What demonisation? Can you or someone be a little more specific? Is being called out for your abusive behaviour demonisation?
If you read my post again i was specifically talking about people with cluster B PD's, not people with PD's. My post came from my personal experiences about those people, and i have known a quite a bit of them.
Also i don't think it's that part they found informative, but the concept of many cluster B people having a mind that experiences normal life events as traumatic. This is not brought up nearly enough.
My post wasn't about rubbing salt to the wound or my negative experiences though. It was about facts. If the shoe fits then wear it. If not, there is no reason to be offended.
The problem here is again, you are assuming we all engage in "abusive" behaviour. Which is not universally true at all. I lash out at myself, not at loved ones. Most people only know I have BPD if I specifically inform them, which I often do not anymore due to ignorance and fear of being immediately stereotyped. I have also been diagnosed with Complex PTSD, not due to "normal life situations."
Your lived experience and opinions are not "facts" that can be applied to all those with these diagnoses - your remarks are sweeping generalisations. Try actual research, which has found that cluster B personality disorders - especially BPD - has the strongest link with a history of abuse.
Given your experiences, I can understand being wary of others with the same diagnosis if you have been harmed and as I said, I'm sorry that happened to you. However, it doesn't make your comments okay, particularly on a thread of this nature.
The type of demonisation is precisely the automatic assumption that we are all abusive and harmful, that we all lie about our pasts and manipulate others. This is often based on either stigma or negative personal experiences, which are not representative of all of us and should not be treated as such.