The red line of digital humor
Attorney Teodoro Cervando Flores Castelo, father of a young man with autism, announced legal actions against a content creator from Hermosillo. The videos, posted on Facebook and Instagram, show young people ridiculing the condition.
“As a father and as a Prosecutor, I express total disapproval of content that reflects ignorance and moral poverty,” he stated with a calm that barely hides his indignation.
His team at Prodedis-DIF is already collecting evidence to present the complaint to the State Prosecutor’s Office and Conapred. It is not just a statement—it is the beginning of a formal process.
When ‘entertainment’ crosses the law
Networks are a double-edged sword. The attorney knows:
“Freedom of expression should not be an excuse for mockery. If we already face many barriers, this virtual vandalism makes us retreat.”
Gloria Pérez Cosío, from the Club Libera de Corazón Azul, was more direct: she called the content “a direct attack on the neurodivergent community”. Behind every joke there are people fighting to be accepted.
And here is the legal detail that many forget: in Mexico, discrimination is a crime. Tania Alcantar, mother of a child with autism, has already filed her own complaint with the FGJE.
The associations seek to prevent these behaviors from being normalized as ‘entertainment’. The message is clear: making people laugh does not give you license to humiliate. Dignity is not negotiable, not even for likes.




