
This weekend marks the 25th anniversary of
ACT UP — the
AIDS
Coalition to Unleash Power — an international direct action advocacy
group formed by a coalition of activists outraged over the government’s
mismanagement of the
AIDS crisis. We speak with
ACT UP founding member Peter Staley, one of the longest
AIDS
survivors in the country; and David France, director of the new
documentary "How to Survive a Plague," which tells a remarkable history
of
AIDS activism and how it changed the
country. "I’m alive because of that activism," Staley says of the triple
drug therapy he was able to take. "This was a major victory this movie
tells about getting these therapies. But that was only the beginning of
the battle. Now we have these treatments that can keep people alive, and
there are still two to three million dying every year. There are more
dying now than when we actually got the therapies to save people. So
it’s a huge failure of leadership internationally. And it shows a
failure of our own healthcare system."
Video
Source: Democracy Now!
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