AIDS made me a lifelong lib

How have your political views changed over time?

I’ve gotten more liberal.

When I was young, my views were influenced by my parents and the Catholic Church. I remember defending Nancy Reagan in an editorial I wrote for a high school social studies class.

By the time I was a junior in college, I had totally changed my mind about President Reagan. Working in the arts after college, and being exposed to the AIDS activism in that community, opened my eyes further to structural inequities. The fact that the AIDS virus (HIV) was considered a “pre-existing condition” by insurance companies and could leave young, sick people without medical care was very real and horrific to me.

Reagan was so slow to even acknowledge AIDS was a disease (much less a full blown crisis), the arts community was absolutely furious and made a lot of art about it. That had a profound effect on me.

Activist art by the Keith Haring, who died of complications from AIDS in 1990 at age 31

2 thoughts on “AIDS made me a lifelong lib

  1. Our generation certainly had the warp over our eyes with Ronald Reagan.

    Like you, I’ve gotten more liberal as I’ve gotten older. I think the divisiveness particularly seen by one party, in particular, has only strengthened my political convictions.

    Isn’t it weird the way that World AIDS day on December 1 has almost become an afterthought now?

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    1. Oh, wow, good point. So much progress has been made, but so many promising young people were lost in the prime of their lives. We forget how awful it was before the good treatments came out and we shouldn’t.

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