Discussion of ‘78 occupation

Discussion started by Phil Stone
Folks:
I am sorry that I have not been able to attend the recent meetings. I have looked at the web site several times and I remain troubled by the following language:

“In a complicated and controversial move, plans for another citizens’ occupation of Seabrook were changed to an on-site anti-nuclear rally, attended by 20,000 people June 24, 1978. Several hundred of those participants continued on to Washington D.C., where they occupied the sidewalks in front of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. That was the last large Clamshell action, but the organization continued into the late-1980s.”

To my mind, the events of 1978 were the cause of the Clamshell Alliance’s demise. The “decision” to change what would have been the largest civil disobedience action in American history to a “rally” on the site was not made by the Clamshell Coordinating Committee. It was made by a small group of unidentified people who made a public announcement in the media. By circumventing the democratic process, the
power of the Coordinating Committee, and the ability of members of affinity groups to
participate in decision making, the participatory essence of Clamshell was destroyed. If this current iteration of Clamshell history is to be accurate, we need to own up to that mistake.

/s/ Phil Stone, Philip M. Stone, Esq.
44 Front Street Worcester, MA 01608 Tel. 508.755.7354 Fax. 508.752.3730

7 Responses to “Discussion of ‘78 occupation”

  1. manager Says:

    As the last known president of the CIA, I will not
    admit to being affiliated with or identify any “small
    group of unidentified people”…

    Actually, I have to admit that I have not read
    thoroughly all of the contents of the website and,
    when looking at this particular section, I, too, find
    it lacking, though I may not be brave enough to offer
    a solution.

    This format of communication has its limitations,
    because when I read Phil’s synopsis, I was surprised
    at its characterization. I find myself saying, “I was
    there and that’s not what I remeber happening.” I
    can’t decipher whether Phil is being provocative in
    his statement or if it is more of a lawyer’s “cut to
    the chase”. In any case, if this is what you believe
    happened Phil, I would offer my recollections as other
    “evidence” to consider.

    I remember when Tom Rath, then NH AG, presented his
    plan to allow Clamshell to enter the nuke site
    “legally” for a one-day period. Within a couple of
    days of that public pronouncement, there was a meeting
    at Diann Garand’s house in Seabrook. There were 20+
    people there - local members of Concerned Citizens’
    groups, landowners, local organizers, Clamshell staff
    and committee members. At this meeting, the local
    folks - our “base” - presented all of their concerns
    about the Rath proposal and many, if not all, of the
    landowners present felt threatened and concerned about
    the potential reprecussions of using their land/homes
    in a act of civil disobedience when Rath’s offer was
    on the table.

    I won’t speak for those Clam folks present, but it was
    a personal “awakening” of sorts. I don’t think that I
    had realized that we had not moved the “base” along
    with us in the process of accelerating our actions at
    the site. I don’t think I had a good understanding of
    the real intensity of the threat people felt from the
    “state”. I think I had a naively formed view that had
    assumed that once people had made that decision to
    make homes/land available in the past, they would
    automatically be there in the future. I don’t think
    that I did my work to support those folks in a way
    that might have impacted this outcome. That is a
    personal failing that I feel, that I will admit to in
    this process and carry in my life’s work.

    I recall attending an emergency CC (Coordinating
    Committee) meeting - so I don’t understand Phil’s
    comment about no CC involvement. I know we had been
    having meeting after meeting for hours on end prior to
    that time, but I think I may even facilitated that
    emergency meeting. I need help from others here to
    recall specifics.

    After the conclusion of that meeting when the decision
    was made to accept the Rath proposal, pairs of people
    were identified to go out throughout New England and
    speak with local Clam groups to discuss our dilemma.
    I remember being selected to go to Boston - there was
    another woman that I went with and I apologize
    profusedly for not remembering who that was, but the
    thinking was the we had wanted 2 women to go to
    counter an overwhelming male presence in Boston. I
    remember going to a Boston meeting with a room filled
    with all sorts of people and trying to explain what
    local people were saying and thinking. I remember
    Rudy, Reva, Harvey H. and Maureen (? - not sure if
    that was her name) being extremely agitated. I
    remember being called an “arm of the State”, in league
    with the “pigs”. It was very intense, but I also know
    there were people present who understood the dilemma
    and expressed solidarity with seacoast folks.

    I recall reports back from others who had gone to
    Western MA, NH, VT and ME that were similar in that
    there was great disappointment, but there was a
    solidarity of sorts in wanting to support our local
    base. I am not sure where you were in this process
    Phil, but I know that we in the seacoast had many
    discussions and conversations about the Rath proposal
    and its consequences. I don’t specifically recall any
    press announcement, though I know there must have been
    some - I generally did not participate in this area,
    unless drafted, other than perhaps reading/critiquing
    releases - so, again, I defer to others with better
    recollection.

    This all took place in a very condensed, intense
    period of time before June 24, so I am sure that there
    are things that I am not recollecting accurately. I
    welcome anyone else who may have more to add.

    As I stated, I do feel a sense of personal failure in
    not recogizing the need to have paid more attention to
    our base. I do not feel that there was a
    circumvention of Clamshell process. It is likely that
    folks not in the thick of it felt left out of the
    process. But I do feel that those of us there in the
    seacoast felt an obligation to the process.

    I don’t feel that the June 24 in an of itself
    destroyed the participatory essence of Clamshell
    democracy. I think that democracy was already seeing
    its limits. Consensus decision making was being
    manipulated, making it difficult to make decisions,
    especially in the time frame presented by the Rath
    proposal. The issue of property destruction was
    tearing at the edges of our organization. There were
    concerns expressed about the “numbers game” and the
    exponential growth of the organization. Though we
    always suspected it and did not confirm it until
    later, infiltration by the “state” was at play, as
    well. I have always felt that using June 24 as “the”
    reason why Clamshell was not sustained was too
    simplistic. It was significant, but not the only
    problem with our growing democracy.

    I think that an “unintended consequence” of June 24 is
    that many, many people who would never have ventured
    to Seabrook came to that site, walked on that property
    and that the impact of that is something that, for the
    movement, was of significance. I think I may be alone
    in my interpretation of that, but I saw people there
    that day from the local area in particular, who would
    never have been able to make the move to occupy that
    site, who came out to express their opposition. I
    think that had a significant impact locally and
    nationally on nuclear power development. Of course,
    we cannot say how an occupation would have impacted it
    all.

    I will admit that I do not have a sophisticated
    analysis of what happened. This was my first
    experience with a social movement and I was learning
    as I went along. It was an exciting and heady time
    that found this farmgirl from NH working with a
    tremendously creative, committed, and dynamic group of
    people, who changed my life and impacted the world all
    at the same time. There were mistakes made and
    personal failings that I stake claim to, but it does
    not take away from the value of the work I have been a
    part of all through my life, particularly as a member
    of the Clamshell Alliance.

    As I said at the start of this response, I don’t have
    a specific suggestion as to how we can present this
    part of our history, but I also want to say that June
    24 was not the “end” of Clam by any means. To say
    that would negate some very important work that was
    done by those in the early 80’s where we saw waves of
    actions where legislators and the wives of judges were
    getting arrested, where we saw the impact of those
    from out of the NE area who returned to their
    communities and built local alliances that created a
    national anti-nuke movement.

    The intensity of June 24 was real, but I don’t believe
    it defines and determines our legacy. Clamshell is so
    much more. Those among us who have experience or
    knowledge of other social movements can easily point
    to similar moments/actions that resulted in
    splintering the movement. I hestiate to characterize
    it as Phil has, but then I could be reacting
    defensively as I was a player in the midst of all of
    it. - oops, I just may lose my presidency of the CIA.

    I offer this for what it is, though I must admit it
    was all sort of neatly tucked away as we humans can so
    easily do, so as to not face our failings…

    In solidarity,

    Kristie
    kaconrad3@yahoo.com

  2. manager Says:

    Kristie and Phil,

    Thank you for these important comments.

    While the web site’ writing can certainly be tuned up here and there to reflect the depth and the breadth of the Movement I , personally see here, in this healthy discussion, the genesis of TVS’ purpose.

    You folks made history and TVS’s book/exhibit/workshops will get out in the open so it does not stop at any particular date but grows from it .

    Indeed the complexities of growing a new political force, then and now will be reflected in the final writings and photographs sweeping over any one owns interpretation and carrying on the grassroots democratic process to the new generation.

    So here is our work, let’s keep walking the track and on… To the Village Square…

    No Nukes,

    Lionel

    PS: Should these comments be developed in our blog - posting them and allowing a potential larger public to comment ? This would have the advantages of congregating all in one place creating archives (versus emails ‘ short lives). ?

    Lionel
    lionel@clamshell-tvs.org

  3. manager Says:

    5-5-07

    Thank you Phil for taking the time to raise the
    question (again). Kristie, your honesty in sharing
    what you recall of those intense days and your own
    revelations of lessons learned are moving. Adam, your
    outside-the-Portsmouth-office memories also broaden
    the picture.

    This is a conversation that begs to continue. IÕve
    never agreed with a sense that to delve into the
    demise of the Clamshell is treason at worst and
    Òscab-pickingÓ at best. ThatÕs why IÕve urged this
    question be used in the story-gathering (even before
    TVS). ThatÕs why I suggested a round-table on just
    this question for the summer gathering (and yes, I
    still do think that inviting Tom Rath to participate
    would be good; letÕs dig up Peter Thomson as well!).

    When the TVS project started we had some preliminary
    – and cursory — conversation about how much should
    be said about events leading up to June 24, 1978. I
    wrote the ÒinadequateÓ paragraph in the website
    history in the third or later draft as an attempt to
    at least allude (space constrictions and all that) to
    the controversy.

    The TVS conversation never fully evolved. There were
    – and perhaps still are — conflicting feelings about
    TVS purpose: is it to inspire and renew anti-nuclear
    efforts or is it to tell the Clam story? (Even if
    these perhaps should not be contradictory, they
    certainly can be when seeking a frank/objective
    discussion of the more controversial parts of the
    story. Propaganda — which is what moves people –
    doesnÕt have to be pretty, but it does have to be
    unified in purpose.)

    I like Adam opening the question up by remembering the
    notion some had that the Clam sowed its own seeds of
    destruction in the fall of 1977 by failing to be more
    imaginative than to just organize another Seabrook
    occupation. Maybe. Others point to the decision-making
    process, lack of clear membership criteria, and
    complete transparency (did we ever even use that word
    back then?) as the seeds of destruction, although as
    strong a case can be made that they were the seeds of
    strength as well.

    Perhaps a broader question than just the handling of
    the Rath proposal would be more appropriate: ÒWhy do
    you think the Clamshell lost momentum?Ó

    As at least some of you already know, I see several
    factors contributing to the ClamÕs inability to
    adroitly handle the Rath proposal. Certainly, a lack
    of cohesiveness among people working most centrally on
    the occupation (ie Portsmouth office folks) was one
    reason. (Sorry Kristie, but the CIA, with its
    semi-elitism, represented this trend; information once
    freely shared no longer was.)

    Tom Rath was clearly aware the whole thing was a
    media/public relations war. The Clam failed to
    recognize this, somehow continuing to think it could
    control public opinion through the ÒrightnessÓ of its
    cause. Tom planned his proposal for 1) maximum media
    (announcing it to the media before bringing it to
    Clam) and 2) .maximum turmoil in the Clam because he
    was fully aware of our cumbersome decision-making.

    Our response was agonizing. After agreeing to turn
    down the proposal (and my recollection was that this
    did go through a full consensus process), we were
    left, as Adam notes, with figuring out how to do this.
    At this point, I still firmly believe there were ways
    to hold the high ground without giving up the
    occupation.

    Again, as many of you know, Sam Lovejoy and I strongly
    felt that we should have accepted on the condition
    there be a statewide, binding referendum on the
    Seabrook nuke. The state would have to respond by
    saying there was no mechanism for such a vote in NH,
    which would have been a lot weaker than what they got
    to say — ÒGuess those Clams are just hell bent on
    breaking the law.Ó This is really where any real
    faith in democracy was challenged.

    Instead, thanks primarily (as I recall) to the
    tremendous fortitude and golden persuasive powers of
    Chuck Mathai, and the total exhaustion of most of us
    hammering out a response (wasnÕt that an 11 hour
    meeting?), we ended up with a laundry list of demands
    that, of course, was perceived by the media as a
    rejection of the Òvery reasonableÓ Rath proposal.
    Chuck was an amazing, brilliant, dedicated and
    extremely effective man and, sadly, is no longer with
    us. He did not, however, have a deep understanding of
    media.

    If indeed local support (ie campgrounds) was still
    there (if shaky) at that point, it may well have been
    the way we initially responded to the Rath proposal,
    as reported in the media, that was our demise. It was
    after that, according to the folks who were closest to
    the campground owners, that they began to withdraw,
    forcing, at least as far as those of us closest to the
    central organizing were concerned, into doubling-back
    and seeing the need to accept the proposal. (Nothing,
    of course, is that simple. We knew our strength was in
    being perceived as a well-organized, disciplined
    organization; not having staging areas threatened
    that.)

    I guess what IÕm trying to say is accepting or not
    accepting the proposal was not the issue. It was HOW
    we did it that mattered. Internally, that meant how
    much we honored our existing procedure or to what
    degree we sought an amendment to that procedure before
    proceeding. Externally, it involved — and this can
    not be underestimated — how our response was
    perceived by the general public.

    This is way to long — and not long enough. Please,
    letÕs keep talking.

    Cathy Wolff, 5-5-07

  4. manager Says:

    — Adam Auster wrote:

    I find this discussion tremendously interesting.

    The most cogent and persuasive defense of the
    decision to cancel the action
    that I have ever heard came from Cindy at World
    Fellowship the summer before
    last. Her main point–sorry if I don’t do it
    justice, Cindy, but please jump
    in–was that Clamshell, which was founded on the
    principle of local control,
    had to follow the lead of the people on the Seacoast
    or become something
    utterly different (and less legitimate and powerful)
    than it was.

    I was just a rank-and-file clam in Western Mass in
    1978. I remember that the
    decision and the process struck me as wrong–and I
    was far from the only
    one. We instructed our CC rep to respond to the Rath
    proposal in a strategic
    way that we hoped would reframe the issue and bring
    Seacoast supporters
    around to supporting the action.

    This may not have been very realistic, but I am just
    trying to describe our
    region’s reaction to the news. That is, we weren’t
    proposing to ignore the
    Seacoast concerns, but to respond in a way that
    could save the original
    plan.

    Later, on the site on June 24, I wrote in my journal
    that the decision was
    flawed and the process just plain wrong, but that I
    still felt tremendous
    good will about Clamshell and optimism that we would
    sort everything out. I
    think most of the people I knew in Clamshell at that
    point felt the same
    way. Again, I am not saying that was anything other
    than what some of us
    felt at the time.

    When I was on the planning committee for the 1979
    Clam Congress in
    Worcester, I interviewed a lot of clams about the
    dread CC decision. It was
    clear to me that the organization had been badly
    traumatized by the
    decision, and that the whole issue was a lot less
    straightforward than I had
    thought.

    One person I talked to was Susan (Susannah) Hoch,
    who had been Western
    Mass’s CC rep for a while and who suggested that the
    real problem lay not in
    the process but in the decision to try to hold
    another occupation. Susan had
    blocked consensus on that decision for several hours
    at the 1977 Clam
    Congress (Putney?) before accepting the inevitable
    and standing aside. When
    she first learned of the CC decision to accept the
    Rath proposal, she said,
    she just had this overwhelming feeling of the other
    shoe dropping.

    Roy Morrison faulted the CC for not taking the
    problem to the cluster reps
    (remember them?) who were on the Seacoast the same
    time that the CC was
    grappling with the Rath proposal. I don’t know how
    he feels about it today,
    but he told me that the cluster reps were our best
    people and said that we
    should have gone to them. We didn’t, he said,
    because at that point we were
    acting out of fear.

    Again, sorry if I’ve misrepresented anyone,
    especially since (unlike Cindy)
    Roy and Susan are not on this list and can’t correct
    my summing up. I think
    I got it right though.

    Based on some of these interviews and the fullness
    of time I have come to
    see things differently than I did in 1978. I think
    we did make mistakes, but
    I’m less sure that there was a better path. Tom Rath
    really did exploit some
    of our weaknesses, including the brittleness of our
    decision-making process
    and what Kristie calls the exponential growth of the
    Clamshell. I could say
    more about that too. Finally I think Cindy’s point
    about local control as a
    defining principle is very persuasive. Any way
    forward would have entailed
    challenges.

    I hope this is not too much at too great length, but
    I really appreciate
    Kristie’s thoughts and memories, and Phil’s
    concerns, and wanted to respond
    in kind.

    Adam Auster

  5. HISTORY Says:

    […] HISTORY […]

  6. manager Says:

    From: Kristie Conrad [mailto:kaconrad3@yahoo.com]
    Sent: Fri 4/6/2007 5:37 PM

    Subject: Re: [JunkMail] Re: TVS web page - Owning our mistakes

    Cathy -

    To let you know, the CIA is not semi-elitist or even
    quasi-elitist, it is elitist and was always meant to
    be elitist - and it never really existed.

    It was an “affinity group of the mind” that you could
    never join, you were “drafted” into it; there was an
    identified leader who was called the president and
    that could be changed without the notification of the
    president by any member, who was not really a member.
    There was no consensus decision-making, no adherence
    to non-violent civil disobedience and a serious
    irreverance for all things Clamshell.

    It was a way for those of us who played with it to do
    just that - play with some of the innane, insane
    moments of the intensity of our lives at the time.

    I’m suggesting that you may need to be the new
    president, although as the last known president, I
    don’t think I am able to resign.

    Kristie

  7. manager Says:

    TVS web page - Owning our mistakes
    Date: April 6, 2007 6:29:00 PM EDT
    Paul Gunter
    Remember folks, if you’ll allow me, this has to be taken in the cosmic sense.

    this was not our only mistake nor our last, its just how it played out to the decimation of the nuclear industry’s plan.

    paul

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