This was not an exaggeration. The government ignored the issue of HIV/AIDS for years before anything was done. Gay and Queer communities had to form their own clinics because no government agencies cared for them. Back then, being diagnosed was equivalent to a death sentence or extreme debt and poor quality of life/a significantly shortened lifespan.
Things got so desperate that people literally had “Die-Ins”— in contemporary usage this refers to masses of people simulating death in order to protest something (like the War in Iraq). In this case, however, fatally sick people would literally lie down in public places and protest with what little energy they had left until they died. There is some footage of a church Die-In in the documentary Beyond Stonewall. The middle image here of that person’s jacket is not an extreme political statement; it’s what people had to do because they had no other options.
The horror of the AIDS epidemic gives me chills. It was a truly despicable and inhumane period of inaction.
To learn more about the politics behind the 80s AIDS epidemic, check out And the Band Played On by Randy Shilts.
you guys.
(book) snape just messaged me on okcupid

“The leg kick before a woman starts to twerk symbolizes the shackles of 400 years of slavery and oppression being broken. God...
Normally to solve an equation with 3 variables, you need at least 3 equations. This one you only need one. Solve for...
Dionysus, Bacchus, Ampelos, Silenus and a Maenad
by Robert Fagan
Date painted: 1793/1795
Oil on canvas, 109 x 147.5 cm
I saw the title of...
Some days i think fatphobes are just jelly.
Beach bodies.
I love Arrested Development but I have no love for its crazy fans who quote everything even the lines that...
Today, I was stuck in a really boring conference on nonprofit law and tax forms because I’m doing my graduation...