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A global invitation to walk in solidarity with communities along the Lebanon Mountain Trail.
South Lebanon has been under attack from Israel displacing thousands of families now fleeing north for refuge. It is no longer possible or appropriate to continue the plan to walk the Lebanon Mountain Trail in April. However, Kinetika and Lebanon Mountain Trail Association (LMTA) are keen to highlight the stories of the people along the
Related
A global invitation to walk in solidarity with communities along the Lebanon Mountain Trail.
South Lebanon has been under attack from Israel displacing thousands of families now fleeing north for refuge. It is no longer possible or appropriate to continue the plan to walk the Lebanon Mountain Trail in April. However, Kinetika and Lebanon Mountain Trail Association (LMTA) are keen to highlight the stories of the people along the
ACT UP’s first-ever demonstration in 1987 — as well as three others in 1988, 1989, and 1997 — took place on Wall Street, the world’s leading financial center, and targeted pharmaceutical companies that were profiteering from the epidemic.” While not all ACT UP actions included walking and marching, their 10th anniversary demonstration did.
On March 24, 1997, the ten-year anniversary of ACT UP’s first demonstration, the group returned to Wall Street. The action, called “Crash the Market,” again protested the profiteering of pharmaceutical companies, but also cutbacks in Medicaid funding. ACT UP chapters from New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Atlanta, Washington, D.C., Las Vegas, Philadelphia, and Oberlin, Ohio, brought over 500 activists, who gathered at 7:30 a.m. by the fountain in City Hall Park. They then marched south to Wall Street, chanting “We die — they make money” and “Wall Street trades on people with AIDS!” Demands for Congressional hearings on the price of AIDS drugs were also made. Protesters rushed the doors of the Stock Exchange or sat down in the streets. During the demonstration, 73 people (mostly women) were arrested for acts of civil disobedience.
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As found on the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project website.

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