In this presentation, which also involves the reading of poems, Clover and Spahr take up what they consider to be the fundamental problems of care: If care is a mode of reproductive labour, to what extent is it already captured in reproducing social relations as they are, rendering them more bearable, and preserving them? Can care accumulate revolutionary capacity in that circumstance as we hope, or is it continually dissipated in the endless churn of social reproduction within capital? Is care locked into the understanding of a micro-political resistance within the pores of hegemonic state and capital, or can we imagine an approach to care as a kind of counter-reproduction—one that reproduces and potentially accumulates revolutionary force without reproducing state and capital?