Monday, January 26, 2026

The Healing Balm of Friendship, A Dispatch on Activism, Friendship and Fighting from Dr Dann

 

This blogger and Dr Dann in Berlin, Fall 2022, above, a bike blur below. July 4th bike ride at some point two decades prior, with LM Bogad, Brennan and this biker in the middle.

Researching On Activism, Friendship and Fighting, I talked with several friends about their experiences. Several came and went as the interview process continued, friends appearing and disappearing. One of these conversations was with Dr Kevin Dann, a radical tour guide, and self described “Cyclist (& wannabe Troubadour)” who shared insights with me about the ups and downs of the US transcendentalists Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson.  I included him as one of the interviewees in the book. On my way back to New York from Berlin, he sent me a copy of a writing project he was engaging in on Kafka. I realized I had not sent him a copy of the friendship book, which I sent him. For a while there as the pandemic ebbed and flowed, we met every Thursday for a pint at the Lakeside Lounge, a local watering hole, now a casualty of the Gowanus blandification rezone. We’d seen each other for years at bike events, with our bike gangs throughout New York City. Eventually, he moved upstate, and I moved to Berlin. We met there once, sharing confidences, but had not really seen each other. We’re all trying to make sense of living in a country, ever descending into an Orwellian order, where facts obfuscated with propaganda, protesters are shot, and labelled terrorists. 

And the streets are filled with bodies. 

 

On Sunday, Dr Dann sent me the following dispatch. The following is his reaction and meditation on the friendship book, which he helped me shape, published with his permission:


“I kept meaning to first say how grateful I was at all that you put me in that appendix interviewee list; and I kinda think you might have already written my preferred epitaph: 

Kevin Dann Cyclist (& wannabe Troubadour)

1956 – 

Here below is a lightly edited version of that letter; you are so awesome, you out–Mercury me every time, and I love it.

Love,

Kevin

PS I turned up those photos while looking for one of us together – but couldn’t find one. I will keep looking. . . 

Dear Ben,

Thanks so much for sending On Activism, Friendships, and Fighting. I love that threefold title—and that right-out-of-the-gate Ben brashness: the jingly alliteration softening the bitter reality of the ever-present through line of conflict—dangerous, sometimes deadly conflict.

I’ve read it with deep gratitude. I love the voices—such irresistible voices. I love the Occupy chapter—Occupy, where my daughter Jordan and I discovered the activist inside each other (I agree 100% with your assessment of Occupy’s birth and death; I was thrilled by how you let the story unfold through Bill’s eyes). I love the way you speak so honestly and admiringly of Caroline. TimesUp! – where I fell in love with you. And I love coming to that twenty-year-old photo of curly mop–you carrying Keith Cylar’s image, and then pages later seeing you again – older, short hair – with another sign, wearing that telltale Ben Shepard frown—half anger, half sorrow, impossible to separate.

Your “Introductory Notes” really sing, Ben: profound scholarship braided with your poetic gift of gab, always in service of the ethical life. I felt it a unique honor to have Expect Great Things quoted there. I have forwarded the book on to a couple of friends whom I know will take immense comfort and inspiration from it. 

The whole project has your signature gifts: tenderness, street-level intelligence, and a refusal to turn friendship into either sentimental fluff or ideological discipline. You’re honoring the way friendship actually works in movements—how it carries us, breaks us, repairs us, and sometimes saves our lives. That opening premise feels more urgent than ever. The book itself feels like an act of care.

Precisely because your title names that inescapable polarity—friendship and fighting—I want to write you with an invitation to consider another polarity, a more invisible one, between us.

In your roster of interviewees, I appear as “Cyclist.” That made me smile—because yes, that’s me, and I love that part of my identity. But I also felt a strange pang reading it, because it captures only one slice of what I’ve been doing all these years. And I realize I’ve never properly told you the larger story. I want to ask you—plainly, as a friend—to consider me as an activist of a different sort. 

My “cause,” if I can even call it that, has been a lonely one: to pioneer a serious, spiritually-informed, apocalyptic conversation—apocalyptic in the true sense of unveiling—about reincarnation and karma as real forces in biography, history, and the American soul. I’ve been working at this for twenty years, and I’m increasingly aware that this is one of those causes where you don’t get a movement, you don’t get a crowd, you don’t get a megaphone. You mostly get polite silence, scandalized faces, and the subtle social message: don’t bring that here.

Which is why I’m writing you now.

Because Ben—you don’t shrink back from serious conversation. You don’t flee complexity. 

You don’t turn away when things get morally difficult, emotionally raw, or socially dangerous. 

That’s part of why your friendship matters to me.

So here is what I’m trying to bring before you. In October, I presented my Emerson/Thoreau reincarnation research at the Harvard Divinity School Transcendentalism gathering—Concord, the whole mythic setup, a small intimate circle, the kind of room where you’d think genuine intellectual risk could happen. I was one of the invitees, there to help Charlie Stang with his bold project of kickstarting Transcendentalism as a spiritual/social movement in the early 21st century (a premise that made me belly-laugh too, I admit).

I spoke about what I’ve found regarding Thoreau’s prior incarnation—and how that karmic fact reshapes the Emerson–Thoreau relationship, not sentimentally, but structurally: it changes the whole spiritual geometry of their friendship.

Not one soul could speak a word in reply, Ben. Not disagreement. Not curiosity. Not even the courtesy of “tell me more.” Just the look-away. The social anesthesia. The gentle refusal.

Then again at the Div School itself in December—at the “Rudolf Steiner at 100” gathering—I gave a talk naming Steiner’s prior incarnations and the Bodhisattva stream, trying to speak soberly and carefully, grounded in the actual karmic research.

Again: recoil, silence—this time from both the academics and the anthroposophists. I came home from Cambridge shaken.

Because at a certain point the question isn’t “Do people agree?” The question becomes: what kind of culture are we living in, if even institutions devoted to spirit and truth can’t tolerate reincarnation being discussed as a matter of serious historical inquiry?

I have just written a book about Trump’s prior (evil) incarnations—not as a parlor trick, not as a metaphysical flex, and not as some “interesting” reincarnation curiosity. I wrote it because I’m trying to come to grips with the naked brutality he has stirred up in the American soul, and the way it has entered the streets, entered families, entered friendships, entered the air we breathe.

I’m trying to understand the karma of this moment, and I don’t know how to share that work—how to even begin to let it breathe in the world—when so many people instinctively step back right at the threshold.

This is the battleground I’m standing on now: not left vs. right, not even activism vs. reaction, but the deeper epistemological fight over what kinds of truth we are allowed to name.

Yesterday I cried at lunch when I heard what went down again in Minneapolis—a city I love, a city that gave me friendships and intellectual life when I did a semester of my postdoc there almost thirty years ago. I heard the news and I just broke. It felt like the same wound reopening in the national body.

And I thought of you. When you wrote that you were leaving Berlin, I pictured you flying straight to Minneapolis—because that’s the Ben Shepard I know: immense heart, immense head, immense hands. The kind of person who would show up. The kind of person who would try to help hold the line where things are burning.

But here is what I want to say, as gently as I can: what’s unfolding in Minneapolis, and everywhere, is not only political. It is karmic, a cipher for something unresolved in the American soul—something older than our current vocabulary can hold. And if we cannot widen the conversation to include that dimension, we will keep fighting symptoms while the deeper cause keeps reproducing itself.

So I’m writing to ask you, Ben—not for agreement, not for endorsement, not for you to “convert” to anything—but simply to meet me here, with your full intelligence and your full courage, to read what I’ve written in the spirit of friendship.

To treat reincarnation and karma not as fringe ornament, but as one possible language for making sense of why history repeats, why brutality returns, why some forces feel almost “possessed,” and why our social conflicts often feel like they’re carrying something ancient and unfinished.

That’s what I’m doing. And I’m asking you, as a friend, not to leave me alone in it. Can you work through that problem with me, Ben?

With love, gratitude, and a shiver of gooseflesh at the prospect of what lies around the next bend,

Kevin”


Attached to the email, a document with a quote:

“Where do we find ourselves? In a series of which we do not know the extremes, and believe that it has none. We wake and find ourselves on a stair; there are stairs below us, which we seem to have ascended; there are stairs above us, many a one, which go upward and out of sight. But the Genius which according to the old belief stands at the door by which we enter, and gives us the lethe to drink, that we may tell no tales, mixed the cup too strongly, and we cannot shake off the lethargy now at noonday.  Sleep lingers all our lifetime about our eyes.

– Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Experience” (1844)..”

I’ll meet you there Kevin. 

Thank you Dr Dann.







 



Sunday, January 25, 2026

Images of Fragmentation, Echoes of Tumult, Berlin Along the Spree, Protesters Shot in Minneapolis, the City on Strike





Baby C and I with Hanging out with Johanna Keimeyer




Union Square Protest by BC Crumb






January 25

The airline told us to book a flight out of Berlin early. It’s the weather industrial complex controlling our travel plans, we thought, overhyped. Plus we were on the guestlist at Kit Kat and had tickets for Jenny Erpenbeck. 


Tell us if you ever come to NYC, we asked the DJ. 

We won’t be there as long as the Orange Menace is there, he replied.

Techno energy beats back hate. That worked perfectly in Cabaret at the original Kit Kat, I replied. 

Sigh, nevertheless we left a day early, before our friends headed out to the KikKat. Had a blast at Bethanien and said goodbye to Berlin. 

Left Berlin at 6 am. Flew back to the crazy usa. Arrived to cold blue skies. Ran home to the cats. News reports that another protester was shot by cops. Another demo at Union Square. Biked out.  It  was cooooooold!!!! Brrrr!!! Minnesota protesters I salute you, waving non violence, civil disobedience, strikes. Stay safe everyone. Stay strong. Be smart. Look out for each other. Power in numbers. The international papers are reporting the US is randomly killing, randomly killing its own citizens like Iran. 

Autopsy reports show that Renee Good was shot three times, killed with a gunshot wound to the head by ICE agents.

 "I'm not mad at you dude," her last words.

But they call Renee and Alex terrorists. 2 plus 2 equals 5 afterall.


Ron Kuby writes:

I just watched ICE agents pepper spray, take down, pummel, then execute an American citizen in daylight in a major American city.  I then saw them scatter as after they fired ten shots, looking like guiltu little boys who just broke Mom’s favorite vase.  I’ve seen this before, of course—I watched numerous police murders of civilians before.  What I have not seen before were the blatant lies told by the highest levels of the U.S. government—that he was brandishing a firearm at the agents (he was a licensed gun owner who never drew his weapon) that he intended to commit mass murder of ICE agents (ridiculous on its face), that his possession of an extra magazine was proof of his intent to cause a mass assasination (almost every who lawfully carries gas at least one spare mag).  This seems new to me.  Of course, local officials have been denied access to the evidence and the FBI, perhaps not yet purged of every impartial investigator, as been taken off the case, and state and local officials have been denied access to the evidence.  PS. Not that is matters, but the victim was an ICU nurse with the VA.


Mark Anderson posted a Statement from Michael and Susan Pretti, Parents of Alex Jeffrey Pretti:

"We are heartbroken but also very angry.

Alex was a kindhearted soul who cared deeply for his family and friends and also the American veterans whom he cared for as an ICU nurse at the Minneapolis VA hospital. Alex wanted to make a difference in this world. Unfortunately, he will not be with us to see his impact.

I do not throw around the 'hero' term lightly. However, his last thought and act was to protect a woman. The sickening lies told about our son by the administration are reprehensible and disgusting. Alex is clearly not holding a gun when attacked by Trump's murdering and cowardly ICE thugs. He had his phone in his right hand and his empty left hand is raised above his head while trying to protect the woman ICE just pushed down, all while being pepper sprayed.

Please get the truth out about our son. He was a good man. Thank you."

2 plus 2 equals 5. 

Not a good direction. 

Conspiracies abound that the murder taking place before the storm was all part of the plot. 

“Although there weren’t ongoing protests this stuff is turning people against them,” Kate theorized. 

“yes, lots of cracks,” I reply. 

Kate continues, 

“People who never get involved in stuff are asking me how to plug in…”

No one really knows. 

 I was in Berlin to get away from this. 

But trying to run away from history, Berlin is not a place to go. 


Jan 21

Much of the Spree is frozen. Walking between  the Kreutzberg Turkish market and Jannowitzbrücke, graffiti  is everywhere, condemning the right, fascism, and Trump with his territorial ambitions. 

The sun sets as we stroll along, looking at the frozen waterway, before we get to the Berlin dome. 

On our way to a book talk on the Berlin airlift of 1948 when us pilots dropped candy, food and supplies in Berlin.  JOSEPH PEARSON's new book The Airlift. "From 1948 to 1949, airmen who had spent the war dropping bombs on Berlin now risked their lives dropping chocolate bars. Berliners, who had once looked to the skies with dread and hatred, now gazed upward with hope and admiration. Joseph Pearson’s new book, Sweet Victory: How the Berlin Airlift Divided East and West, offers a cultural history of this massive air relief operation—one that wrote the playbook for the Cold War and still influences Western thinking and diplomacy with Russia."  

 "The book has a poignance as we see old alliances unravel" mentioned one of the discussants, introducing the author. 

Pearson explained that this is a story about soft power, a friendship narrative linking cultural policy and everyday life. He told the story of a young girl, Mercedes Wild, who saw the planes above, disturbing her animals at home. Her father had disappeared in the war, probably in a Russian prison. The older boys found the chocolate the US bombers were dropping. She wrote one of the bombers, telling him about how his planes startled the farm animals. And that the older boys found his chocolate. The pilot from Utah replied, sending her some candy,replying, 'Your Chocolate Uncle.' She traded it for marbles.  The two stayed in touch through the years.  Friendship can make progress beyond geopolitics, says Pearson, reflecting on the terrible situation we find ourselves in. These are allies against communism. Yet, this is a friendship that has been lost, that has been challenged after a huge victory against Stalin all those years ago. After years of fighting on the Eastern Front, now to look at the West as a threat, history doesn't repeat, it does rhyme.


Says Samuel Delany:

“President Trump is trying to block a report filled with photographs of Mar-a-Lago, ranging from images of top secret documents on the floor to the president arm-in-arm with Jeffrey Epstein.  Meanwhile, he's been forced to admit that he can't invade Greenland with military force, and can only enact random tariffs on Americans until Europe gives him a free island.  No one's very impressed with the Nobel Prize he received from his friend who got one for her work in Venezuela.  Also, his physical symptoms keep getting worse.”


January 22

It's ahistorical histrionics, says Baby C,  sitting at Laidak, our favorite coffee shop, located at Boddinstraße 42/43 in Neukölln, where we spent the afternoon writing and chatting about the current state of the Spectacle from Davos. Greenland, Greenland, Greenland. The Orange One, Orange One, Orange One on  everyone' mind. On the way to the Mind Shapes show, we stopped at a little wine bar and tapas joint on Mainzer Str 39, eating tapas at CIUK, mushrooms and polenta and cheese, drinking an Americano, one part campari, red vermouth, and soda, shaking our heads. At the art show, everyone was shaking their heads even more.  The conversation extended into the evening. 

Why's Denmark have Greenland? 

What did he say? What happened? 

Three more years of this? 

What happened in Iran?


January 23

Maybe it doesn't have anything to do with Hegel, says Stef, speaking of Hartmut Rosa, Maja Gospel, Rutger Bregman. We walked through the cold, ice still on the ground, exploring an old bookshop about to close, out to an art opening at Berghain, with requisite line, we skipped, out dancing late at Sameheads, late into the night, a few kids from Manchester dancing with us, ahh Berlin.

Taking a few notes of Stef’s influences. 

“... we are alienated in our relation to the social world … Because we, as human beings, find ourselves in constant existential competition with one another, we encounter one another primarily as competitors, and thus with latent hostility; and, over time, this leads to irresolvable self-alienation.”

Hartmut Rosa, The Uncontrollability of the World

“An old man says to his grandson: ‘There’s a fight going on inside me. It’s a terrible fight between two wolves. One is evil–angry, greedy, jealous, arrogant, and cowardly. The other is good–peaceful, loving, modest, generous, honest, and trustworthy. These two wolves are also fighting within you, and inside every other person too.’ After a moment, the boy asks, ‘Which wolf will win?’ The old man smiles. ‘The one you feed.’ 3”

Rutger Bregman, Humankind: A Hopeful History 

“The great milestones of civilization always have the whiff of utopia about them at first. According to renowned sociologist Albert Hirschman, utopias are initially attacked on three grounds: futility (it’s not possible), danger (the risks are too great), and perversity (it will degenerate into dystopia). But Hirschman also wrote that almost as soon as a utopia becomes a reality, it often comes to be seen as utterly commonplace. Not so very long ago, democracy still seemed a glorious utopia. Many a great mind, from the philosopher Plato (427–347 B.C.) to the statesman Edmund Burke (1729–97), warned that democracy was futile (the masses were too foolish to handle it), dangerous (majority rule would be akin to playing with fire), and perverse (the “general interest” would soon be corrupted by the interests of some crafty general or other). Compare this with the arguments against basic income. It’s supposedly futile because we can’t pay for it, dangerous because people would quit working, and perverse because ultimately a minority would end up having to toil harder to support the majority.”

Rutger Bregman, Utopia for Realists: And How We Can Get There – from the presenter of the 2025 BBC ‘Moral Revolution’ Reith lectures

January 24th

Last night in Berlin, we ran around picking up paintings and works in storage, a little groggy from the night before. Met up with chums at Bethanien for the opening of Echoes of Tumult, a show about our moment, the coming apart and back together, fissures and need for repair, the violence and cruelty, and movements to push back against it, the possibilities and fragmentation, closings and openings, glimpses of light and shadows, efforts to make sense of the wreckage. A lot of damage has been done. Good will tested.

Running around looking at art, talking about memory and obfuscation. Thank you Berlin.

"Echoes of Tumult

daadgalerie

Kunstquartier Bethanien

discourse program

Exhibition

With works by Dror Feiler, Essa Grayeb, Hoda Afshar, Interspecifics, Isuru Kumarasinghe

Echoes of Tumult brings together works that witness and process violence, systemic failure, and vulnerability by artists who are in varying proximity to the realities they are examining. Through approaches ranging from speculative and documentary, to sensorial, theatrical, and personal, their works resonate with and against current realities at the nexus of ecological crisis, geopolitics, and war. They deliberately bring us into contact with painful situations, oscillating between confrontation and resistance, and at times unexpectedly echoing with solidarity and hope.

Refracting into an affective field of resonances and disturbances, the works situate visitors within the complex connections and entanglements with the more-than-human world, address violence and unrest through sound, or grapple with memory and the construction of narratives through visual representation and the mediation of images. Some dive firmly into speculative actions or fictions pointing to futures that, while remaining conflicted, engage in new forms of relationality, agency, and hope. Together the works within Echoes of Tumult reflect on the possibilities and difficulties of repair, and insist on the possibility of listening, communication, and connection as fundamental to calling for and driving change. Things cannot and must not stay as they are.”

Great to see you, I said to Andreas, earlier in the night.  We will move back and forth, good leaders and bad, all the talk of the big divorce was a little discouraging. Total U.S. commitments to Ukraine surpassed $175 in 2025, compared with 167 from Europe. And we have mass food insecurity and homelessness. Voters revolt against such expenditures. I can’t control that. Rough.

Back in and out of the vortex of Berlin, hoping the USA does not fall off a cliff.


"When even one person stops performing, when the greengrocer removes his sign, the illusion begins to crack," Carney said. "Friends, it is time for companies and countries to take their signs down," and find a different way forward.


The question is where, is how.


Jackie Rudin posted a note:

“Today the editorial boards of both Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal and his New York Post urged the administration to pause its ICE operations in Minneapolis after the killing of Alex Pretti. The Wall Street Journal’s famously right-wing editorial board warned that “[t]he Trump Administration spin on this simply isn’t believable.” It continued: “Ms. Noem and Mr. Miller aren’t credible spokesmen. Their social-media and cable-TV strategy is to own the libs, rather than to persuade Americans. This is backfiring against Republicans…. Mr. Miller’s mass deportation methods are turning immigration, an issue Mr. Trump owned in 2024, into a political liability for Republicans in 2026. Americans don’t want law enforcement shooting people in the street or arresting five-year-old boys.”

Tonight, the editorial board of the New York Post warned that Trump’s ICE actions in Minneapolis are “backfiring.” “Swing voters…see US citizens dying at federal agents’ hands, and recoil in horror.”

It concluded: “Mr. President, the American people didn’t vote for these scenes and you can’t continue to order them to not believe their lying eyes.”

Heather Cox Richardson…”














Back in New York, thinking about our days in Berlin. 



Hanging out with Johanna Keimeyer amidst work of Paula Alejandra Riquelme Orbenes





Looking at Hanging out with Johanna Keimeyer's work. 





On our way back to New York. 
 

The line to the artshow at Berghain

 





























Back in the snow.


Thinking about Berlin. 

















































































 




















A few more pics. 




The Berlin fetish.
  









































 Jan 20