Prelude: With Gratitude
Before I light this fire, I want to pause. To thank ACT—for every staff member, volunteer, advocate, fundraiser, and survivor who carried Toronto through decades of crisis. For the late nights, the vigils, the counselling rooms, the pamphlets, the phone calls, the hugs in waiting rooms, the funerals held with dignity. ACT was not just an organization. ACT was survival.
And it’s too easy—far too easy—for Canadians to forget how much modern medicine owes to AIDS research, how much public health owes to AIDS activism. Our treatments, our prevention strategies, our very idea of community-driven care all bear ACT’s fingerprints. Even if most people will never realize it, ACT has touched us in ways that can’t be measured.
That is the legacy I honour here. And that is what makes this betrayal unbearable.

Stop Believing Harm Stays in Its Lane
Racism, xenophobia, queerphobia—they don’t queue up and wait their turn. They flood. And when they flood, governments either build the levees—or they let the water drown us.
That’s where we are now. The AIDS Committee of Toronto—ACT, one of the largest and most important AIDS service organizations in Canada—has been forced to dissolve. Read that again. Forced. Not failed. Not surrendered. Forced.
To say I’m furious is too soft. I taste fire and brimstone. This isn’t just a funding cut. This isn’t just a restructuring. This is a betrayal: cold, deliberate, structural.
ACT: Catalyst, Not Casualty
ACT wasn’t some minor player, easily replaced by a slick new app or a government flyer. ACT was a backbone. Born in 1983 at the height of the crisis, ACT took on what government wouldn’t:
- HIV prevention when silence was easier.
- Counselling when stigma was lethal.
- Harm reduction when the law preferred punishment over care.
- Advocacy when politicians were too cowardly to even say the word AIDS.
ACT was scaffolding: a bridge between lived reality and medical science, between fear and survival, between government neglect and community care.
And now that scaffolding has been kicked out from under us.
Let me make this clear: ACT didn’t give up. ACT didn’t run out of fight. The people inside ACT are gutted. They have no choice. They’ve been cut down by decades of neglect, of bureaucrats polishing their résumés while the community kept carrying the weight.
The story will be spun as inevitability: “times have changed,” “needs are different,” “resources are limited.” Don’t buy it. This is not inevitability—it’s cowardice dressed up in neutral language.

The Debt Canada Refuses to Pay
Modern medicine stands on the bones of AIDS research. Antivirals, cancer protocols, viral load monitoring, even COVID response playbooks—they all owe their existence to queer activists who forced medicine to move. Because people dying in hospital beds demanded better. Because communities turned grief into research and mourning into action.
AIDS cracked open the medical playbook. Protease inhibitors. Viral load monitoring. Global collaboration models. The urgency of AIDS forced medicine to leap forward decades in just years. Canada, like every other country, reaped the benefits.
And what did we get in return? A government that cashed the cheque, framed it, bragged about “innovation”—and then turned its back when it came time to pay the debt.
This isn’t history. It’s happening in real time. While Gilead gouges the price of HIV prevention drugs, governments shrug. While PrEP is kept out of reach for the people who need it most, governments shrug. While ACT collapses under the weight of decades carrying responsibilities the state should have owned, governments shrug.
This is not failure by chance—it’s failure by choice. And the shame belongs squarely at the feet of the people who benefited most.
Neglect as Policy, Betrayal as Design
Governments love to posture about “innovation.” They cut ribbons at research labs, they brag about clinical trial speeds, they slap their logos on campaigns that community groups built from scratch. But innovation is nothing without scaffolding. ACT was that scaffolding. It turned raw science into lived survival. It turned information into access. It turned research into community care.
Dissolving ACT is not an accident. It’s not some sad little inevitability of “changing times.” It is betrayal, written into policy. It is cowardice, camouflaged as efficiency. It is the state saying: We’ll take the benefits, but we refuse the responsibility.
And let’s be clear: ACT didn’t fail. ACT didn’t quit. The people inside ACT are gutted—hollowed out by a government that was perfectly happy to let them shoulder the crisis for four decades, then cut them loose when survival became politically inconvenient.
We keep pretending these collapses are glitches in the system. They’re not. They are the system. This is what Canadian neglect looks like: polite, incremental, and relentless. It chips away until the foundation cracks, and then it shrugs at the rubble.

The Condo Crane as Coffin Nail
While ACT is gutted, the Church-Wellesley Village is being bulldozed into dust and glass. The neighbourhood that carried Toronto through the AIDS crisis—the same streets where vigils burned, where bars doubled as war rooms, where community meant survival—is being erased one condo crane at a time.
Developers will call it progress. Politicians will call it revitalization. But let’s call it what it is: burial.
Our communities bled, buried, and built over.
Over by neglect.
Over by indifference.
Over by condos swallowing the Village whole.
Over by governments happy to take the medicine but allergic to the memory of who made it possible.
The collapse of ACT and the collapse of the Village aren’t two separate stories. They are the same story. A story of how governments, developers, and institutions collude to bulldoze history while congratulating themselves for efficiency. A story where survival is tolerated only as long as it is profitable.
ACT gave Toronto its spine during a crisis. The Village gave Toronto its pulse. And both are being erased by the same polite, incremental neglect that Canadians mistake for order.

The Pattern of Momentum
This is not a Toronto story. It’s not just a queer story. It’s a Canadian story.
Ottawa set the stage. The federal government built a “national HIV/AIDS strategy” and then quietly starved it—funding trickles, priorities drift, commitments forgotten. They’ll take credit for breakthroughs, but when it comes to actually resourcing prevention and care, they disappear into press releases.
Queen’s Park swung the axe. Ontario’s Ministry of Health controls the lifeblood funding that kept ACT’s doors open. For years, it has chipped away—cuts, freezes, “efficiency mandates.” Death by a thousand polite budget lines. This wasn’t sudden. It was slow, deliberate, and cruel.
And Toronto, my city, brought in the bulldozers. While ACT collapsed, the Village was torn down—erased in the name of “revitalization.” Glass towers where vigils once burned. Condos where counselling once saved lives. A community built over. Again.
This is momentum. Momentum in the wrong direction. Profit over people. Austerity over care. Glass towers over history.
And here’s the part that should chill every Canadian: what starts with queer communities never ends there. Harm does not stay in its lane. The systems that betrayed ACT, that gutted the Village, will betray you too. Public health, housing, community infrastructure—if they can erase us, they can erase anyone.
The flood isn’t coming. The flood is already here.

Intertwined on a Rock in Space
This betrayal doesn’t stop at Church and Wellesley. It doesn’t stop at queer men. Women’s health owes a debt to AIDS research, too—prevention of mother-to-child transmission, protocols for prenatal care, treatments that reshaped virology across the board. Breast cancer activism, reproductive rights campaigns, cervical cancer screening—all borrowed the playbook from AIDS activists who demanded better.
We are intertwined. Our survival is collective, whether governments admit it or not.
When ACT is gutted, it isn’t only queer communities who lose. It is women, it is families, it is anyone who relies on a public health system that now stands on weaker legs. The government wants us to believe this is a “niche issue.” It isn’t. It’s a structural rot that hollows out survival for everyone.
We are all on the same rock, spinning through space. And when one part of the foundation is chipped away, the whole structure is weaker.
The Shame They Cannot Dodge
Shame on the Canadian government for every obituary it made us write alone. Shame on Ontario for every program starved to death in the name of “efficiency.” Shame on Toronto for bulldozing the Village into glass towers and calling it progress.
This wasn’t an accident. It wasn’t a mistake. It wasn’t inevitable. It was deliberate. Layer by layer, cut by cut, decision by decision. The betrayal of ACT is not a stumble. It is policy. It is design.
Canada likes to pat itself on the back for its AIDS response, for its innovation, for its compassion. But that story ends here. ACT’s forced dissolution rips away the mask. What’s left is a government allergic to accountability, addicted to austerity, and content to let profiteers chart yacht courses on the backs of our prescriptions.
ACT didn’t fail. ACT was gutted.
The Village didn’t vanish. It was bulldozed.
The people didn’t stop caring. They were abandoned.
And for that, shame belongs not on our communities, but squarely on theirs.

Vigilance as Legacy
So what now? We honour ACT not just with memory, but with vigilance. We honour them by refusing silence, by demanding better of our governments, by asking questions and expecting answers from our medical professionals.
Open your mouth. Speak about your health. Speak about your needs. Speak until the systems built to silence you have no choice but to listen.
Educate yourself, and educate each other. Be relentless. Be loud. Be inconvenient. Because silence is what let neglect creep in the first time.
We are all on this rock in space together. The flood does not wait its turn. And the only levee we have left is each other—our vigilance, our voices, our refusal to let survival be commodified again.
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