disabilities, backgrounds, etc., they will magically create "inclusion and awareness" out of thin air. No, the answer is inclusive integration in an honest system where everyone is treated fairly.