I remember two of his posts. He was a spirit, funny and cranky. 

Hate to see a light like that transition but glad he got a chance to
step a bit into the future with his videos.

As for you Jay, please don't rush your toward your "final exit." You
still got a lot of work to do.

Gena


--- In [email protected], "Jay dedman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Some of you may know Ferd Eggan, a videoblogger who joined this list
last year.
> He died on Saturday of liver cancer.
> 
> He did a videoblog called Cranky PWA (person with AIDS):
> http://crankypwa.blogspot.com/
> Here was his first post:
>
http://crankypwa.blogspot.com/2006/07/watch-video-person-with-aids-talks.html
> 
> Ryanne and I got to know Ferd really well over the last 12 months.
> He had a long history of activism and using different media for his
> art. I wish he had more time to learn to use videoblogging to explore
> parts of life media usually ignores.
> It was exciting to work with someone who was not afraid of trying
something new.
> 
> anyway....as our community gets older, I guess these are the breaks.
> maybe one day youll get to see me die! I'm determined to get it on
camera.
> 
> Jay
> ________________________________
> 
> My friend and comrade Ferd Eggan died this morning at 7 minutes before
> 7 on the 7th day of the 7th month of the 7th year of this millennium.
> I guess he wanted to have an auspicious send off into wherever his
> spirit and energy goes next!
> 
> He was a warrior, strategist, writer, artist, activist, friend ... in
> the political, social and intellectual movements for liberation of our
> time.  He was engaged wholeheartedly and variously in the southern US
> civil rights movement, the anti-Vietnam War movement, women's and gay
> liberation, Weather Underground, Puerto Rican Independence, political
> art (as a writer, actor, film maker, website and blog creator), queer
> and critical theory, ACT UP, harm reduction, "post-Marxist"
> anti-capitalism, anti-imperialism, trans and gender variant rights and
> freedom, etc etc etc.
> 
> I am grateful and proud to have been his comrade in fact for the past
> 17 years and comrade in spirit far longer than that.  We shared the
> experience of growing up as bright, rebellious, anti-racist,
> not-yet-aware queer boys-to-youngmen, yet privileged in some ways as
> males and whites and "lower middle class," escaping the "idiocy of
> rural life" in small town America to elite universities, on full
> scholarship, only to find a new kind of alienation, as we were
> repulsed by the blithely self-confident scions of the ruling class we
> found there as well as the role proffered us as loyal servants in
> exchange for a well-off "upper middle class" lifestyle. We each
> dropped to work full time in the Southern civil rights movement and
> then on to the contradictions and joys of sexual and gender liberation
> and radical politics, sex and drugs and 'personal liberation' and
> careers as teachers and organizers, meeting up for the first time in
> 1990 in ACT UP and Being Alive -- the PWA Coalition of Los Angeles,
> where he was the E.D. and I was the Board Chair. He recruited Mary
> Lucey to AIDS activism when she was still fresh out of prison with an
> ankle bracelet and hired her partner Nancy McNeil at being Alive; we
> both encouraged and supported them in founding what became Women
> Alive. Ferd went on to be an innovative AIDS Coordinator for the City
> of L.A. for 8 years, persuading the Republican mayor to permit and
> allow Ferd to use city tax money to fund needle exchanges,  get
> federal money to build a housing project (Safe House) for PWAs who
> might still slip and use drugs sometimes, and to spearhead and fund a
> landmark study (by Dr. Cathy Reback) of crystal methamphetamine and
> its effect on the gay community and HIV-transmission-risky sexual
> behavior.    He retired on disability in 2001 and went on to write a
> novel and then create a variety of multimedia political art and
> journalism, some of which can be seen on his web site ferdeggan.net,
> including some compelling interviews with figures from the past
> several struggles of social struggle, and his blog, "Communiques from
> a Cranky PWA."
>


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