Tuesday, March 17, 2026

"All things are entangled, ensnared”: On Bertolt Brecht, War and Mother Courage

 





"All things are entangled, ensnared”: On Bertolt Brecht, War and Mother Courage 

Ray and I sat in the park, talking about the world, old Louis Malle movies. I'm not sure we'll ever be the same, says Ray. But maybe we will. It’s three weeks into this war. And they are still using Putin/Orwellian language, calling it an operation, not a conflict. School kids are being killed. And they are pointing fingers. 

Max arrived and we caught up on his journeys through Tokyo. His tips on the road, trips to Lake  Titikaka. And Sunday afternoon turned to evening.

In Mother Courage and Her Children,  Bertolt Brecht’s 1939 play, war is depicted as a parasite and a brutal business, its protagonist simultaneously profiting and mourning the conflict that destroys her family. 

We found ourselves reading his poems, Stories of Mr. Keuner, poetics, comments on politics and everyday life. 

Whose Mr K, I wondered about Kafka’s Mr K from The Castle. 

 Brecht saw something absurd in all of this:

“What made me,” asked Mr K in “Love of fatherland, the hatred of fatherlands”,  “become a nationalist for this one minute? It was because I encountered a nationalist,  but this is precisely why this stupidity has to be rooted out, because it makes whoever encounters it stupid.”

I am starting to adore Mr K. 

“Mr K, who was in favor of orderly relations between human beings, was embroiled in struggles all his life….”

I guess we all are.

At a certain point, I abandoned the group zoom session to run downstairs to watch more of the Oscars. 

A documentary film about Russia and Ukraine won the Oscar for best documentary feature Sunday. “Mr. Nobody Against Putin,” takes on the Russian leader's propaganda and patriotism program for the nation's youth after its invasion message.

“In the name of our future, in the name of all of our children, stop all of these wars now,” the film's protagonist and co-director Pavel Talankin said in Russian from the stage through a translator.

"We will not learn to live together in peace by killing each other's children." Former United States President, Jimmy Carter.

Still, it drizzled all morning Monday. 

Maria played Kazdoura Kazdoura in Yoga, all of us  stretching along and I made my way on a cloudy journey from Brooklyn up to Albany, through Troy, NY, past old farm houses, to  Bennington, Vermont to meet the little one, hit a few thrift shops, talking about it all, life, love, Spring Break, skinny dipping in a frozen pond, along a farm, greeting Rosie, a new friend, stopping at Big Mouth Deli & Country Store, thinking about Friedrich Nietzsche's concept of Amor Fati (love of fate) from Thus Spoke Zarathustra (Part IV, "The Drunken Song" or "The Sign"), which argues that joy and suffering are inseparable twins.

"Have you ever said Yes to a single joy? O my friends, then you said Yes to all woe as well."

"All things are entangled, ensnared, enamored; if ever you wanted one thing twice... then you wanted everything to return!"

In the meantime, March proceeded with Spring around the corner. 

March 7

Missed the antiwar demo to hang out with Mom at the Princeton Art Museum, taking in the Robert Motherwell Untitled that caught her eye. We used to have a piece like that, she recalled. Mom was struck by the Basquiat. It just makes me laugh, she told me. Lovely to see art with the art history prof. Mom discovers Jean-Michel Basquiat at 89 years old.

March 8

Noise demo outside the Hilton where ICE is staying in mid town. ""No Trump! No KKK! No Fascist USA!" we chant. The Rude Mechanical Orchestra plays. The Funkrest follow, Monica leading the band in an ecstatic anti fascist chorus. 

Following the demo Baby C and I made it out to Ridgewood for some late night techno at Kein Club. There's a war going on. Protests every day. Late night parties. History about us. USA come on, snap out of it! I remember the Hostage Crisis of 1979, New York September 2001. It does eventually come our way. No war with Iran!!!

March 9

We sneak off to the movies at Metrograph theater in Chinatown.

Sabrina is in Geneva, having escaped Prague after the Russia invasion of 68, at dinner with a new suiter. She complains about the muzac. "The Transformation of music into noise was a planetary process by which mankind was entering the historical phase of total ugliness. The total ugliness to come had made itself felt first as omnipresent acoustical ugliness: cars, motorcycles, electric guitars, drills, loudspeakers, sirens. The omnipresence of visual ugliness would soon follow" she says in the film adaptation of Milan Kundera's masterful novel. We played hookie from the world, dreaming of old Prague, thinking about Thomas and Tereza, looking about, talking about our lives and friends, glorious weekend of activism and dancing and movies and writing and plans for future travel. Spring around the corner.

March 10th

Richard Greagor my old buddy notes..."I feel like we’re somewhere between The Twilight Zone and Nutsville. For years, we have heard about the Anti-Christ, but we just might have a front row seat..." sigh..

March 11th

And then Baby C joined us, then Nate, then Meaghan. And then the bands. And then the banter. As music surrounded us as we tried to make sense of the wreckage, war after war, detention of immigrants, execution of protesters. Oh my.

March 12

Complicated times. I can't help but think blowback is coming our way. Reports of Iran drones poised to strike California. Discussions about the world at Julius. And a meeting for Gowanus Green tonight. My friends pass out flyers with some background about the problems with putting a school and affordable housing on a toxic waste dump from Voice of the Gowanus. Toxins in the ground, expanding…

March 13th

New reports:

“Anti-ICE protesters accused of being part of antifa found guilty of support for terrorism in Texas” says the Guardian. 

“A statue inspired by the “Titanic” pose has appeared on the National Mall — but instead of portraying Jack and Rose as she pretends to fly, it depicts President Trump and Jeffrey Epstein,” says the NY TIMes. 

March 14

You have to have your own adventures, said Mom over lunch, chatting about her trip to China on her own in 1980.  All these stories, all these moments we share and can still talk about. What a gift. Food and kids and dreams, with a little banter along the way, before Baby C and I walked through the East Village, for a snack at a little Japanese place and some karaoke... All the kids sang along to the 70s era anthem. Who was that song? asked a younger woman, sitting by us. I really liked that song... me too.

"Can't Smile Without You"

You know I can't smile without you

I can't smile without you

I can't laugh and I can't sing

I'm finding it hard to do anything

You see I feel sad when you're sad

I feel glad when you're glad


That night I posted some info for the upcoming ACT UP demo. 

“Feeling down, join us,
I write, posting a note about ACT UP’s 39th anniversary action coming up. 

“Direct action gets the goods, then and now.”


Trip to Jackson Heights, the smell of spices hit us jumping off the train, music, food trucks for delights from Tibbet, India, Columbia, dumplings, the globe. Jim, our tour guide, met us at Diversity Plaza in Jackson Heights, Queens, "a vibrant pedestrian plaza created in 2012 to provide open space and enhance safety near a major transit hub (E, F, M, R, 7 trains). It serves as a cultural and social hub for the neighborhood's diverse communities, hosting events, markets, and providing public seating, landscaping, and food stalls with authentic cuisine like momos, kebabs, and samosas." Some guys start screaming. There are more people than tables. Countless voices,  several of 167  languages spoken in the neighborhood. I go get some samosas. Come back, another guy is yelling at Jim, from Kuwait. We keep on walking. Some guys are selling food for people to eat after they break their fast. It's a festival day. Everyone is trying out new wares.  First stop, Fuchka Garden, for fuchka. Run into some old friends, Jackie Orr, navigating the ups and downs of our time. Off to get some rolls of chicken tikka masala at a food truck. 'Why pay fancy when u could get fiery...' says the truck. Off to a Himalayan spot for some Momo dumplings. Crazy good. They remind me of khinkali dumplings you get in Georgia. We strolled about, stomachs full. Run into Catalina Cruz, the New York State Assemblymember for District 39, which includes Jackson Heights, Corona, and Elmhurst in Queens. A former DREAMer and experienced attorney, she focuses on tenant protections, immigration reform, and workers' rights. We talk about City Tech, where she used to work. Up Roosevelt past gay bars and Colombian restaurants, we stopped at a Nepali place called Bhanchha Ghar for momo. Jim tells us about his childhood in India. Go to Kerala boat tours, he says, recalling his home in India. The restaurant is full of cute people. Wow. We talk about the public spaces of Queens, one of the most colorful places on earth. Each day, a new journey about the globe.


On the way to Jackson Heights, we stopped at Love and Fury, at Posterhouse, taking in some of their collection of social movements, Black film, and Love and Fury, New York’s Fight Against AIDS,March 13–September 6, 2026

"In the late 1970s and early 1980s, clusters of rare illnesses began appearing among young, otherwise healthy gay men in New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Doctors, activists, and affected communities noticed the pattern before public health authorities did. 

Initial confusion was compounded by stigma: early names like GRID (Gay-Related Immune Deficiency) framed the epidemic through homophobia. In 1982, the CDC officially named the syndrome AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). As the death toll mounted, New Yorkers organized in the absence of state response—forming the Gay Men’s Health Crisis (GMHC), publishing community bulletins, and launching the first waves of self-determined care and advocacy.

When AIDS hit New York, posters spoke where institutions stayed silent. In a city wired for visual competition—crowded streets, subway ads, nightclub flyers—posters became lifelines. They were how people found clinics, mourned the dead, demanded justice, and fought for the living.

This exhibition explores how graphic design shaped New York’s grassroots response to AIDS from 1979 to 2003. Public health campaigns, agitprop, benefit flyers, and club handbills offer more than messages—they map how communities built survival systems from below, often before the state would act."


























Saturday, March 7, 2026

DC Bust for PEPFAR, AIDS Cuts Kill, Fund PEPFAR Now! #actupfightbackfightaids #HousingWorks #savePEPFAR, #RestorePepfar #STANDUPFIGHTBACK




Photos Kris Ward, @iammoustache

 I only went to one planning session for the Housing Works trip to DC to save the President’s Emergency Program for AIDS Relief. I just heard about the plan. We were supposed to meet everyone at Union Square Square 145 E 14th 5 AM. (I arrived at 5: 18 AM). So we could get to DC by 10 AM. Once in DC, we planned to drop six banners inside the Cannon Rotunda, a government office building, where activists were calling on the admin to implement the PEPFAR programs. The program has had bipartisan support, the money is there, allocated. Both Republican and Democrats in the House and Senate are there for PEPFAR. Yet, the administration is sitting on it. We must make sure funds are being spent, with data transparency, funding transparency. This is why we were going to DC. We’d walk into the Rotunda around 11 AM, in groups of five, everyone wearing all black. In the building, everyone whose participating in the civil disobedience will take out the banner from the bags, unfurl them, while chanting. Unlike the Metro Police who seemed to be ignoring the demos outside, the Capital police will be quick to stop our antics upstairs, banners flying from top corners.  

I was late, rushing to the train, even after Eric gave me a wake up call at 4 AM. We’d been here together the previous January and all through the spring and summer, in and out of jail, fighting the PEPFAR cuts and the Big Beautiful Bill Out there, gutting services. On the road with Eric, Asia and the Housing Works crew.

Darnell and Asia and Regginald and the rest of the Housing Works crew were there to greet me. 

“We’re still on time,” says Darnell.

With cuts to the ADAP program, aids drugs cut from the formulary, we were on our way to DC, to get the drugs back into bodies.   

On the bus, Eric laughs, everyone was here a half hour early, but you, he says. We talk about Cafe Lafitte, a Gay Bar in New Orleans, the oldest gay bar in the United States and all these trips to DC, his recent busts, the last few times were in DC, the oral history project we’ve been working on. He tells me about a World Wide Documentary film he worked on, called, A Closer Walk, about global AIDS, stories of “infections overwhelm the public health system and orphans face their own deaths, central Europe, where drug users spread the disease via shared needles, India, where husbands infect wives, and to the U.S., where grass-roots efforts in places like Kansas City confront cultural stereotypes.”

“Leave it with a little hope,” he says, describing our current moment, as PEPFAR looks like its funding is restored. Still 21 states are cutting the AIDS Drug Assistance Program, he says. They are either actively implementing or considering cost-containment measures for their AIDS Drug Assistance Programs.

“I give you permission to tell my story,” says Asia, walking up to talk with Eric and I. She’s been getting arrested with Charles and Eric as long as anyone. “I was a Black Panther. It all comes together with HIV and how we were treated,” she says, recalling last summer’s bust. 

Eric and I talk about the old political funerals and an old article about TB in the New York hospitals from 1992. Sawyer shows me the article, in which apparently he’s included. I don’t even remember that, says Eric. He’s been at this a long time. In the article on political funerals, the journalist asked me if I’d like one if I died of this. Impale me on the fence of city hall, he told the reporter, who quoted  him verbatim in an article in the post. “That was the time I was hurt at a protest, carrying Tim Bailey’s body in a casket to the White House. Keith Cylar was with me. The police pushed us, swarming around us, trying to make us to drop the body. They had us surrounded, jostling the casket, slamming it up and down on our shoulders, trying to topple the casket. When we are finally forced to put it back in the van, I called Bob Hattay, in the White House, and arranged forthe police to back off. Clinton did not want us there. When I got home, there were bruises all over my body. They let us hold a brief funeral session in the Capital parking lot in front of the van and escort us in the van out of town to Maryland.

Death and sex, our conversation soon turns to a guy Eric used to see at the Twilo,  a nightclub in operation from 1995 to 2001 in New York City, on 27th Street. He ran into the guy through the years, the two of them continuing to share moments and intimacies. 

Arriving in DC, we meet at a church, hearing updates about the program. 

“How many of you are planning to take an arrest,” asks Charles, starting the pre-demo meeting. “We’re going to explain what's going on with an expert on PEPFAR, but first I’d like everyone to introduce themselves,” says Charles. 

“The fight it affects everyone,” says one Housing Works member. 

“I’m Eric Sawyer,” says Eric, introducing himself. “I helped start ACT UP,” he says to great applause. 

“I’m Reginald. I’m red.”

“I’m Cassidey, I'm red.”

“I’m Asia, of Healthgap.  I’m banned from the property,” says Asia Russell.

“I’m Meaghan with Housing Works.”

“I’m Kendall with the Treatment Access Group in DC.”

“We’re got a great crew,” says Charles. “A great action planned. A year ago we did a similar action on the Rotunda, and got lots of media, holding banners, dropping them over the balcony. Some of us arrested by the Capital Police, we are usually treated respectfully,” says Charles, noting that a year ago, a few members of the group faced higher than usual charges. Beware, he warns us. “Last year we were disrupting a hearing. And Asia and a staff member were dragged out, arraigned, prosecuted, and given a stay away order; the other changed with resisting and assaulting an officer. He couldn’t remember which arm was assaulted. We are generally given a post and forfeit. You give em $50.00, you get your charges dropped. This is your last post and forfeit, they tell us every time. Yet, we rarely get anything more than that. Maybe today we will? Beware if you do something obnoxious they will put you through the system,” Charles counsels. I recall the guys running away from the cops in their electric wheel chairs last summer, in a madcap demo that felt like the Benny Hill show. Try to be cooperative, Charles advises. 

“When PEPFAR is under attack, what do we do, act up fight back!!!”

“The ferocity of your action was so compelling last year, that it changed history. It's that compelling,” says Asia Russell, taking us through the last year of the PEPFAR program, when they cut UNAIDS. We heard about the cuts when we got out of jail. “We’re never giving up. We’ve won powerful things. With $4.6 billion a year, we saved 26 million lives across the globe,” says Asia. “We fought to protect the program. They obstructed the program. Now funding is released. But the money is sitting idle, unspent. We’re here to push back. The CDC, which also runs on PEPFAR money, is running out of these funds. We’re transforming history fighting for this program,” says Asia. 

“With PEPFAR, two other things are happening," says Charles, pointing out that the US is sitting on lifesaving supplies. Only pregnant and breastfeeding women get access to prevention technology. There’s country by country negotiations for PEPFAR.  Two tablespoons of Plumpy'Nut  keeps a kid alive for a day.  “Where's Plumpy'Nut?” reports NPR. “A lifesaving food for malnourished kids is caught up in U.S. cuts.” The US is sitting on warehouses of it. 700,000 kids have starved. TB is the second cause of death. “Well before the bombs started in Iran,” says King.  “The US has been literally killing, starving people, encouraging disease.” (To say nothing of US measles outbreak because of RFK, who opposes vaccines)

Asia pointed to evidence Trump and Vought are blocking spending of more than $977 million in lifesaving HIV funding. The continuity of CDC’s FY26 PEPFAR programs are under threat. Still, congress is kept in the dark as the PEPFAR data blackout continues. One year into the Trump Administration, more than $977 million in appropriated PEPFAR funding for HIV prevention and treatment was unspent by the end of Fiscal Year (FY) 2025—triple the amount unspent at the end of FY 2024. Activists predict this backlog will worsen rapidly in FY 2026 unless Congress immediately reasserts its Constitutionally-mandated oversight authority.  In addition, the funding for Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC’s) PEPFAR programs will run out in just three weeks, by April 1 2026—because only 45% of their FY26 funding has been transferred from the State Department. Unless funding is transferred immediately, CDC’s global HIV programs across sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and the Caribbean will grind to a halt.         

“PEPFAR has saved more than 26 million lives and changed the trajectory of an epidemic. However, the Trump administration’s decision, over the objection of Republicans in Congress, to freeze PEPFAR funding has caused decades of progress to come undone and has been a death sentence for people with HIV relying on life-saving treatment. The U.S. must immediately restore PEPFAR funding and regain our standing in the global fight against HIV,” said Charles King, CEO of Housing Works. 

The Republican-controlled Congress has fully funded the global AIDS program, signaling bipartisan support for PEPFAR. However, Trump and Vought’s attacks on foreign assistance are obstructing PEPFAR from spending funds and saving lives. Activists anticipate the White House is planning its own shadow control over these funds, escaping the scrutiny of Congressional oversight. Vought was recently caught having taken $15 million in funding that had been allocated for foreign aid, to fund his private security detail. 

“Trump and Vought are responsible for stealing lifesaving prevention and treatment from countless people with HIV worldwide,” said Asia Russell, Executive Director of Health GAP. “Congress must wake up, wrest back its authority, and immediately expend PEPFAR’s funding.” In addition, the Department of State has instituted a PEPFAR data blackout, refusing to share PEPFAR’s program results—a level of secrecy that is unprecedented for a program that had been radically transparent regarding where money was being spent and its funding impact. And exploitative bilateral deals, for example with Zambia, are using HIV funding as a bargaining chip to secure U.S. access to Zambia’s vast mineral wealth. 

“This administration’s cuts to PEPFAR and its elimination of USAID are nothing less than savage. We demand that Congress take back its Constitutionally-mandated power of the purse and assure that US funds are fully expended on these life-saving programs,” said Kendall Martinez-Wright, TAG’s Government Relations and Policy Associate. “The price of this impoundment will be millions of preventable deaths and unnecessary new infections. We demand that Congress hold oversight hearings, interrogate Secretary of State Marco Rubio and OMB Director Russell Vought under oath, and start exercising its Constitutional powers.”

In the U.S., cuts to HIV programs and research in the U.S. are also growing, in what activists called a campaign of cruelty, with HIV treatment programs across 20 states planning to force people off their life-saving HIV treatment and onto waiting lists. Activists are demanding Trump, Vought, Rubio, and Congress fulfill their full obligation of appropriated PEPFAR funds and rejection of growing political interference in global and domestic HIV programs

 "AIDS cuts kill, fund PEPFAR now!!!" we chanted in the Rotunda, after making our way through metal detectors, unfolding banners from the balcony, calling for the congress to spend the money that has been allocated.  “AIDS Funding Cuts Kill.” The police pull down our massive banners. “TRUMP AND VOUGHT KILL PEOPLE WITH AIDS WORLDWIDE,” “OVER 200,000 DEATHS SINCE JANUARY 2025,” and “HANDS OFF PEPFAR.”

Security grabbed our banner fast. We went downstairs, dying on the floor  in the Rotunda. As soon as it starts, the police put plastic handcuts on too tight,  13 of us are arrested. 

“AIDS cuts kill, fund PEPFAR now!!!" screams Asia. 

“No more,” says a cop. “You’ve got cuffs on. The demonstration is over. You want more charges?”

Police search us and take us to the police vans, where two guys are led onto one side, women on the other. Inside the van, Reginald of Voices of Community Activists and Leaders, was not very comfortable: 

“I had to bend down to get in, while handcuffed behind my back. It was extremely uncomfortable. The handcuffs cut off the circulation in my wrists. Most of our time was spent handcuffed behind our backs.  I thought about the hundreds of children that were brutally packed into buses. The police were polite. I also thought about Christ's suffering on the cross. What I experienced was not as brutal or long. 15 of us got arrested at about noon.”

Reginald was quiet. That was not the case with Charles King, of Housing Works. 

Sitting in a clerical collar, Charles King and I talked about his Sunday lessons, this weekend at Riverside Church on Peter, who betrayed Jesus three times and Christ still made him the leader of the Christian church. If you ever think you really fucked something up, think of Christ's forgiveness of Peter. Failure is not final. 

As he often does in these circumstances, he recalled his favorite arrest and arrest officer, Hernandez from ACTUP’s infamous Stop the Church Action on  December 10, 1989 when ACT UP disrupted the services at St Patrick’s Cathedral. We went to trial. I defended myself, he told us. We all put a chain on us locking us to the pews, as we prayed, vocally. At trial, they had one aging deacon who testified we were running up and down the aisle screaming and cursing about  Cardinal John O'Connor. What were we saying? I asked the Deacon, over and over again.  What were we saying? Can you repeat that? I didn’t care if I went to jail. It could not be more funny. Officer Hernandez comes up and says the same thing. Later during recess, he asked me what I was doing this weekend.  I said I’m not going out with you. The one that guy away, almost four decades ago. I've been getting arrested with Charles a few times a year since 1998. Almost every time we get arrested he mentions this wondering about old Officer Hernandez, his all time favorite arresting officer, 

Other arrests have been less fun for King. He recalls hearing fireworks from his apartment on 12th Street in the East Village. He runs out to see what is going on, a little weary as he’s been warned  there is a death threat on his head. Squatters are running to and from, followed by cops on an eventual 4th of July, in the late 1980s, the years when riots were aplenty in the East Village. Police run inside, pulling me, throwing my head against the wall inside. Looking at my head bleeding, the police insist, I guess we need to arrest you. We won $75,000. $50 of it to me to make payroll, the other $25 to Ron Kuby. 

The squatters are fun to get arrested with, I reply. King wasn’t having fun that time. 

My arrest fantasy is we get pulled into the police van, in our handcuffs, only to find its not really a police van at all, its a party bus in NOLA, filled with fake cops, giving us lap dances as we’re handcuffed, playing disco music, taking us to Kermit’s Mother N’Law’s Place in New Orleans. 

Finally, we are taken to the “prisoner holding center” where we usually pay our fines. Sitting inside all afternoon, till one after another we get out, some faster than others. Some of us have been arrested here three, four, five or even seven times here in the last year. Those with the higher number of arrests including Eric are given future court dates and held. 

The rest of us are let go, making it home to NYC later in the evening. I find myself thinking about Keith and all those old demos, the old busts, all those years ago. A few of us talk about those old days, the spirit of Housing Works through the years. 

The last few are eventually let out of jail, with court trials later in March. 

A bit of the beloved community today, an I thou day, I write Charles, referring to the beloved community Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, a society based on justice, equality, and love. “The aftermath of nonviolence is the creation of the beloved community” said King.  I was also thinking of "I and Thou (1923) by Martin Buber, the foundational work of philosophy that explores human relationships through two fundamental modes: the I-Thou (a direct, mutual, and whole relationship) and the I-It (an objectifying, utilitarian, and detached relationship). Buber argues that meaningful human existence is found in the I-Thou encounter, which can occur with other people, nature, or God (the Eternal Thou). 

When we got home, Eric wrote, “Yesterday I joined activist from Housing Works, HealthGAP, Treatment Access Group and former staff of PEPFAR, and USAID in demonstrating again at the Rotunda of the Cannon Building of the House of Representatives for the Administration to stop the games and spend the funding appropriated by bi-partisan support of PEPFAR which in response to our prior protests had restored a lot of funding for the program. The Administration continues to block the funding from providing life-saving drugs and treatments for millions of people around the world in every step of the funding and operational steps of the program.”

Activists demand:

Immediately release already-appropriated, unobligated PEPFAR funds, demand activists. 

Break the blackout on PEPFAR data, so Congress and people with HIV know how funding is being spent and can program based on data 

Activists are calling for full obligation of appropriated PEPFAR funds and rejection of growing political interference in global and domestic HIV programs.

 
















 


 

PEPFAR action Feb 2025

PEPFAR action Feb 2025