Photos by Erik McGregor above, Babara Ross and this writer. |
This writer and friends, including Reginald Thomas Brown act act up 30. |
Riding over the action, I ran into
Jim Fouratt, whose been at this for decades, strolling down the street away
from the action. Everyone seemed to be there. Joining the action, I started running
into friend after friend, Michael who had been out of town, Annette, Andy, Amanda,
Eric, Jim, etc. Its now been twenty
years that I have been going to ACT UP demos in New York, my first in San Francisco
in 1993. The group has marked my growing up and learning to find a voice.
“Single Payer Now!” people screamed
as we walked past the old St Vincent’s location toward Union Square.
Someone was carrying sign declaring:
“Pence Loves Fags” and “Eat Ass Pray Love!”
“Eat Ass Pray Love!!!” people
started screaming. “Eat Ass Pray Love!”
A group of younger activists were
smiling, walking along.
I recalled Bob Kohler, the old Gay
Liberation Front icon and ACT UP member, who died ten years ago.
“Wash your ass!” we chanted at his
funeral march. “Wash your ass!”
Members of VOCAL were carrying
pictures of activists from their group who had died in the last year. Every
year the list of losses grows.
““Healthcare is a right,” the crowd
screamed. “Health care is a right.”
Bryn Marie and I talked about the
ACT UP youth caucus coming to meetings now.
I told her I was sorry I was not
able to make the Monday night meetings.
You make the actions, she
replied. That’s good enough.
I stumbled into my friend Brian, AKA
Harmonie Moore, of the Church Ladies for Choice.
“My first ACT UP was the Monday
after Pride in 1990. They needed someone
to drive the flatbed truck back to Long Island City. I volunteered. And the whole room applauded. I drove the van back and arrived in a part of
Long Island City where there were still prostitutes all over the place. Oh my I
thought. I met most of my friends in ACT UP.
There were all these guys I wanted to know in the meetings. Ed Ball, David Buckingham, Babbit…”
All these years, we still see each
other at the Drag March every year.
Walking, I stumbled into Sharonann Lynch, of Médecins
Sans Frontières, who I met when I first started
going to ACT UP events in the late 1990’s. She helped organize ACT UP Memphis, going to her
first ACT UP New York demonstrations in 1995, with the Bridges
and Tunnels budget actions.
At Union Square a man was carrying a
sign in tribute to Keith Haring.
Members of the Youth Caucus started mcing.
And veterans talked.
Mark Milano greeted Eustacia Smith,
who first got arrested with ACT UP at the ten year anniversary demonstration in
1997. Milano pointed out that several of
the activists – Sharonann Lynch, Smith, Mel Stevens - who had taken part in the Gore’s Greed Kills
zaps over big pharma and international drug pricing were there. This small wave
of actions helped move international drug pricing onto a global agenda, become
a compelling target for the burgeoning global justice movement. These activists
helped us see that we are all connected in this. AIDS transcends borders. So we have to stop it from spreading
everywhere. We are all connected in
this.
Some younger activists with the
black block held a sign.
And speakers started.
“Thank you for saving my life,” charged
several.
“Thank you.”
“Housing is health care!” charged
Reginal Thomas Brown of VOCAL, one of the dozens of AIDS activist groups
building on ACT UP’s legacy of connecting issues related to HIV and housing and
questions about access to basic safety net services.
Mark Hannay pointed out that ACT UP
has always argued for universal access to healthcare. He argued the time is now for universal
access. With the collapse of Trumpcare, its still a message worth pushing.
Jim Eigo, the poet of ACT UP,
followed. Jim was leaving SexPanic! when
I moved here in the fall of 1997. We met at actions and talked. He shared his writings which found their way
into four of my books. Its been a pleasure to see him and hear his story the
last few years, as he re engaged with ACT UP.
But there are so many stars and movements
that grown out of ACT UP. Bob Lederer,
who can be seen briefly in the early meetings of the Treatment and Data
committee of ACT UP in David France’s How to Survive a Plague, and I talked
about some of the heroes of the movement, including Housing Works, the Harm
Reduction Committee and so many others, who have not been featured in some of
the movies about ACT UP.
Eigo recalled the early days of the
Ending the Epidemic initiative. Charles
King and Mark Harrington hatched the plans in jail in DC during the International
Conference on AIDS, recalled Eigo. King
had been working on the issue for years before as part of the Campaign to End
AIDS. He pointed out that ending the epidemic means expanding Medicaid and
Medicare through the Affordable Care Act.
It means preventative medicine. It
means connecting sexual health in a holistic perspective. It means ending homelessness. What it does not mean declaring victory and
leaving. It means zero deaths and zero
new infections. It means ending it
everywhere. Eigo concluded with a simple
vision. I hope one day to be here truly
celebrating zero AIDS deaths with a younger generation. It’s a hope we all have.
But several speakers stood up to
point out that ending the epidemic means ending criminalization, ending
transphobia. Ending the epidemic means ending it everywhere.
ACT UP showed us how we could all
fight for that. It showed us how to
stand up for ourselves, for care, for lust, for being freaks, for being
different and building our communities up from that. When people with AIDS are under attack, it
taught us to fight back. When our
friends are under attack, it taught us to fight back.
Thank you act up.
ACT UP, Fight Back, Fight AIDS.
Anniversary with a multiorganizational
action, on Thursday, March 30, 2017,
30 YEARS OF ACTING UP TO END AIDS.
The action will begin at the New York
City AIDS Memorial in memory of our beloved comrades and as a symbol of our
recommitment to ending AIDS.We will then march in solidarity to Union Square
for a spirited rally. The action will celebrate the history of AIDS activism
and the legacy of ACT UP as a direct action organization committed to ending
the AIDS crisis.
30 YEARS OF ACTING UP TO END AIDS
envisions a country and a world free
of AIDS in the
next generation. Our demands fall
under the following broad issue themes:
·
Ending the AIDS pandemic
·
Defending and expanding access to
health care and coverage
·
Fighting for affordable HIV and
hepatitis C drug prices and access
·
Finding a cure for HIV/AIDS
·
Defending the human rights of all
oppressed communities in ending the AIDS crisis
·
Ending HIV criminalization laws
At the 30 YEARS OF ACTING UP TO END
AIDS
action we will commit ourselves to
resisting the
current political environment based
on fear-mongering, bigotry, and the disenfranchisement of vulnerable people,
including people living with HIV and hepatitis C. We are still united in anger against
policies that undermine people’s right to health care, and we embrace the new
tidal wave of resistance and activism to recommit to an end to AIDS in this
generation!
“While the President and Congress
have pulled back from their outright attack on the Affordable Care Act and
Medicaid for now, the fight to protect these and other programs, like Medicare
and the Ryan White CARE Act, that so many people living with HIV/AIDS rely on
for access to health care will no doubt continue,” said Mark Hannay, a member
of ACT UP/New York. “And of course, ACT UP remains committed to fighting for a
universal national health insurance program such as
“Medicare for All.”
“Important initiatives such as the
plan to End the AIDS Epidemic in New York state, as well as ongoing research on
a cure must continue without any obstacles”, said Luis Santiago, a member of
ACT UP. “For that to happen, we must redouble our activism in the streets and
inside the centers of power, and work with our partners to prevent any funding
cuts to Medicaid and Medicare, and to the National Institutes of Health (NIH)”.
"Thirty years later, ACT UP
renews its commitment to making HIV and hepatitis C treatments affordably
priced for everyone who needs them. Extortionate drug prices continue to put
patients' lives in jeopardy. We will use
our spirited legacy of using direct
action to overturn these treatment
barriers and patent abuses in order
to achieve EtE and hep C elimination goals in New York and across the
country!" noted Bryn Gay, from Treatment Action Group, a cosupporter of
the event.
What:
30 YEARS OF ACTING UP TO END AIDS:
ACT UP 30th Anniversary March and Rally
When:
Thursday, March 30, 2017
--
4 to 7PM
Starting point at
4PM:
AIDS Memorial,
200
-
218 West 12th Street, New York City
March route: West Village to Union
Square
Rally location at
5PM: Union Square, open plaza on
East 17th
Street
Co-supporters:
Anti Violence Project
AREA: The American Run for the End
of AIDS
Bailey House
GMHC
Health GAP: Global Access Project
Housing Works
Lambda Legal
Latino Commission on AIDS
Make
the Road NY
Metro New York Health Care For All
Rise and Resist
TAG: Treatment Action Group
The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual &
Transgender Community Center
TWOCC
(Trans Women of Color Collective)
VOCAL NY
About ACT UP
About ACT UP NY: Founded in 1987,
ACT UP
(AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power),
is a diverse, nonpartisan group of individuals united in anger and committed to
direct action to end the AIDS
crisis. ACT UP meets every Monday
night at 7pm in New York City at the LGBT Community Center, 208 West 13th Street off 7th Ave.
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A panorama of friends. http://www.newnownext.com/act-up-30-anniversary-march-rally-nyc/03/2017/ |