Given these shortcomings, do I still have a chance?

This is a very bad “why Cornell” essay but your college adviser will help with that for any college you apply to.

You’re greatly helped by the fact you won’t need financial aid.

For Cornell, the #1 college for transfers is CALS. It mostly takes cc transfers and HEOP applicants but it does admit students (mostly NYS residents) who come from colleges that don’t offer the majors CALS offers or have a very different environment. So look at all the majors in CAS and find one that’s both interesting to you and not offered everywhere. That’s your best shot.

Next, you need to find a college where you’re top 25% for curriculum rigor and GPA. That’d be a college I identified upthread as a safety, or something like Muhlenberg, Drew (that seone mentioned upthread)… There you’d need to prove yourself in a few existing clubs as a freshman, to the point that sophomore year you could be entrusted with a leadership position in one, all while having excellent grades and being noticed positively in the classroom. 2nd semester sophomore year you’d apply to Cornell CALS with a good case that their environment and majors are very different from your college, where you’ve shown both academic excellence and leadership, but doesn’t offer what you need academically.
So, the path is exceedingly narrow, but there it is.

Ok good, if you have bio/chem/physics – precalculus/calculus and foreign language 4 would form the basic core curriculum along with English and social science/history APs.

Another constraint is accomodations for your disabilities. If you apply mostly to safeties in order to go to Cornell, you’ll get several acceptances, probably with honors program/college. This will allow you to choose the college with the best accomodations. (Keep in mind that colleges won’t necessarily accomodate your needs so that’s a key variable).

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