Direct Action: Chapter I
by Luke Hauser
Note - the novel opens with the PROLOGUE - Chapter I is not the opening scenes of the book
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This website and all pages and contents ©2003 GroundWork, San Francisco. Photos by Belsmith.
In politics, obedience and support are the same.
- Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem
Tuesday, May 25, 1982
"Stop the Bomb Where It Starts - Blockade Livermore Lab!" The poster stood out from a clutter of paper and tape on the Berkeley phonepole. Demonstrations happened all the time in the Bay Area, but in 1982, anti-nuclear protests were special. For the first time in my adult life, large numbers of people were doing civil disobedience.
I'd heard about CD since I was young - Henry David Thoreau, Susan B. Anthony, Martin Luther King, Jr., the Berrigans. Inspiring, sure. But something that other people did. Heroes and martyrs.
In the late 1970s, in the wake of the Three Mile Island nuclear accident, activists on both coasts turned to civil disobedience in their protests against nuclear power. But the actions weren't in the Bay Area, and I didn't hear much about them. It wasn't until February 1982 that the spirit reached me. The newly-formed Livermore Action Group sponsored its first action at Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab, forty miles east of San Francisco. One hundred seventy people were arrested, and the local papers gave it front-page coverage.
One hundred seventy people? That changed the equation. The part that worried me most was being alone in jail. If there were one hundred seventy others with me, well, that felt different.
I'd been out of the political loop for a few years after being involved in campus-type organizing at Indiana State in the mid-1970s, mainly cultural work like coffeehouses or literary journals. I got my degree in political science, but that didn't seem to mean much in the real world.
Music seemed more promising. Since college I'd been writing blues and folk songs satirizing Republicans, landlords, generals, and other obvious targets. In 1980, I got serious about it. I dropped out of grad school in Berkeley and took a maintenance job in a Southside apartment building. Two or three nights a week I performed at open mikes or played with a couple of friends at a pizza joint down by the Bay. I liked seeing people laugh and nod as I sang, but something was still missing.
Soon after the February 1982 Livermore blockade, I saw a flyer for a LAG meeting in Berkeley. Why not go by and sing them a couple of anti-nuke songs? When I arrived, there were fifty people crowded into the community room of the Savo Island co-op, overflowing couches, leaning through doorways, filling the floor. Most were White, and they ranged in age from students to seniors.
I asked for five minutes on the agenda, and someone said, "Why don't you sing now while we're waiting to start." I didn't even have time to get nervous. I wasn't sure if it was nuclear power or weapons they were protesting, so I covered both.
The cheers rang in my head for days afterward. Singing to a roomful of protesters, I felt involved. If my singing inspired them, and they went and shut down a nuclear plant, I'd had an effect. Sure, it was indirect. But you have to start somewhere. The memory stuck with me all Spring, and when I saw a poster for a protest co-sponsored by LAG in May, I decided to take the afternoon off my maintenance job and go.
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Livermore Lab was hosting a weapons-research conference entitled, unbelievably, "Tougher Targets: Upgrading Lethality," a title which eloquently captured the mission of the federally-funded Lab - the creation of ever more deadly weapons for the U.S. government.
LAG joined with several Central America solidarity groups in calling a protest of the weapons conference, which wasn't at the Lab itself but at a nearby country club. I'd been hoping to witness my first arrests, but apparently no one in the crowd of a hundred was planning to blockade.
We lined the roadside, chanting and singing for ourselves and a couple of dozen police. Off to one side, a group called Overthrow Cluster set up the "Hard Times Soup Line and Crumb Kitchen" to dramatize the sudden increase in homelessness as the Reagan administration slashed social spending to fund the arms race.
Seven o'clock came and went, and I was wondering whether the conferees had snuck out a secret exit. Suddenly two police cars came cruising down the road with their lights flashing, followed closely by several chartered buses. From both sides of the road, people surged forward, chanting and yelling and finger-pointing. The police fell back a step before bracing and bringing their clubs to attention. Through the narrow corridor crept three shiny tour-buses. As they came parallel with our lines, our shouting coalesced into a chant: "U.S. bombmakers, you can't hide! We charge you with genocide!"
From behind their sealed windows the delegates gawked and nervously laughed. A few even waved or flashed the peace sign as the buses inched past.
"U.S. bombmakers, you can't hide!" For a minute, I felt a jubilant sense of release. Then they were gone. My eyes turned back toward the direction from which they'd come. There had to be someone else to yell at. But the cops were packing up. Clearly they thought the action was over. Now what?
"The delegates are going to Howard Johnsons!" The rumor swept the crowd. People scrambled for the cars. No one seemed to mind who rode with whom, and quickly an entire caravan was speeding down the highway with the state police hot on our trail.
We found Howard Johnsons, and were out of our cars before the last bus emptied. Several dozen of us descended like locusts on the delegates. Most of them scurried for the cover of the cocktail lounge, but a few of the thicker-skinned ones stopped to explain themselves.
"What about the Russians?" a condescending delegate in a gray jacket argued. "We're supposed to stop our research while they move ahead?"
"We could stop for a while," a protester countered, "and see if the Soviets do the same. Someone has to take the first step for peace."
I was still pumped up from the earlier scene, and cut loose in a loud voice. "Why bother with him? He's a sellout. He gets paid big bucks to talk the government line."
The man inspected me through a veneer of imperturbability. Other protesters elbowed me away. "Come on, let the man talk. Let's hear what he has to say."
I waved my hand. "It's a waste of time. He's paid not to think."
A picket line formed in front of the lounge. Although a row of police barred the doorway, we could see the delegates through the windows. I joined the ranks, and we chanted and sang as the cool Spring evening set in. Maybe we couldn't get directly at the bombmakers, but at least they couldn't ignore our presence.
Gradually the protest wound down, and I caught a ride in a van heading back to Berkeley. As we got settled in the back, a tall woman whose brown hair showed streaks of gray looked over at me. "I heard you hassling that delegate," she said pointedly. "You weren't facilitating communication."
Other eyes were on me. "No, I guess not," I admitted. "I was just sick of him acting so calm and casual about designing weapons."
"But do you think it's nonviolent to yell at him?"
Another woman spoke up. "Come on, Melissa, anger isn't violence. Anger shows respect. It can open communication."
"There was no communication going on out there," Melissa said. "Shouting at someone just creates an us-them dynamic."
"But we are against them," I said. "I'm totally against what that guy does."
She looked at me as if she'd had to explain herself one too many times. "That can be expressed in an open and caring way. If we truly want peace, we have to show it in our own lives, in the way we treat our adversaries."
"Oh, come on," an older guy in the front seat said. "We have to have some release or we'll all get ulcers."
"Then we have to find a better way," Melissa responded. "That's why I get arrested. Yelling and chanting doesn't accomplish anything. But civil disobedience shakes their whole system. If they prosecute us, we clog their jails and courts. If they drop the charges, we go back and do it again. Getting arrested is the only time I've ever felt like I was being heard by the government."
That got my attention. "You've been arrested?" I said. "What's it like?" No one else in the van had done civil disobedience, and we peppered Melissa with questions. She had been busted in LAG's February blockade at the Lab. She'd gotten a seven-day sentence, which she served with dozens of other protesters. She had a misdemeanor on her record, which wouldn't keep her from getting a job anywhere. The police had been rough, the jail guards were liars, but the other inmates at the county jail had mostly been supportive.
She told us about the next action, a blockade on the Summer Solstice. By the time we got back to Berkeley, I was ready to go. Maybe not to get arrested right off, but at least to be part of the protest.
"You should call the LAG office and sign up for a nonviolence prep," Melissa told me. "Everyone involved has to have one. It gets you ready for the police and jail."
What a concept. When I thought about civil disobedience before, the idea of a prep session hadn't crossed my mind. Had I thought people just showed up at the Lab and sat in the road? And the possibility of being a supporter hadn't occurred to me before today. No wonder I was hesitant! But here they were, offering a do-it-yourself CD workshop. How could I turn that down?
It was about a month till the June 21st blockade at Livermore. I thought I'd probably get arrested, but I didn't tell anyone right away, in case I changed my mind. It worried me in some ways. I'd never had a run-in with the law, not even a speeding ticket. They didn't have my fingerprints or anything. So why should I turn myself in? Wouldn't it be more effective to stay anonymous, underground?
But I had a nagging feeling that I wouldn't take myself seriously if I didn't do it. I knew that the world had to change, and that I had to do something about it. But what? Music? I wanted to do something, not just sing about it.
After a week of thinking it over, I decided to visit the LAG office. It amazed me that LAG had an office. Unions have offices, and political parties. But a group whose major purpose was breaking the law?
There it was, though, a small storefront on Shattuck Avenue, right at the Oakland/Berkeley border. The front windows were pasted over with posters for the upcoming blockade, and for the big June 12th anti-nuclear march sponsored by the Freeze and other mainstream peace groups. I pushed on the front door, which stuck. I gave it a harder shove and made it into the office.
The space was about forty feet long and fifteen feet wide, with an exceptionally high ceiling. Desks and file cabinets lined the walls. Worktables filled most of the rest of the area. The space was shared with Berkeley Citizens Action, "BCA," a left-leaning electoral coalition. In their half of the office, several older Black women worked on a mailing while a high-powered young White guy talked on the phone.
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I made my way to the LAG area in the back, where half a dozen young White folks were working amidst posters, mailings, tangled phone lines, and a hundred important scraps of paper.
"Who's in charge?" I asked. A couple of people laughed.
"Hi, I'm Caroline," said a tall, round-shouldered woman. "I'm not in charge. What can we help you with?" She had an open, welcoming demeanor, and I felt like I'd come to the right place.
"I want to sign up for a training for the June blockade," I said.
"You mean a nonviolence prep?" She turned to another woman behind her. "Claudia, where's the sign-up sheet for preps?" Claudia rooted around on her desk and produced a handwritten list of twenty names. "Can you make it June 19th?" Caroline asked.
A flicker of disappointment passed over me. I was counting on the prep to make up my mind about getting arrested or not. "That's only two days before the blockade. Isn't there one sooner?"
"No, they're all full. That's the next open one in Berkeley."
"Okay, I'll be there."
"It's from ten till six," she said. "Make sure you're there on time and can stay for the whole prep. It's really important." As I finished signing the list, she gave me a newsprint booklet. "You should read this, too. It covers the action and consensus and stuff. It's one dollar."
I paid the dollar and thanked her. She turned back to the mailing she was working on. As I headed out, I looked around at the posters tacked over every inch of LAG's wall-space - from Germany, Japan, Italy, New York, Wyoming, everywhere the same message: No Nukes, Not Here, Not Anywhere.
When I got back to my apartment, I watered the plants, made some popcorn, and opened the handbook. I leaned forward on the table and flipped through the pages, catching glimpses of the titles: Consensus, Nonviolence, Feminism, Nonhierarchy, Jail Solidarity.
I'd been wanting this for a long time. I came into political awareness at the tail end of the Vietnam era. The protests were over, but the world was still a mess. What should I do? Campaign for the Democrats? I tried it during college, and I felt like a cog in a rusty machine. Work on a referendum? If it could really change anything, it would never be allowed to pass. That much I understood. Electoral politics was hopelessly corrupt, chained to the pocketbooks of the rich.
Through my music and writing, through studying history and economics, I groped for a handle: How to shape my talents and interests into a tool to change the world. The quest had its own rewards, like my recent awakening to Medieval art. But sometimes I wondered how much I clung to "searching for a niche" to avoid having to do anything.
Since Reagan's election in 1980, I had been experiencing flashes of anxiety. One day it was the spectre of nuclear war or toxic disaster. Other times it was more personal, a devastating car accident or a brutal mugging. Always the images were haunted with a sense of the entire world falling apart.
I knew I had to do something. But what? I wasn't a pacifist, but neither was I going to pick up a gun and head for the hills. Acting alone or with a few friends, the only options I saw were to be an artist exposing the injustices of society, or a social worker struggling to alleviate the suffering.
Leafing through the handbook, I caught a fresh vision. A vision of a better future - and of a new way of living and working right now.
I read about the Seabrook and Diablo Canyon actions, where thousands of people raised their voices against nuclear madness. I read again about the February blockade at Livermore. 170 arrests. My wake-up call. And I read about the plans for the June blockade. What would that be like? Two hundred people? Five hundred? Maybe these LAG folks were on to something. Maybe it wasn't hopeless after all.
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Saturday, June 19, 1982
The day-long nonviolence prep, held at the North Berkeley Quaker meeting hall, brought it all together for me. There were twenty of us, aged seventeen to fifty-five. Two were Asian American, and one woman identified herself as Latino. The rest seemed White. Most looked middle-class, which somehow didn't surprise me.
As far as our daily lives, we were pretty diverse: a couple of teachers, a couple of students, a mother and daughter, gays, straights, and bisexuals, a wealthy couple from Marin County, the secretary of a plumbers' union, several underemployed marginals, and even one man who confessed to voting for Reagan. One thing united us - no one had ever been arrested at a protest.
The preppers were two veteran activists. Maria was about my age, twenty-eight. She had helped start LAG, and been arrested at the Lab in a small action on Mothers' Day after chaining her wheelchair to the front gate. Nathaniel was around fifty, a staff member at American Friends Service Committee with an arrest record dating back to the Civil Rights and Vietnam eras.
The prep included some theory and discussion of nonviolence, but mainly we role-played protests - dealing with the cops, talking with Lab workers, making consensus decisions under pressure, getting arrested, and jail solidarity actions. We formed an affinity group, calling ourselves Spectrum. I was so inspired that I even volunteered to be one of our AG spokes at the final spokescouncil the next day.
For all we covered, I still had a hundred unanswered questions at the end of the prep - not the least of which was, am I going to get arrested? Several times during the day, I was sure I'd blockade. But I could see the wisdom of going to my first action as a supporter. Check out the real thing before jumping in headlong. It wasn't like nukes were going to disappear overnight. And neither was I. With the prep, the handbook, and all the great people I was meeting, something more was awakening. Some long-buried desire not simply to take action, but to be part of a movement dedicated to changing the world. I was especially struck by the emphasis on consensus and feminist process, which seemed like a blueprint for building a new, cooperative society. We weren't just protesting - we were forging an alternative.
Knowing that this movement existed - or was coming into existence - how could I be anywhere else? Sure, no one had asked me to sign anything or pay any dues. I could walk away at any time. But we had a chance to make a difference. Wasn't that the whole point of my studies and writing and music? I'd found my calling.
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Sunday, June 20, 1982
Around two hundred people gathered for the spokescouncil in Berkeley's Martin Luther King, Jr. Park. It was lunch break, and I was sitting around in the warm grass with people from other affinity groups in our new cluster, "Change of Heart." The name came from a documentary film being made about Noah's Ark, one of the AGs in the cluster.
Karina was in Noah's Ark. She was in her early twenties, with bright eyes and thick brown hair that fell over her shoulders. Her laughter summoned a growing circle as she recounted episodes from the filming. "Can you imagine fifteen people trying to name an affinity group with video cameras capturing every word?"
"That's great," I said. "Sounds like a pressure test for consensus process."
"It was terrible," Karina said. "Everyone knew that we needed the cameras to be off for a while, but no one wanted to be the one to say that on camera!"
We got to talking about the number of people blockading the next day. Earlier in the afternoon the spokescouncil had taken an informal poll of AGs. Everyone hoped the number would significantly exceed the one hundred seventy arrested February 1st. But no one was prepared for the estimated total - nine hundred fifty!
As the crowd erupted in applause, I inclined toward getting arrested. I could help push the total past a thousand. That would be pretty amazing, a thousand people. I smiled to myself - here I was, keeping a scorecard on the protest. Probably not the best motivation for my decision. But still....
The only bad moment came at our cluster meeting. I was so inspired by the gathering that I led a song and offered to facilitate the meeting. I called on other people to speak, but interjected my own opinions after most speakers. Finally a tall woman with long red-blonde hair interrupted me from across the circle.
"I don't think the facilitator should talk so much," she said plainly. "If you want to argue, you should let someone else facilitate."
I flushed. She was right. I awkwardly proposed that someone else facilitate, and didn't speak much for the rest of the meeting. I could see I had a lot to learn.
The main topic at the meeting was whether to non-cooperate during the arrests. Most people planned to get up and walk, but a few were talking about going limp when the cops came for them.
"Do you think they'll carry non-cooperators, or use choke holds?" someone asked.
Karina tossed her head back. "Choke holds? If we're lucky. They'll probably use wrist locks and other pain holds. They're not going to carry a thousand people."
I shivered. Even if I did get arrested, I didn't see the point in non-cooperating. Why bring on pain when they're going to make you move in the end?
A man next to me raised his hand tentatively. "Maybe we should consense that we won't non-cooperate?"
Hank, one of the other spokes from my AG, jutted his chin out. "No way," he said. Hank was about my age, a tall, muscular guy with a dark stubble. He worked as a electrician in a Berkeley auto shop, and looked like he'd had a few run-ins with the police in his day. "I'm not cooperating with a cop busting me for blockading a death lab."
"Amen," Karina said. "If they're going to arrest us, at least make them work for it."
The meeting broke up. For the first time all day I felt alone, lost in the milling crowd. I wandered over to where a couple of AGs had prepared dinner for us. As I waited in line, I saw the blonde-haired woman who'd challenged me at the cluster meeting. She moved with casual grace as she surveyed the salads and breads, taking only a couple of small servings from the table. "You're not getting much food for your money," I kidded her, trying to show I didn't hold a grudge.
"No," she said, turning toward me. Her blue-green eyes were friendly, but I couldn't read any further. "I'm not supposed to eat wheat or dairy." She got a bowl of broccoli soup and some rice, then walked toward the last sunlit spot in the park.
Ordinarily, I would have taken it as a hint if someone walked away from me. But I couldn't drop it quite so easily this time. I'd been single for a year, wishing and waiting for the right person to come along. Maybe she just had. The graceful stride, the calm smile, even the gentle yet direct way she'd criticized me at the meeting - I better not let her slip away.
I went over and sat down on the ground next to her. "My name is Jeff," I said, reaching out to shake her hand.
She took my hand, which looked red next to the pale yellow of her skin. "I'm Holly." She seemed amused at our handshake. She was about my age, and had a calm, collected air about her. "I wasn't trying to give you a hard time at the meeting," she said. "I just thought you shouldn't try to facilitate and debate at the same time."
"That's okay," I said. "I needed someone to slow me down." There was a moment of silence. I bit off a chunk of bread and searched for something to say. "Is this your first arrest?"
She looked up from her soup with a thoughtful expression. "Yeah. I went to the Mothers' Day action at Livermore last month, but as a supporter. This time I'm blockading. How about you?"
"I'm not sure," I said quietly. I creased my brow. If she had been a supporter the first time, why couldn't I? I changed the subject, asking her what drew her to LAG.
She looked at me thoughtfully. "Partly I was seeking community," she said. "I wanted to be in an affinity group. But it's political, too. I wanted to make a statement. I don't know if we can shut the Lab, even for a day. But I want people around the world to realize that not everyone in America is passively accepting the arms race."
I nodded. "That's the same for me, making a statement. Plus, if the world blows up, I want to die knowing I tried to stop it."
She smiled, and I relaxed a notch. I asked about her affinity group.
Holly's eyes sparkled. "We named it for a civil defense song from the 1950s," she said. "In case of nuclear attack, Duck and Cover! We've been meeting every week since our prep in April."
"Wow, my AG just met for the first time at our prep yesterday," I said.
We talked a while longer, till we finished eating. Then she excused herself to go meet with her AG. "We're leaving for Livermore at three tomorrow morning."
"Yeah, us too," I said. I wanted to ask for her phone number, but it seemed like pushing things. She hugged me lightly. As she turned to go, I called after her. "I'll see you out there in the morning."
She looked back and smiled. "Good. I'll see you then."
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Monday, June 21, 1982
As we pulled off the freeway and passed through the sleeping town of Livermore, a cloud of foreboding crept over me. Was it a premonition, a warning to stay on the sidelines today? Or a projection of fears that I needed to face?
It was still dark as we stopped along a country road outside Livermore. I groped my way out of the car, and could make out a ditch and a field beyond it.
"The Lab is down this road," Hank said as he squeezed his big frame out of the car. "It's an easy walk from here."
Change of Heart was part of the first wave at the East Gate, and I wanted to get up there and see what the place looked like. The sooner I got to the site, the better picture I'd have of my options.
"Don't worry, we're way early," Cindy said. "It's only four a.m. There won't be anyone to blockade yet." Cindy was a special-ed teacher in her mid-thirties, and she herded us together like we were kids on a field trip. She pointed down the road, away from the Lab. "We should go that way and block the road leading in. The police are expecting everybody at the gate. We could blockade a lot longer out here."
"But there's media and support people at the gate," someone argued. "The police can't be as rough."
I silently nodded. Going off on some unknown adventure made me nervous. Of course, if I weren't getting arrested, it wasn't my decision to make. But I still hadn't quite ruled it out.
"We agreed on the gate at our prep," someone else said. "It takes a new consensus to change our plans."
"If we're serious about shutting down the Lab, we should go down the road," Cindy persisted. But only Hank backed her, and they gave up.
We walked quietly up the road toward the gate. My angst had subsided. For most of us it was our first time at the Lab, a two-square-mile complex of office and research buildings surrounded by an eight-foot barbed wire fence. Even though I knew what went on at the Lab, it was hard not to be awed by this bastion of "scientific research."
We arrived at the gate, a simple two-lane asphalt entrance road with a chain-link fence on either side. A couple of hundred protesters were already bunched along the sides of the road. The police had set up barricades inside the gate, and were standing nervously at ease, waiting for the blockade to start. People were hurrying around making final arrangements and saying goodbye to friends. The AGs from our cluster, Change of Heart, congregated in the gravel area to the left side of the Lab entrance.
Two other clusters formed the balance of the first wave at the East Gate. Before our AG arrived, there had been a coin toss to see which cluster would go first. Sonomore Atomics, a cluster from Sonoma County, won the toss. Change of Heart came in second, which meant that there were fifty or so blockaders ahead of us. Good, I thought. Gives me time to see how it all works.
The affinity groups within our cluster needed to meet to determine the blockade order. Tony, the plumber from our AG, volunteered to be the spoke. The rest of us pressed up to the road. A row of police were stationed right at the gate, and some protesters harangued them about the arms race. Although it was barely dawn, a few cars were arriving, and everyone wanted the action to begin. Chants kept breaking out, then dissolving into shouts and applause.
Finally, the first AG from Sonomore Atomics strode into the street. A cheer went up from the crowd. Several dozen California state troopers buckled down riot helmets and pulled on leather gloves. The blockaders situated themselves across the Lab entrance and sat down in the road. The rest of their cluster chanted, "Shut it down! Shut it down!" A couple of cars pulled to a stop. The drivers leaned out of their windows, chagrined.
A squad of troopers marched in and surrounded the affinity group. "You are obstructing a public roadway," blared their bullhorn. "If you do not move immediately you will be subject to arrest."
"Shut it down! Shut it down!" the crowd yelled back. One by one the protesters were led away to an open area just inside the fence, where they were frisked and handcuffed. The lone non-cooperator was dragged by the arms.
As soon as the first AG from the Sonoma cluster was cleared away, a second took its place, followed soon by a third and a fourth. Lines of cars were backing up in both directions. As the drivers stopped their engines and settled in for the wait, protesters handed out leaflets. Some workers accepted them, some angrily threw them away.
Hank and Cindy and I stood at the edge of the road taking in the panorama. "We'll be up in no time," Hank said.
"Yeah," Cindy answered. "It's going too fast."
Too fast. My chest tensed. Should I do it? Why not? Well, for one, I hadn't actually asked for any time off work beyond today. I'd have to cite out after a day or two, and break solidarity. Let it go, I told myself. Don't be impatient. You don't have to get arrested at your first blockade. Use today to watch and learn.
I craned my neck for a better view as a man in a wheelchair was hauled away by several police. The arrestees were being handcuffed with flexible plastic strips, disposable cuffs that looped together behind the back. The police must have figured they didn't need to handcuff the guy in the wheelchair. But as soon as they turned away, he steamed back into the intersection to the cheers of the crowd.
The second time, the police cuffed his chair to the fence. Fifty or so people were now in custody, and Change of Heart's turn was rapidly approaching. The last affinity group from the Sonoma cluster took to the street: animated high-schoolers with painted faces, balloons, and bright, hand-lettered signs pleading for the future of the planet. The police seemed reluctant to begin the arrests. When they began busting the teens, booing and cries of "Shame!" filled the air.
Tony, our spoke to the cluster meeting, rounded us up for the final briefing. "We drew straws, and we're the fifth AG," he said. "We're after Fish Without Bicycles, and before Duck and Cover. Look, there go the first people from our cluster."
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A dozen people from Short Meetings AG stepped into the road, holding hands. The rest of Change of Heart applauded them, then joined in the old Pete Seeger song, "If I Had a Hammer."
We sang through several verses as the police arrested them one by one. I tried to picture myself seated on the concrete. Should I do it? If you're not sure, it's better to wait. Focus on supporting those who are arrested.
Next to me, Hank fidgeted and shifted around. "It's only been a half hour, and they've busted eighty people," he said. "It's barely dawn. We're walking right into their arms."
"It's kind of late to change our plans now," said someone else from Spectrum.
"No, come on," Cindy said. "Let's go back up the road. We could be way more effective if we got away from the cops."
As other members of our AG joined the debate, though, it was clear that most preferred to stay at the gate. People talked about their blockade plans. I drifted out of the discussion, having spotted Holly fifty feet away, circled up with Duck and Cover. They had their arms around each other, and looked very close-knit. I felt happy for her, but wished their meeting would break up so I could go talk to her before she got busted.
A woman from Fish Without Bicycles came over to us. "We're going now. You're next." A current ran through our group, blockaders and supporters alike. We huddled together. People grabbed drinks of filtered water, took vitamins, and got a final round of hugs. "One of our support people should go tell Duck and Cover that we're going," Cindy said as the moment approached.
"I will," I volunteered, seizing the opportunity. I hastened over to Holly's circle. "Spectrum is going next - then it's you," I told them, looking right at her.
Holly looked back at me and smiled. "We're still discussing what we're going to do." She pointed past me. "There goes your AG. You better hurry!"
Sure enough, Spectrum had just walked out into the road. I looked back at Holly, still smiling at me. I held her gaze, and suddenly it was completely clear. I turned and headed toward the blockade.
"Come on," Hank hollered as he saw me hustling after them. I caught up and grabbed his hand as we circled in the intersection. In a glance I took in the faces of the others - excitement, fear, pride, concern. I shared all their feelings, simultaneously.
We barely got seated before the troopers surrounded us. Photographers darted in and out. We started singing a song we'd learned at our prep:
"Circle round for freedom, Circle round for peace...."
My heart pounded, but I brimmed with confidence in what I was doing and in the people I was with. How could I have doubted that I belonged here? We gripped each others' hands, letting go only as the police pulled someone up.
The first few stood and were led away, but when they came for Hank, he remained seated. "Come on," came a cop's gruff voice. "You're under arrest!"
Hank stared straight ahead. The rest of us kept singing nervously. A helmeted cop bent over and wrenched Hank's arm behind his back. Hank leaned forward to ease the pressure. The cop yanked the twisted arm up and forced Hank to his feet. I sang in a thin voice, embarrassed that I planned to cooperate.
Our song faded. Heavy boots scraped the concrete behind me. "You're under arrest." Leather gloves gripped my arm. I staggered to my feet, scared and excited. On either side an officer held my lower arm, ready to twist. I walked with them to the waiting schoolbus, where other Change of Heart people yelled support through the windows. My wrists were pulled back and cuffed. A wave of elation swept over me. I was doing it.
The police did a cursory pat down, then pushed me up the stairs into the bus. There was a guard at the front, but otherwise it was all blockaders. I made my way past rows of laughing, shouting people to the back seats where the rest of Spectrum had gathered.
A woman from Short Meetings came toward us brandishing a pair of nail clippers. "Who wants out?"
Hank stood up. With a few quick snips, the clippers cut through his plastic handcuffs. He yanked free and massaged his shoulder. "Damn, I think they sprained it."
I leaned up in my seat, taking in the scene, joining in the songs and chants that kept bursting out. Karina from Noah's Ark was kneeling on the seat in front of me. Her hands were free, and she stuck a piece of granola bar in my mouth. "You want out?"
"No," I said, wriggling my bound wrists behind my back. "If I'm going to get busted, I want the total experience." I settled into my seat as best as I could, and a feeling of satisfaction wafted over me. We'd closed the weapons lab. They had to arrest us. It was official now.
The bus pulled out and headed across the Lab grounds. "They're taking us out the back way. I'll bet they have roads that aren't on the map." We cruised on for a few minutes, then came to a stop for no apparent reason. We were still yelling and singing, and it took a while to realize we weren't going anywhere.
"What's the delay?" griped Karina. "I want to get to jail."
"Yeah, come on," called out Hank. "I need to use a toilet!"
But we sat. The cop at the front of the schoolbus refused to answer questions. Karina opened a window. She leaned out, then ducked back in and hollered, "It's blockaders! They're blockading our bus at the edge of the Lab!" A cheer went up and we pulled open more windows to shout encouragement.
It took ten minutes to clear the road, and we resumed our journey to the county jail. When we got there, we were led off the bus and into a small gymnasium to be booked. "Women this way, men over there!" yelled a guard. People quickly hugged whoever they were standing closest to, and we said goodbye to half of our cluster.
The guards clipped the plastic cuffs off the few of us who still had them on, and formed us into a long line facing a row of makeshift booking tables.
"Where can we go to the bathroom?" someone asked.
"Out there," a guard pointed.
"Against that wall?"
"Well, there's nowhere else," he shrugged.
A few of us started that way, but someone called us back. "Don't! It's a trick, they're gonna bust you!"
I hesitated, but Hank waved the guy off. "Come on, we've already been busted."
Apparently the guard wasn't tricking us. "There's our first lesson in arbitrary authority and the prison system," someone half-joked.
Booking went just like the role-play in our nonviolence prep. We gave our names and addresses, got weighed, measured, and photographed, and then were led to a long table where a row of deputies were waiting with ink pads and fingerprint cards.
"Right hand first. Just relax your hand and let me roll the finger over. Now the thumb." This was the creepiest part. I recalled how as a Boy Scout I had started working on the fingerprinting merit badge, but never got around to the final challenge: submitting my prints to the FBI. How lucky, I later thought. If I were ever involved in any illicit radical activity, my prints wouldn't give me away. So now here I was, donating a complete set to the government.
"Left hand, all four fingers together. Okay, wash up over there." The deed was done. As I wiped off my hands, I felt an unexpected wave of pride. No more hiding, no more dreaming of some hypothetical act of resistance. I was officially a protester.
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After booking, the men were led back to the bus and driven across the Santa Rita jail grounds. We peered out the windows at the decrepit facility. To my right, behind a tall barbed wire fence, I saw a row of barracks.
Our bus drove past the barracks for a quarter mile or so and stopped in front of a big warehouse. "The inmates are kept in the barracks," someone said. "But they don't have room for us. We're probably being kept in this warehouse, and the women in that gym we saw."
The bright morning was rising over the valley as we filed off the bus to a round of applause from the fifty men who preceded us. The guards handed each of us a sheet, a blanket, and a paper bag. I opened the bag in search of breakfast, but instead found a toothbrush, soap, paper, a pencil stub, and a shiny New Testament. "That's going to honk some people off," Hank said, holding his book at arm's length as if avoiding contamination.
The warehouse, which had a thirty-foot ceiling, was lined with row after row of olive-green army cots. We made our way down the narrow aisles and staked out a corner for our AG. Other Change of Heart AGs settled nearby, and we did a quick check-in to see if everyone in the cluster was accounted for.
"Wait," someone said. "There's only eight AGs here. We started with ten."
"Fish Without Bicycles was all women."
"But where's Duck and Cover?" I looked around. Sure enough, the men from Holly's AG were missing.
"We were supposed to blockade after them, but they were still discussing what to do, so we went ahead," someone from another AG said. "They're probably on the next bus. There it comes now."
We yelled and applauded as another thirty men disembarked and checked in. But there was no sign of Duck and Cover.
Several more buses arrived, and we hollered ourselves hoarse greeting them. The warehouse was filling up fast, but still no Duck and Cover. We asked the later arrivals if they knew anything.
"They were at the East Gate?" someone said. "Isn't that where the Oakland motorcycle cops were?"
"Oh, great," Hank said. "They can be real pigs."
It was hard to picture someone as tranquil as Holly tangling with motorcycle cops, but I was starting to worry. Once trouble started, everyone in the area would be in danger.
Another bus arrived, and I went out to ask if anybody had been at the East Gate and seen what was happening. No one knew specifically about Duck and Cover, but people talked about the cops getting rougher as the blockade went on.
The next bus pulled in, and I was hearing the same story, when suddenly the men from Duck and Cover emerged.
"Where were you?" I asked a young guy from the AG. "The rest of us got here an hour ago."
"We saw how fast the cops were scooping up people at the gate," one guy said. "So we hiked down to an access road and blockaded there. We shut down traffic for a long time before the police got it together to come arrest us."
Later in the morning the guards opened the doors of the warehouse and let us out into the yard, an old asphalt parking lot broken apart by sun-bleached weeds. Bales of hay served as the only seats. A token coil of barbed wire demarcated the yard. Obviously no escape attempts were expected.
"We're overflowing the warehouse," Hank reported. "There's more of us than they have beds for."
"They're putting the rest of the men in holding cells in the main jail," someone told us. "There must be over a thousand arrests." We felt great about the numbers, but it wasn't yet noon. A thousand arrests, and it would be over by lunchtime.
I thought about Cindy wanting to go up the road to blockade. "It would have been more powerful if we kept them out for the whole day," I said.
"That wasn't the point," said a man from our cluster named Antonio. He was in his forties, with sharp eyes and a precise, impassioned voice. "We reached their hearts. They may get into the Lab, but I don't believe they'll get any work done today. They'll be too busy talking about the blockade."
The shriek of a diesel horn almost drowned out his last words. Highway 580 was only twenty feet beyond a double fence at the edge of the yard. One protester was out by the fence pumping his arm at the trucks rolling by, and every few minutes a driver would blast his support.
I sat down on a bale of hay. I was finally winding down, and for the first time, the expanse of dead time hit me. An entire day with no guitar, no books, no baseball game on the radio, no beer or candy bars. I thought about what I'd eat when I got out. A burrito. No, a hamburger. And a big bowl of popcorn.
Some guys were talking to a guard behind me. "You wouldn't want to be in the general population," the guard was saying. "Those guys would hate you."
"Aw," someone argued back, "We passed a truckload of inmates going out on work detail and they were all cheering us. Well, except one guy who flipped us off."
"No, you'd see," the guard insisted. "The Blacks and Whites and Latinos, they all hate each other. It's a jungle. You're lucky to be out here."
Around eleven a.m., Change of Heart gathered for a cluster meeting. We reviewed the legal situation, which was simple. We were charged with a misdemeanor, obstructing a roadway. People who non-cooperated had an additional charge, but no one seemed to think it would stick.
Then we did a go-round to see who from our cluster needed to cite out. "They're expecting me on a job tomorrow," said Tony, the plumber from Spectrum. "But I could call the union hall and get someone to cover it. I'm good for at least one more day."
As my turn approached, I wished I'd told my boss that I might get arrested. She was pretty conservative, though. Probably best not to bring it up if I didn't have to. "I could take one more day off my repair job without having to explain where I am," I said. "After that, I might need to cite out."
Moonstone, who had been leaning back on a cot, sat up slowly. His tie-dyed shirt stood out against the muted canvas cot. Moonstone looked to be in his early thirties, with a long ponytail and a scraggly beard. "Time-wise, I could stay. But unless they serve vegetarian food, I may need to get out after a couple of days."
"Maybe we should make it a demand," someone suggested.
"No, we shouldn't ask for special treatment," answered Doc, an intense man with flowing hair and a long, graying beard. He was in Enola Gay, a self-described "faggot" affinity group. "We shouldn't ask for anything different from what the regular inmates are getting," Doc said. "But you could trade meat for bread or cheese."
Moonstone's AG, Deadheads for Peace, included a few CD veterans. They suggested that our cluster consense on some basic solidarity points to be considered at the first jail spokescouncil. "At Diablo last Summer," one guy said, "everyone agreed on 'no fines, no probation, and equal treatment.' No fines because it's economic discrimination. No probation because it keeps us from getting busted again. And equal treatment for everyone, including non-cooperators."
There was a bit of discussion, but we consensed to the solidarity proposals pretty quickly, and chose a couple of guys to be spokes at the meeting.
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A little later, lunch was served - balogna and American cheese on white bread, plus an apple and Kool-Aid. I bartered for a triple-balogna sandwich, trading my apple to Moonstone for his cheese and balogna, then swapping both cheeses to another vegetarian for his balogna and Kool-Aid.
"Can we have your cup?" someone asked. "We're making a peace sign." A few guys were collecting all the styrofoam cups and wedging them in the chain-link fence to create a giant peace sign facing the highway. "If we get enough we can spell out a message."
After lunch, four of us from the cluster sat down together on a couple of cots: me, Hank, Antonio, and a guy named Daniel. Daniel looked and spoke like a college professor. "As impressive as this blockade is, it could be the seed of something greater still," he said. "What if each of us were to bring in five new people next June?"
Next June. It was in the air already, almost taken for granted. "Yeah, we should blockade again," said Hank. He was leaning forward, lacing up his hiking boots. "We oughta do it earlier in the Spring, though. Doing it on the Solstice is too new-age for a lot of people."
Antonio sat up on his cot. "No, no, we have to stay with the Solstice," he said. "It's a truly global day, beyond any one movement or nationality. It's in tune with the natural rhythms of the planet."
Hank started to reply, but Daniel preempted him. "We should call on other people to join us next June - locally and across the country - to band together on the Solstice to protest nuclear weapons. It's an idea whose time has come."
"Why focus just on nukes?" I said. "It would reach more people if it covered more issues, like the environment or unemployment."
"Nuclear weapons are the fundamental issue of our era," he said.
"I absolutely agree," Antonio chimed in. He ran a hand through his silver hair. "Other issues divide us. Nuclear weapons are the one issue that touches everyone. We're all at risk. People who would otherwise never be in the same room can make common cause in opposing nuclear weapons. We have to set aside our differences and join together. If we can't stop the nuclear madness, no other issue will mean anything."
Hank tried to say something, but just then a cry went up from the yard. "Out to the fence! The guards are trying to tear down the peace sign!"
We jumped up and hurried out into the yard. Several hundred guys were packed against the tall chain-link fence, squared off opposite a dozen guards. Everyone was arguing about what to do, but we finally managed to choose two guys as spokes. They went over and conferred with the guards while the rest of us determined to go limp and non-cooperate if the guards tried to clear us away.
The spokes came back. "The guards say they have orders to remove the peace sign. They don't want to force us to move, but they have to obey their orders."
I was amazed that the guards would admit their reluctance. It was like confessing they were human. People started arguing again as the guards eyed us nervously.
"Let's not polarize the situation," someone said. "It's not their choice. This order came from higher up. There's no point in turning this into a confrontation."
"Let's just sit down in front of the sign," another guy suggested. "What can they do?"
Hank laughed rudely. "Step on us!"
Ideas were flying every which way, and the guards were getting itchy. It looked like we would never reach consensus, but Doc raised his voice to get people's attention. "Maybe we should take the sign down. That way we defuse the conflict, but keep the power of action ourselves. We don't turn it over to them."
Not everyone agreed, but no one had a better idea. The guards seemed mollified, and backed off. Slowly, one cup at a time, the peace sign was removed. As the last cups were taken down and turned over to the guards for proper disposal, someone started an "om," and it caught on. Several hundred men linked arms and formed concentric circles. The "ommmmm" filled the air, swelling and fading, swelling and fading. Here and there men let their arms float upward, reaching for the sky. As the tones finally faded, some people knelt and spread their palms on the ground. "Returning the energy to the Earth," one man explained.
I nodded to myself. That was an interesting way of seeing it.
Eventually people drifted away, but a few men stayed behind and built a small monument of stones at what had been the center of our circle.
A legal spokescouncil convened in mid-afternoon. I wanted to be right in the center of the action, and was hoping to be one of the spokes for Change of Heart Cluster. But I didn't want to nominate myself, and two other guys were chosen. I wandered outside to watch. There wasn't much definite to discuss at the meeting, although we had heard some rumors from guards and late arrivals. One account had us getting a week in jail or a $500 fine. Another had our charges being dropped to an infraction - a jaywalking ticket - and all of us released with sentences of "time served."
"Rumor control, rumor control," called out Claude, a tall guy with graying hair and a long, sharp nose. Hank had pointed him out as one of the artists who had painted the great La Peña and People's Park murals in Berkeley, so I was especially inclined to trust his opinion. "This is all speculation. Let's stick to what we're sure of," Claude said.
The main order of business was determining what sentences we would consider acceptable. As the forty or so cluster spokes weighed in, I looked up at the stark sun. Compared to coastal Berkeley, the parched Livermore valley, with little shade and no cold water, felt like a desert.
As the meeting stretched on, I heard someone behind me mutter, "junior lawyers." I turned to see an older guy I'd met at lunch. He had been part of "peace navy" actions during the 1950s, sailing into restricted areas in the Pacific to delay atomic tests.
His remark about junior lawyers stung me, since I had wanted to be a cluster spoke. "What's the option?" I asked him. "We have to make decisions somehow."
"No, we don't," he tossed back. "Why not just sit in jail until the government throws us out? This legal dickering is just playing their game, playing by their rules. No matter whether we plead innocent or guilty, they win. We acknowledge their right to arrest and prosecute us. But suppose we said, 'You don't have that right, and we're not going to cooperate with you in any way. We're going to sit in jail until you get sick of us and throw us out.' What could they do? They'd eventually be forced to let us go, and that would be like admitting they were wrong to arrest us in the first place."
"They can force us to go to arraignment," I answered uncertainly.
"You think so?" he laughed. "If we refuse to cooperate every step of the way, do you think they can come in and force a thousand people to go to court? We've got them over a barrel. All this legal nonsense is just weakening us."
"Why don't you say that to the spokescouncil?"
"They don't want to hear it. They're too wrapped up in their own importance."
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He turned away. It was a lot to take in. With a little less ardor, I refocused on the meeting, which was trying to discuss specific demands to make to the judge. A lot of spokes thought we should plea-bargain to get the charges dropped from misdemeanors to infractions, with a sentence of time-served. "We'd probably get out in less than a week," someone said.
But there was a sizable group of people who were demanding a mass arraignment, all thousand of us at once, prior to any plea-bargain. The most vehement proponent of this tactic was a man with a weathered face and white hair named Pilgrim. I heard he had been arrested over thirty times, and he certainly had the attention of the meeting. "Holding out for a mass arraignment might cost us an extra day or two in jail," Pilgrim said. "But it would get as much media coverage as the action did. If they refuse a mass arraignment, we'll all plead not-guilty and demand a thousand separate trials."
The proposal caused a buzz, but most people favored a plea bargain if it would get us out sooner. Someone pointed out that we didn't all have to do the same thing, but the overall sentiment favored unified action. "We have to stick together," Doc said. "Their whole strategy is to divide us."
The meeting continued until dinner, which was a warm plate of pasty spaghetti. I saw Doc talking with Claude, and went over to join them. I worked across the street from one of Claude's murals on Telegraph Avenue, and I couldn't help putting him on a pedestal, "the great Berkeley political artist."
Claude and Doc each looked to be twelve or fifteen years older than me, and I imagined them to be veterans of the Civil Rights and Vietnam eras. Both had worked on LAG all Spring, and they were talking about what would happen after the blockade. "Do you think LAG will organize more actions?" I asked, hoping it was the right question.
"That's assumed," Claude said in a nasal voice. "I didn't spend the last six months of my life working on a one-shot coalition."
I nodded, trying to catch his eye. "A lot of people will want LAG to keep going."
Doc furrowed his brows. "The question is, what will it be? Will LAG be an affinity group network, or will it turn into one more 'progressive' organization with an office and a permanent staff?"
"It has to go beyond affinity groups," Claude answered. "It's time to think in terms of building a movement, not just doing actions. LAG is the first step, a group that lasts beyond one action."
I was going to second that point, but a commotion at one side of the yard interrupted the discussion. A hundred men were already clustered around, and more were hurrying over.
"It's the lawyers! They let the lawyers in!" We finished our scant meal and headed over to where two members of LAG's volunteer legal collective were being mobbed. Walt, a recent law school graduate who was in one of the Change of Heart AGs, stepped up onto a bale of hay. "We really don't have anything solid to report. We just wanted to check-in with people."
Someone called out, "We heard that the two local judges have disqualified themselves and that there would be a new judge appointed."
"We heard that rumor too!" Walt laughed. "But that's all it is."
"Has there been an offer to negotiate?"
"Nothing definite yet," Walt said.
"What was the total number arrested?"
Kathleen, a short woman with wavy brown hair and a sharp jaw, waved some papers. "We show a little over thirteen hundred -" A cheer punctuated her remarks. "- And I've heard there might be fifty more tomorrow. There's a meeting tonight for people who want to get arrested."
There were more cheers from the hundreds of guys clustered around the lawyers. I wondered what the largest-ever anti-nuke protest was. I'd heard people talking about Seabrook on the east coast, and Diablo Canyon in southern California, but I didn't know much about them. Maybe we'd broken the all-time record.
I surveyed the five hundred men crowded around the lawyers, and suddenly felt the need for some privacy. Some room to think. I drifted away from the gathering, laid down on my cot, and mulled over the situation. How long would we be here? Could I really cite out? It would be hard to leave before the action was over. Maybe I should call in sick for the extra days. Or just tell my boss where I was and hope she'd be cool.
I looked around the warehouse. I had expected the average age of the blockaders to be mid-20s, but it seemed more like mid-thirties. Hair styles ran the gamut from blow-dried professionals to home-cut dropouts. Regardless of age and appearance, a pervasive politeness and tidiness made me think of my own middle-class upbringing.
Most of the men were White, with a smattering of Asian Americans and Latinos. I'd noticed two Black men earlier, both middle-aged. I wondered how they felt about being in such a minority. Had they expected it all along?
I thought about the "real" county jail, where most of the inmates were Black. In the February action, the one hundred seventy arrestees were mixed in with the general population. What a different experience that must have been.
A loud voice cut short my daydreaming: "You too can be ssssssssssssucked up in the Tornado of Talent!" Earlier in the day, Wavy Gravy, a longtime activist who was a Merry Prankster in the 1960s and an emcee at Woodstock, had posted a sign-up sheet for an evening talent show. I had taken a slot, figuring to share a song, but I hadn't given it much thought through the day.
Now, as Wavy assembled us for the show, I hurriedly hummed a few scales, trying to get loose. The names were drawn out of a hat, and I wound up with slot number one, which seemed like a tough assignment. Luckily, Wavy warmed up the crowd. We packed onto the cots in the center of the warehouse. Knowing that we had all chosen to be there together, it felt like a big state-sponsored Summer camp. Wavy was the jovial head counselor, and the guards, who were standing off to the sides, seemed like the maintenance staff relaxing at the end of a long day.
Wavy told a few jokes, then launched into a story from the Sixties, when he was in Washington, DC, for a Vietnam protest. "I went inside a government building and found an empty room," he told us. "I took off all my clothes and hid behind the door." Wavy pantomimed the scene. "Then one of my friends called in a bomb scare. They emptied the building, and the cops went room to room searching for the bomb. When they came to my room, I jumped out and screamed - scared the daylights out of them!"
I was on. I planned to sing one of my own songs, "After the Nuclear War." But as I stepped onstage and faced five hundred expectant faces, a different inspiration seized me. I grabbed a breath and launched into Elvis's "Jailhouse Rock." With no guitar, no harmonica, and no microphone, I had no idea what to do with my hands. I nervously snapped my fingers. Instantly dozens of people picked it up, and the raucous cheering as I finished told me I'd hit the mark.
Skits, poetry, mime, comedy, songs, magic, and dance filled the next two hours. "And this is only the first night," Wavy said late in the show. "Wait till we get warmed up!" We ended the evening in a huge circle around the perimeter of the warehouse, holding hands and singing the old Civil Rights-era standard, "We Shall Overcome."
Finally we reached the end of the longest day of my life. The blockade that morning was distant, and the previous night - before I'd been arrested - seemed like a prior lifetime.
We talked in lower voices as we settled in for the night. No one wanted to let go, but finally the guards insisted that we be quiet. They turned off a few of the overhead lights, but it was still pretty bright. I tried to get comfortable. The canvas cot was barely as wide as my shoulders. The building wasn't insulated, and the chill night air seeped through my army blanket. I pulled the blanket tighter, then decided to use the portajohn one more time. I got my shoes on and trekked to the far end of the warehouse.
A dozen other guys had the same idea, and were lined up at the door. "They're only letting us go one at a time," someone told me.
"Why? There's eight portajohns."
"Right. But they don't want us to forget who's in charge."
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Tuesday, June 22, 1982
It seemed like I was awake all night, vibrating with the rhythms of the action. But somewhere I dozed off, and Hank had to rouse me the next morning. "Come on, there's something happening out at the fence!"
I staggered up, pulled on my jeans and followed him out into the gray dawn, where we joined a crowd of men along the fence facing the highway. Out in the median strip a van had pulled over and a half-dozen Asian men with shaved heads and white robes were chanting solemnly to a simple drumbeat.
"It's a group of Buddhist peace monks from Japan," someone said.
"Japanese monks?" exclaimed Tony. He pushed his way up to the fence. "I was on a peace march last year with some monks from Japan." He squinted through the fence at them, then started waving and yelling. "It's him, it's Matsahiro!" Tony jumped up and down, waving and hollering.
At first the monks stoically continued their drumming. But then one of them took a few steps toward us. He peered across the highway, then started waving back. He ran over to his comrades and pointed at us excitedly.
People tried to pick up the chant. Most of us never quite got the words, but our toning voices filled the air as the State Police arrived and chased the serenaders away.
Soon after, the guards dispensed a breakfast of gummy oatmeal and white bread. While we were eating, a guy came around announcing the resumption of the spokescouncil. "Every cluster should send a spoke empowered to decide on our basic legal demands."
It made sense to me, but several people gave the guy a hard time. "Who are you, calling the meeting?"
"I was a spoke yesterday," the guy answered. "Don't get paranoid."
Sometime mid-morning, the guys who had been put in holding cells the night before were brought over to join us. Enough men were citing out to make room for them, but we still filled the warehouse. If as many women were staying, we still numbered a thousand.
We traded stories with the newcomers. Toward the end of the previous day's blockade, a Pagan AG, The Web, had spun a ritual web of yarn and string across the road where the Oakland motorcycle cops were harassing people. The cops thought that a web of yarn was no big deal, and one tried to ride through it. The web held, and the cop fell off his bike. Although a number of people got knocked around as the cops retaliated, it sounded like everyone was inspired by the action. "I think there's a metaphor somewhere in that yarn," said Antonio.
The guards brought in a few Chronicles and Tribunes so we could read about ourselves. We got banner headlines in both papers, with plenty of pictures. We were celebrities! It was the first time I'd ever been involved in a front-page story. The papers circulated around the warehouse, read aloud over and over.
Along with the papers, the guards brought two rumors: they told us eighty more blockaders had been arrested that morning, and the two local judges had in fact disqualified themselves from the case. The former information was soon verified by the arrival of about forty more men to new rounds of cheers. But no one could corroborate the story about the judges.
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Several workshops got underway in the afternoon. The one that appealed to me was veterans of earlier movements sharing their experiences in a big circle out in the yard. I leaned back against a bale of hay as Nathaniel, my nonviolence prepper, told a story about a Civil Rights sit-in.
"In the Spring of 1960," he said, "I was working in Washington, DC, with a group of students from Howard University, a Negro College, as it was called then. By 1960, the lunch counters and cafeterias in Washington had been integrated, but those in Maryland and Virginia, just across the border, had not. Even diplomats to the United Nations, if they were Black, couldn't sit at the counters and be served.
"There had been some sit-ins in Maryland that Spring. We'd go down there for the weekend, get arrested, sit in jail singing freedom songs and sharing stories, and then on Sunday night they'd let us out and we'd go back to school for the week.
"But in Virginia, they passed a law saying that anyone arrested at a sit-in would get a $1000 fine and a year in prison. Also, the American Nazi party was active in Virginia, and had threatened to lynch people who came there. They seemed serious, so at first, no one tried.
"But some of us talked it over, and felt we had to stand up to them. We decided to do a sit-in after school ended that year. We did intensive nonviolence trainings, and asked anyone who didn't think they could maintain nonviolence not to take part. We actually punched people in the stomach during the preps, to test our responses. Finally, eleven Black students from Howard University and I decided to do it.
"In early June, we went across to Arlington, Virginia, to a place called, ironically, People's Drug Store. We went inside and sat down at a Whites-only counter. Within five minutes, the police arrived with paddywagons. But the owner said he didn't want arrests - it would be bad publicity - so he closed the counter.
"We decided to stay and wait. We wound up being there for two days, which were the two most challenging days in my life. Word got out fast, and people came from all around, Nazis and others. They harassed us, shoved and punched us, sometimes so hard you'd fall off the stool. Then they'd start kicking you. The worst part was when people put lit cigarettes down our backs. The police had left, of course. They had no interest in preventing the violence.
"The whole time we tried to respond as nonviolently as we could, looking people in the eyes, trying to treat them as human beings.
"For me, the peak came toward the end of the second day. A White guy came up behind me and called me a 'nigger lover.' I turned around and saw the most terrible look of hatred I have ever seen. He was holding a switchblade about an inch from me. And he said, 'If you don't get out of this store in two seconds, I'm going to stab this knife through your heart.'
"Luckily, I had a lot of experience by that time. So I looked him in the eye and said, 'Friend, do what you believe is right, but I'm still going to try to love you.'
"This guy was just shaking with hatred. When I spoke, his jaw dropped, and his hand shook even more. He didn't say a word. He just turned on his heels and walked straight out of the store."
I released my breath, wondering if I could have thought so fast. And what if one of the Black students had said the same thing?
"Later that evening," Nathaniel continued, "we finally decided to leave. We were dead tired, after two days of this. We prepared a written statement, saying, 'We appeal to local religious and community leaders to get these eating establishments open and integrated. If nothing has happened in a week, we will be back.'
"There was a crowd of about five hundred people outside, yelling and throwing things at us. But there were also some friendly media people, and they helped cover us as we left. Otherwise, I don't know whether we would have gotten out of there alive.
"We went back to Washington, DC, and tried to resume our lives. Five days passed, and we wondered whether we had the courage to return. On the last day, we got a phone call from Arlington. People's Drug Store had decided to open its counters to everyone. The religious and community leaders had used their authority to bring it about. After hundreds of years of segregation, twelve students had touched their hearts."
The group of listeners was sitting in spellbound silence. Nathaniel paused and collected his thoughts, then concluded his story.
"As I reflected on my experience, especially on the man with the knife, I realized that what I did was the most effective thing I could have done to protect myself. If I had tried to fight back, I probably would have gotten stabbed. Even if I'd won the fight, his hatred would have grown stronger. But by reacting in this way, it made him realize he couldn't go through with it. He had to change.
"I've been involved in civil disobedience actions for over two decades now, but I have never seen such a striking example of the power of nonviolence. There's a crucial lesson here - if we treat our opponents as humans, there is a good chance that they will respond that way. It also shows the strength of a small, committed group of people - an affinity group, you could say. Together we were able to maintain our nonviolence and be there for each other with emotional and physical support.
"We weren't alone. Thousands of people went through similar experiences in those years, and helped bring about the transformation of society. I've seen it happen."
Later on, Daniel Ellsberg gave a talk about the arms race to a large gathering of men in one corner of the warehouse. Ellsberg was a former government employee whose revelation of the secret "Pentagon Papers" in 1971 had blown the lid off the lies and cover-ups surrounding U.S. policy in Vietnam, and helped turn the tide against the war. Since that time he had been a key spokesperson against U.S. nuclear and military policy, taking part in civil disobedience actions on both coasts.
By the end of his talk, I was losing steam, and retreated to my cot to lie down. Two guys near me were playing chess with little pieces of paper. Antonio and Doc were rounding up Pagans to plan a new moon ritual, and some other guys in our cluster knotted a few T-shirts and headed out to the yard to play football. I lay on my back, exhausted but too wired to sleep. I wished I had something to read. I flipped through the New Testament they'd given us, but it didn't hold my attention. Too sketchy. I wished I had a Russian novel. Something by Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky to pass the hours. Or the days.
How long would we be in? People at the February action had gotten a week. Since the state had gone to the trouble of setting up the warehouse, they might just let us sit here for a while. By tomorrow, I was going to have to cite out or call my boss and tell her where I was. Not something I looked forward to.
Moonstone and some other guys were talking and laughing on a cot near me. I rolled over the other way. I thought about how long I'd craved my own apartment, which I finally got a few months earlier - and here I was spending my vacation in a five-hundred-man dormitory.
Try as I might, there was no way to tune it out. One guy talked about being arrested at the 1977 occupation of Seabrook nuclear plant on the east coast and enjoying the action more than the Livermore blockade. Moonstone, who was pacing around wearing his bedsheet as a toga, said he liked the 1981 Diablo action more, too. "There's something about a backcountry occupation that a street blockade just can't match."
Someone else said they had heard that our thirteen hundred arrests were the biggest one-day total ever for a California anti-nuke protest.
"Yeah," answered a younger guy. "But we didn't really disrupt anything. It was all so orchestrated. Put this kind of energy in downtown San Francisco and we could shut down the whole business district."
There was an idea, I thought. Shutting down the financial district. How about the stock exchange? If we disrupted trading, it could be statistically verified. We could make headlines in the business section.
A little later, word filtered around that the legal spokescouncil was reconvening. Sleep seemed hopeless, so I decided to go watch the meeting. As I headed outside, I heard Wavy Gravy decline an invitation. "I've been going to jail for fifteen years, and I haven't been to a meeting yet." He lay back down on his cot.
The spokes circled up. Many clusters had rotated their spokes, and it took an hour just to do check-ins and catch everyone up on the previous day's discussions. The main issue was still whether to bargain for lower charges and agree to plead no contest, or to accept the misdemeanor charges and demand a trial.
"We could use the courts to put Livermore Lab on trial," someone argued. "We could present evidence on why we blockaded, and use it to indict the Lab and the government."
Claude was standing with his arms folded across his chest. "That kind of testimony would probably be suppressed by the courts," he said. "They don't typically allow political defenses."
The spokescouncil discussed the trial question for a while, but there was no consensus on what to do. Luckily a couple of our lawyers arrived. They had some definite information: local judges Lewis and Hyde had voluntarily disqualified themselves, and Judge William Chotiner had been appointed to hear our cases.
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"Chotiner's the judge from Diablo Canyon last Summer," Moonstone said, bouncing excitedly on his toes. "He's the guy who gave us four-day sentences."
Shouts and joking rang through the space, even though some people reminded us that we might be in jail for several more days.
"Lewis and Hyde had to step down, they couldn't take the heat," Hank said to Doc and me. "The county can't afford to keep us here, but the local judges can't afford to let us out or it would ruin their political careers. So they had to step aside."
Doc squinted. "Lucky for us they disqualified themselves," he said. "We could have challenged them, but that takes time. They could have kept us sitting here for a week or more."
The legal spokes reached consensus that we would all stay in solidarity until it was certain that everyone was getting equal sentences. The lawyers said they would convey our decision to the women's jail.
Dinner came and went, along with a great rumor that we were getting out that night with sentences of time served. The spokescouncil reconvened, but I stayed behind this time. The lawyers had brought in some books, and I was reading a copy of Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five that had been torn apart and was being passed around serially.
Around sunset the lawyers unexpectedly returned. From around the warehouse people converged, and the air was electric. Walt was urged up onto a chair to fill us in. "Your charges have all been dropped to infractions," he announced, "and all resisting arrest charges for non-cooperators have been dropped." Shouts and applause burst out, then subsided just as quickly so Walt could continue. "Judge Chotiner has indicated that he will give a sentence of time served to anyone who pleads no contest, and the arraignments can begin this evening if you accept the offer."
I could hardly believe what I was hearing. And it was icing on the cake when Walt added, "The judge has agreed to arraign you by affinity groups, in the order you were arrested."
I spontaneously hugged the guy next to me, a huge smile on my face. The warehouse echoed with cheers. Everyone was talking at once. There was no question that most people were ready to accept the offer. A few people called for process, saying that spokes should check-in with their clusters and then reconvene to see if we consensed to the offer. But the warehouse was in chaos, with people laughing and yelling and hugging as if they were about to part forever.
The spokescouncil had barely gathered before a deputy with a bullhorn began reading the names of the first twenty men to leave for arraignment. The guys looked around for guidance. Some people still argued that we should coordinate with the women's spokescouncil and formally consense before anyone left for arraignment. Others argued that immediate arraignment was a major victory, and we should go for it. Clearly most people wanted to get the legal proceedings underway. With a final round of hugs, the first group of men left for court. The spokescouncil heard a few complaints about process and how we hadn't ever reached consensus, but gradually the debate wound down.
Wavy got another talent show going, which most people gathered around for. My AG, though, stayed on our cots talking. We heard from the guards that about one hundred fifty men would be arraigned that night, and we had easily been among the first one hundred fifty brought to the warehouse the day before.
We talked in low, hurried tones about the action, mostly in the past tense, looking ahead to the next time. Everyone was pretty sure they'd get busted again, especially if there were a blockade next June at Livermore. I had no doubt, and even hoped there'd be another action before then. If all we were getting was two days, I could do it more than once a year. I wasn't feeling tired anymore.
It must have been about midnight when our names were called and we boarded a bus that drove us across the jail grounds to a makeshift courtroom. Fifty or so supporters and press people who had gotten jail passes greeted us with applause as we were led in and reunited with the women from our AG. We sat with our arms around each other as the judge read the charges. Then he called our names one by one, took our no-contest pleas, and asked if we had a statement to make before sentencing.
A few people gave short speeches on why they had blockaded - for their children, for the planet, for the future. The rest of us waved our hands in the air to signal support. But most of us skipped statements to speed things up for the people after us.
"Jeffrey Harrison," Judge Chotiner said as I stood before him, "If you have no statement, I sentence you in the name of the People of California to two days in the county jail. That time has already been served, and you are free to go."
I stepped away, hardly believing it was over. I thought back over my time in jail, the blockade, the Sunday meeting in the park, the nonviolence prep - what a long four days! I'd been swept into an alternate reality where every minute was packed with meaning, where every day was half a lifetime. My innocent bystander days were over. I barely remembered what it was like not to be involved.
We were led back out to the buses, men and women together. Everyone seemed to have extra bounce in their step. Even the guard driving the bus got caught up in the spirit, telling us "off the record" that he and some of his colleagues supported our action.
"Why did you jail us then?"
He laughed. "That's what you wanted, wasn't it? We didn't want to disappoint you."
"Join us next year! We'll be back - join us!"
"No comment," he said. "No comment."
The bus dropped us off at the edge of the jail grounds at about two a.m. The driver pointed up the road. "I think some of your people are over there." We started off hesitantly, then we heard shouts and calls. At least a hundred people were waiting for us. They welcomed us to freedom with hugs, extra jackets, and four types of trail mix.
We waited a couple more hours for later people, trading stories with the women from our cluster. Karina entertained me and Hank with a long story about some women who burned one of the New Testaments and were dragged away by the guards, setting off a big commotion. I didn't get the story quite straight, but I figured I'd hear it again at our AG meeting a week later.
I was hoping Duck and Cover would get arraigned so I could see Holly, but they were too far down the arrest list to get out that night. Finally, the last bus of the night unloaded, and we all headed home.
Karina offered me a ride back with a woman named Sara, whom I took to be her lover. Sara was in her mid-twenties, with dark, serious eyes. She was involved with Central America support, and made sure I got a handful of flyers when she dropped me off at my apartment.
It was past five a.m. when I finally made it to bed. I had scarcely slept for two entire days, but even after drinking a beer I lay awake for a long time reverberating from the impact of the past 48 hours. I scribbled frantically in my journal, trying to capture every detail.
When I awoke that afternoon, I lay in bed for a while replaying my mental tapes of the blockade. A hundred scenes reeled past, and dozens of faces swirled through my mind. But one person in particular kept popping up: Holly. I couldn't wait to see her. I had no idea whether she was single or not, and I didn't even know how to get hold of her except that she volunteered at the LAG office. It seemed like a good time to do some volunteering myself.
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Friday, July 16, 1982
The first few times I stopped by the office, Holly wasn't around, so I looked at the literature rack a while and then split. Finally one time she was there, working on a mailing about the LAG Congress that was being called for the first weekend of August. I offered to help, and afterward caught her alone for a minute and asked if we could get together later in the week.
She thought for a moment, a slight smile on her lips. Then she looked at me and said, "I've been wanting to go for more walks. How about Thursday afternoon?"
On our first couple of dates, we went for walks around South Berkeley and the UC campus. Conversation flowed freely, everything from theories of social organization to the nuts and bolts of the latest LAG mailing. Back in my day-to-day life, the blockade sometimes seemed like a dreamworld. But when I talked with Holly, it seemed as if it were only yesterday, and I was filled again with the passion, the power, and the hope.
The third time we got together, I met Holly at a house in South Berkeley where she was doing some gardening. We were going to a show at the Freight and Salvage coffeehouse that evening, but it was only about five o'clock. "Want to walk to my house?" she asked. She pulled on a gray sweater and zipped up her daypack.
We wended our way down to Grant, a quiet street that ran most of the length of town. An anarchistic array of flowers, shrubs, and little lawns crowded up against the sidewalk, enlivening the small wood and stucco houses. Kids were playing up and down the street, and music filtered out of an occasional window.
We hadn't talked much about the past, and I was surprised to learn how recently Holly had moved to Berkeley. Until the previous December, she had been working as office manager for an alternative energy company down in Monterey, and living with a guy named Frank. Their relationship mostly ended in late 1981. "I say 'mostly' because I'm still really close to Frank," she told me.
I felt a twinge of jealousy and steered away from the subject. "So you moved to Berkeley?"
"Yeah," she said. "I got laid off and was getting unemployment, so I had a lot of free time. I always wanted to live in Berkeley. It seemed like a place where so much was happening."
I nodded. "Did you know about LAG then?"
"Not initially. I went to a forum sponsored by a group called Urban Ecology, and I decided to join them. In fact, I wound up moving into the house where Urban Ecology has its office. Then some of us went out to Livermore to support the Mothers' Day action. Seeing the arrests was powerful, but what especially struck me was how the women doing the action were so intimate and caring toward each other." She slowed almost to a halt and looked at me. "That really touched me. I was searching for community. Being new in Berkeley, I felt like I was meeting people superficially, even in my house. I was looking for a deeper connection."
I could help with that, I wanted to say. But it didn't seem like the moment for a joke, even a serious one. "I know what you mean," I said, looking at her.
As I spoke, we reached University Avenue, the dividing line between south and North Berkeley. Four lanes of traffic interrupted our reverie. "A rude reminder of the state of civilization," I commented. "This city is getting overrun with cars."
"It sure is," she said. "Urban Ecology wants to get most cars out of Berkeley. We have a plan to route all traffic onto a few major streets. The rest would be plowed up and made into playgrounds or parks or community gardens."
"I like it," I said. "I had this idea for getting rid of cars entirely. Everyone who had to drive would park in underground garages at the edge of the city. Then, to get into town, there'd be these giant roller coasters running into the different neighborhoods. It'd be energy efficient, since gravity would do the work. And it would be really fast!"
She laughed and put her arm around my waist. I put my arm around her shoulders and breathed deeply. Along the sidewalk, flowers swayed in the evening breeze, drinking in the last sunlight.
We turned off of Grant onto Cedar and headed up a slight hill, approaching a two-story wood house set back about fifteen feet from the sidewalk. Behind a little picket fence was a yard full of wildflowers and an apple tree. "This is it, the Urban Ecology house," she said.
"I recognize this house," I said. "Didn't it used to have an old convertible parked out front that was filled with dirt and had a garden growing in it?"
"Yeah, the Veggie Car. We had to move it. It's in a park down in West Berkeley now." She unlocked the front door and ushered me into the living room. "I need to call Claudia at the LAG office."
"It's after six. Do you think she'll pick up?"
"I'll call on the night line. I'll be back in a minute."
She walked toward the back of the house. The night line. I hadn't heard of that before. Was it a secret phone number for the initiates, or could anyone ask for it?
I stepped into the living room, which had high ceilings and lots of wood trim. The room was furnished with old couches and chairs draped with patterned cloths. More fabric hung on the walls. The aroma of baking bread wafted out from the kitchen, but it was overpowered by the scent of fish emulsion plant food, which had the house smelling like Ocean Beach at low tide. I looked around at the dozens of potted plants filling the living and dining rooms. "Why don't you use instant fertilizer?" I innocently asked Holly's housemate Randall.
"Are you kidding?" he asked, pulling his head back for effect. "You're feeding right into the petrochemical industry when you use commercial fertilizer. Fish emulsion is a sustainable resource and requires practically no processing."
I nodded noncommittally, wondering how you emulsed a fish. "Too bad the room doesn't get more light. The plants would do better."
"Funny you should say that," he said enthusiastically. "We're getting ready to knock out the whole front wall and build a greenhouse. It's a perfect southern exposure." He beckoned me out onto the front porch. "The apple tree will give it enough shade so the plants won't scorch."
I tried to visualize how a greenhouse would attach to the front of the narrow two-story house with its tiny yard. "It'll be two stories, all glass," he explained, "shaped like the front three sides of an octagon. It'll be a model for indoor gardening."
Holly came to the door. "Do you want to eat while we're here?" We followed her back into the kitchen. "There's miso soup heating up, and we have some tabouli..."
I tried to decline, having no idea what I was being offered. "I'll just have some tea," I said.
But Randall wouldn't hear of it. "No, no, try the miso soup, it tastes just like tamari, only more intense - you'll love it." He set a big bowlful in front of me. Holly helped out by offering me some crackers and cheese.
I wished we'd have some time to hang out, maybe up in her room. Our strolling conversations were great, a chance not only to relive the blockade, but to envision the next steps and brainstorm how to make them real.
Until the past month, sweeping social change had seemed like a remote fantasy. Talking with Holly, though, the radical reworking of our entire culture along the lines of peace and social justice was transformed into a challenging organizing problem to be solved by thorough discussion, careful planning, and direct action. I was grateful for our talks wherever they took place, but the idea of making love and then lying in bed plotting nonviolent revolution seemed wonderful.
When we finished dinner, though, Holly told me that she had to deliver a phone list to the LAG office before we went to the show. "They need it for phone-banking about the LAG Congress. I should warn you, Belinda and Monique are there - we're probably walking into the middle of a fight over the Bible-burning."
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The Bible incident was still being debated, especially since the Feminist Cluster announced that they weren't sending spokes to the LAG Congress. I had never formed a clear picture of the incident, and I asked Holly about it as we took a bus across town. I opened a sliding window, then turned in my seat to face her. Her eyes met mine, then drifted away.
"We were held in a big gymnasium. Two-thirds of the floor was filled with six hundred cots, and the other third was open space, for meetings, rituals, sharing circles, or whatever. Over in the back corner you had the Feminist Cluster. Their AGs had names like Revolting Hags and Sisters of Lesbos, and they were a lot more vocal than most of the women, chanting and yelling at the guards all the time. A lot of them already knew each other from the Women's movement. They stayed separate in jail, and there was definitely prejudice against them. They were seen by a lot of people as 'big, loud dykes' who were stirring up trouble."
"So they burned a Bible?"
"We were never totally clear on what happened. After lunch on the second day, most people were napping or talking in small groups, waiting for some word from the legal team. Suddenly there was a terrible scream. Two women from the Feminist Cluster came bursting back into the gym from the restroom, chased by several female guards. Before anyone could react, the guards grabbed the two women and dragged them out of the gym."
Holly's voice was rising, and she seemed to check herself. "I still get wrapped up in it, three weeks later! More guards squared off, guarding the door. Women from the Feminist Cluster ran up and demanded to know what was going on. Most of the other women gathered around. The guards said that the two women had started a fire in the restroom, endangering everyone in the gymnasium."
"Did you believe them?"
"I didn't know what to think," Holly said. "The Feminist Cluster challenged it, and kept demanding the return of their sisters. But some other women wanted to know what had been set on fire, which the guards told us - one of the New Testaments that everyone had been given."
"That's the part I heard," I said.
Holly nodded as the bus lurched to a stop. We shifted in our seats. "A spokescouncil was called to discuss what to do," she resumed. "Their cluster wanted solidarity actions, but others didn't want to hold solidarity with people they felt had violated the nonviolence guidelines by destroying property.
"Finally the Feminist Cluster got fed up. Twenty women walked out of the spokescouncil, marched to the front of the gym, and started pounding on the doors and chanting. The doors were locked, and the guards didn't respond. So the women kept pounding and yelling. Belinda and a few others went to support them, but most people stayed at the meeting. Some of us were just confused over what to do, but a lot of people were offended by the Feminist Cluster."
"So what happened to the two women who got grabbed?"
Holly laughed slightly. "Nothing. Toward the end of the day, with no explanation, they were returned. That was the end of it."
I shook my head. "Just like the whole incident never happened," I said.
We'd reached our stop, just up the block from the LAG office. As Holly had predicted, tensions were simmering as we entered and made our way to the back. Claudia, whom I'd met before, nodded in our direction. Holly introduced me to Belinda, who barely looked up, and Monique, who said hi and asked how we were doing.
Holly joined them around the worktable. I felt a little extraneous, and busied myself straightening the flyers on the literature rack, where I could hear the talk without interloping.
Monique was about my age. Unlike practically anyone else in LAG, she wore makeup and styled her auburn hair. Monique was a member of the Walnettos affinity group, which had its base in Walnut Creek, an affluent suburb east of Berkeley. I'd met her once before, and although I liked her, a geographic and cultural gulf separated us.
With Belinda there wasn't a gulf. We were from totally different planets, and I gathered there wasn't much room for me on hers. She wore a bright red T-shirt that proclaimed, "I Like Big Women." Belinda was a big woman herself, with wire-rim glasses and crewcut blonde hair. Her face flushed with anger as she turned back to Monique. "Who can blame the Feminist Cluster for boycotting the Congress," she said. "They got no support at all in jail."
"There was some support," Holly said. She spoke slowly, as if reluctant to enter the argument. "The spokescouncil consensed that we wouldn't leave jail until the two women were returned."
Belinda shook her head sharply. "It wasn't enough. Solidarity failed. When your sisters are singled out like that, you do everything you can to get them back. The Feminist Cluster knew what solidarity meant. While everyone else sat around debating, they acted."
I nodded to myself. Abrasive as Belinda was, I liked what she said.
Monique looked distressed. "All their yelling just turned people off. And in the end the guards brought the two women back, anyway."
"Maybe that was because of what the Feminist Cluster did," Claudia put in. Claudia was a wiry woman with spikey brown hair. She was one of the two LAG staffers, with a sharp mind and sharper tongue. She eyed Monique. "The guards knew that if they didn't bring the women back, the Feminist Cluster would raise hell all night."
"I think that's probably true," Holly said, looking apologetically at Monique.
Monique turned to Holly with a pleading expression. "It split the group," she said. "They escalated the tactics, and then expected solidarity. That's coercive. We could have gotten the women back by less confrontational means, like refusing to go to arraignment until they were returned. The Feminist Cluster just alienated people."
"Well, the lack of solidarity alienated other people!" Belinda gesticulated. "Lesbians are subjected to this all the time. As soon as we stand out in a crowd, the authorities clamp down, and the straights stand by and say, 'Oh, they shouldn't have made such a scene.' Well, we're through being quiet. And if straights don't like it, who needs them? We'll go do our own work!"
Damn, I thought. What could anyone say to that? Monique seemed cowed by Belinda's tone, and didn't respond.
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I caught Holly's eye, and nodded toward the clock. She looked torn between mediating the clash and trying to get as far away from it as possible. My hint about the time seemed to settle the matter. She gave the phone list to Claudia, and we said our goodbyes and took off.
We headed for the Freight and Salvage, which was down in West Berkeley. Originally Holly had suggested going to Ashkenaz to dance to a Cajun band. I didn't want to admit that I was incompetent on the dance floor, so I talked about how much I wanted to see the band that was playing at the Freight that night. To my relief, she went for it. Sure, sooner or later she'd figure out I couldn't dance - but not on our first musical outing.
Our route took us directly into the remnants of a patchy red sunset, and we walked along quietly. But my mind kept drifting back to the argument at the office. "That's intense," I said. "There was nothing like that in the men's camp. People argued, but nothing so divisive."
"Yeah," Holly said. "It definitely polarized people. When the guards brought the two women back that evening, Karina and I went over and welcomed them. But we were about the only ones from our cluster who did." Holly nodded to herself. "In a way, I felt intimidated by the Feminist Cluster. But not by their behavior - it was their experience and analysis. These women had spent years discussing feminism and solidarity. They were way ahead of most people, and that caused problems."
"Kind of ironic that it was the women who had the conflicts, and the men who ran smoothly."
Holly yawned. "It wasn't all conflicts. That was the only divisive incident. Most of my time in jail was amazing. It felt so easy to connect with people. My cot was right next to a Buddhist AG from the Zen Center in San Francisco. I meditated with them on the second and third days. And there was a Pagan ritual led by people in Matrix AG who call themselves Witches."
I had met a couple of male "Witches" in jail, and although they seemed like nice guys, I was skeptical about the whole Pagan thing. But just then, Holly pointed to a poster on a phonepole. "Look, the San Francisco Mime Troupe is doing their new show in Berkeley next weekend. Want to go?"
"Sure," I said, glad to pin down a future date with her.
"How about Sunday? Because on Saturday, I'm going to the Future Actions work group. We're going to decide what actions to propose to the LAG Congress next month."
"Is that the coordinating meeting you were telling me about?"
"Coordinating Council? No, that's different. Coordinating Council is a meeting of spokes from all the work groups. It's an overview group that meets every Monday. I might go next week. We'll probably hash out the final plans for the Congress."
That was news to me. I had gone with Holly to a planning meeting for the LAG Congress the previous week. I went mostly to have something to work on with her, but I was starting to feel invested in the two-day Congress, which was charged with calling future actions as well as designing an organizational structure for LAG. It bothered me that some other group was setting itself up as the overseer, making the real decisions. I felt cut out of the loop. "Who's on this Coordinating Council?"
"Mainly spokes from work groups. But anyone can go," Holly said. "It's not a closed meeting."
"Do you think you'll go?" I figured that her presence would make me feel more at home if I decided to check it out. I had been going back and forth on how much to get involved in LAG, since it was taking up time that I wanted to be reading history or playing music. Still, if Coordinating Council was where the real decisions were being made...
The Good Old Persons were playing at the Freight and Salvage that night, singing bluegrass and country swing. My thoughts drifted off to my family in Indiana, who might like this music. A rare point of agreement. What would they make of LAG? I'd talked with my mother just before the blockade, and hadn't mentioned it. As far as she knew, I was still saving up money to go back to grad school. If I mentioned civil disobedience, she'd start talking about careers and how an arrest record would jeopardize my brilliant prospects. Maybe I could tell my younger sister or brother about it, but what would it mean to them? They'd think it was one more weird thing that Californians did - sit in hot tubs, follow gurus, and get arrested at protests.
My family were your basic "good Americans," silently assenting to whatever the government did. Did they ever secretly imagine that things could be different? That their efforts could matter? What would it take to reach folks like them?
The one ray of hope was my newfound faith in LAG, that we were the cutting edge of a fresh wave of resistance. Despite Reagan's momentary ascendancy, people were waking up. Seabrook, Diablo, Livermore - we were lighting the torches of a new rebellion.
We stayed through two sets, then took off. Walking home, our conversation died more than once, which was rare for us. I wondered what she was thinking. Was she enjoying the silence, or was it making her uncomfortable?
Tentatively, I put my arm around her shoulders. She slipped her arm around my waist. Her hand lay lightly on my hip. I closed my eyes, letting my steps match hers. What was she thinking? Did she want me to kiss her? Or was she just enjoying my company? What would happen when we reached her place?
As we approached her house, she slid her arm from around my waist and reached into her pocket for her keys. "Do you want to come in?" she asked casually.
"Sure," I said nonchalantly. Holly stepped in and removed her shoes. I followed suit. "Let's make tea and go up to my room," she suggested. Despite feeling some jitters, I smiled to myself. This was more like it. A kettle of hot water was already on the stove. Holly made a cup of raspberry hibiscus tea for each of us, and then led the way up the stairs.
Her room was at the front end of the hall, overlooking the street. The old hardwood floor squeaked as we stepped through the doorway. She closed the door behind us. There were no chairs, so I sat down on the end of the big bed, which took up most of the room. A thick white comforter crumpled under me. Holly picked up a stack of papers from the bed and moved them to the orderly shelves lining one entire wall. A potted ficus tree arched out of one corner, and deep green vines circled the top of the walls.
"Looks like you're really into plants," I said.
"They do really well in here." As she reached out to light a candle, her hair tumbled over her shoulder, looking reddish against the light skin of her arm. "We have a garden in the backyard, too. It's all organic. I love it, it keeps me at peace with the Earth."
"Sounds spiritual to me," I joked, reminding her of a recent conversation.
"It is, it's a spiritual connection," she said, sitting down next to me on the foot of the bed. "We sang this song in jail, 'The Earth is our mother, we must take care of her.' I believe in that."
From our previous discussions, I knew we didn't see eye to eye on spirituality, and I regretted bringing it up. "Let's put on some music," I suggested, spying a cassette player on the shelves.
"There's some tapes over there," she pointed. "Pick whatever you want to hear." As I got up, she sat down on the side of the bed.
Most of her tapes looked like sound tracks for meditation. I picked North Indian flute music and put it in the player. "Do you meditate?" I asked as I sat next to her on the bed. The flute sketched a haunting melody, joined by tablas and an organ-like drone. I wished it were a little louder, but I didn't want to get up again.
She lay back on the bed, her hair fanning out and framing her face. She folded her hands across her stomach and gazed up at the candlelight flickering on the ceiling. "Yeah. I wish I did it more. I guess I'm a one-passion person. And right now, that passion is politics."
She lay on her back, breathing gently. A curl brushed across her forehead. Her eyes shimmered blue-green. I hesitated, then leaned down and kissed her lips. She slid her arms around my shoulders and looked up with an enigmatic smile, as if to say, "Yeah? Now what?" I eased down and pressed my body against hers. We kissed again. She rolled toward me, and the softness of her breasts against my chest sent a shiver through me. I threaded my fingers deep into her thick hair, then burrowed down to kiss her neck.
She laughed slightly, which caught me off-guard. "Are you ticklish?" I whispered.
"No," she answered. "It just made me laugh. Here we are on the bed together, we're probably going to make love, and neither one of us has spoken a word about it."
I looked at her intently. "Does it bother you?"
"No, it's just interesting." She leaned up on one elbow so our heads were at the same level. Her eyes were full of warmth, but I couldn't make out what she was thinking.
"Is there something you want to talk about?" I asked.
"Well, I guess there's one thing - condoms. I have some if you don't."
"I have one in my jacket." I went to get it, turning up the flute tape at the same time. Holly slipped out of her jeans and pulled back the sheets. She stretched luxuriantly on her back, arms behind her head, her breasts outlined through her T-shirt. An angel, I thought. Truly an angel.
As I slipped into bed, I flashed back to meeting Holly, in the park the day before the blockade - how lucky I felt to have met her, and how much I wanted to see her again. Here we were, in bed. Was this for real? She leaned over and kissed me sweetly on the lips. What a dream.
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Wednesday, August 18, 1982
The crowd pressed in on both sides, singing and shouting. From the left they danced after flutes and drums, from the right a trumpet and sax. Attired in brilliant colors, they converged on the small double doors. A huge guitar played by two thick hands soared overhead. And from the flames above the doors rose a fiery phoenix.
It swung like a rainbow over La Peña's facade, a mural commemorating the struggles of the Chilean people against their CIA-sponsored military government. The doors, the focal point of the mural, were carved with intricate Andean reliefs.
While Mort locked his car, Craig and I looked over the familiar painting. Craig pointed up at the weathered hands holding the big guitar. "Claude says he's going to renovate the mural next Summer. BCA swung a city grant."
We made our way into the crowded restaurant area of La Peña, the local Chilean cultural center and a favored watering hole for Berkeley activists. Craig went to the bar for a pitcher of beer while Mort and I found a table under a row of multicolored shawls hanging along the back wall. A photo collage showed the Guatemalan village where they were made.
We pulled up another chair for Hank, who was expected momentarily. Hank had engineered our gathering to share his blueprint for a giant Grim Reaper for the October Livermore protest, one of three actions we consensed on at the LAG Congress.
Three actions. If I had any lingering doubts, that hooked me - a radical organization with a full year of actions. Even before the Congress I was going to a couple of meetings a week plus stopping by the office every few days. Now we had three actions in the next ten months, each building off the previous, culminating in another June blockade of Livermore. With good organizing, who knew how many thousands might join us this time?
Not everyone was so sanguine. I knew that Mort and Craig thought we were spreading ourselves too thin. But how could there be too many actions? You can't hold back people's desire to protest.
Craig set the pitcher and mugs on the table and pulled up a chair. We were all practically the same age: Craig and I were twenty-eight, Mort twenty-nine, and Hank thirty. We shared a cultural history, growing up at the end of the Vietnam era, and I had gravitated toward them over the past month or so.
The other three had met earlier in the Spring, and I envied their easy rapport. I wanted to be part of their circle, and I was glad to have an hour or so to spend with them before joining Holly, who was at a meeting across the street at the LAG office.
Craig poured the beer into our glasses. "Cheers," he said. As we clinked our glasses and drank, I studied Craig. He was stocky, with neatly-trimmed brown hair, and wire-framed glasses. His green short-sleeved button shirt contrasted with the light skin of his arms. Craig had helped initiate LAG the previous Winter, and had been a staff member since the Spring. I'd met him at the office and a few Coordinating Council meetings. He was usually so brusque that it took some adjusting to see him leaning back in his chair drinking a beer.
By comparison, Mort seemed like an old friend. We worked together on the LAG Congress, and he'd given Holly and me a ride home from several meetings. Mort maintained a consistently unkempt appearance: long brown hair tucked behind his ears, a wispy Lenin-esque goatee, shirt tail falling out. Only a pocket-protector crammed with pens suggested that by day he worked as a solar engineer.
I asked Mort and Craig about their cluster, Overthrow. The idea of a socialist-oriented direct action group intrigued me. It had a lot more bite than the amorphous nature of Change of Heart Cluster.
"It started as a refuge for people who didn't like the new-age tone of most of the affinity groups," Craig said.
Mort nodded and set his glass on the table. "Our goal is to get discussions going about the wider context of LAG's work. No one ever talks about economic relations, or political power and social classes. The affinity groups just want to know when the next blockade is."
He was cut short by Hank, who loped up and said, "Let's see who's radioactive." He started scanning Craig with a small Geiger counter. Immediately it began clicking. "Jeff? Sure enough." The box clicked again as he checked Mort. "Good, I see you've all been getting your daily dose of radiation."
"How are you doing that?" Mort said, leaning over to see the dial of the instrument.
"I was turning the counter up to peak sensitivity," Hank explained. "It was picking up background radiation. Reassuring, huh?" He pulled up a chair. "Hey, I just got tickets for the Dead shows next month. They'll probably sell out by tomorrow."
We poured Hank a beer and got to talking about all the great 1960s bands from the Bay Area - the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Santana, Country Joe and the Fish... How as teenagers living in different parts of the country, we'd listen to them and dream of moving to San Francisco and joining a hippie commune.
Growing up in Indiana, I nurtured an image of San Francisco and Berkeley: everyone was political, everyone was an artist, and the whole culture was steeped in radical creativity. Which wasn't far off the mark. But despite playing political music around Berkeley for several years, I had been doing it by myself or with others who were in it for the music, not the message. LAG was my first time being around a whole community of creative political people.
"I feel really lucky to be here in Berkeley," I said as I refilled our glasses. "Politics seemed so hopeless in Indiana. It probably does everywhere outside of a few liberal cities. What can you do?"
Craig sat up, and his eyes met mine. "People can take action anywhere," he said. "That's the message we have to spread. No matter where you are, you can find a few others and act."
"Five people can't go organizing a blockade," I said.
"Not at first. But you can do something. The key is to act, not just sit around talking. Do an event that unleashes people's creativity and gets them working together. Paint a banner and hang it off a rooftop. Perform a skit outside the student union. It doesn't take a thousand people to make your point."
Mort nodded. "In a place where nothing's happening, you might actually get some media coverage. You could reach a lot more people than you think."
I thought back to my years at Indiana State. Not exactly prime organizing territory. Some friends and I had set up a coffeehouse and a couple of folk festivals, trying to rekindle the spirit of the '60s. Without a lot of luck. Oh well, I figured, I had to start somewhere. Look at it as a warm-up for LAG.
Craig doled out the rest of the beer and asked Hank, "What about this Grim Reaper idea of yours?"
"I'm glad you asked that question," Hank said. He pulled a sheaf of crumpled papers from the pocket of his leather jacket and showed us a sketch. "I'm picturing a ten-foot Reaper, with a long black robe and a death head. We mount it on a flatbed truck and drive it through Livermore in October - think they'd get the message?"
We all laughed. "I'll work on that," Mort said.
Craig emptied his glass. "I like it. But I'm worried about the October 9th demonstration, overall." October 9th was the thirtieth anniversary of Livermore Lab, and Lab brass were planning a big celebration. People at the LAG Congress felt that October was too soon for another big CD action, so we consensed to a legal demonstration at the anniversary bash. "It's a fine idea," Craig said, "but hardly anyone signed up for the work group."
"There's still time," I said.
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Ignoring my remark, Mort looked at Craig. "No one wants to work on a legal demo. It's not glamorous enough for the AGs." He pulled out a couple of dollars. "Who wants more beer?" Several more bills were tossed onto the table, and Mort made his way to the bar.
While Craig and Hank talked about the Reaper idea, I leaned back in my chair. Mort's disdainful attitude toward affinity groups bugged me. Even though Spectrum hadn't met since right after the blockade, Hank and Cindy and I had been spokes at the Congress, and I figured our AG would come back together for the upcoming actions.
Even more, I noticed that when the talk got serious, Mort and Craig talked right past me. Sure, they knew each other better and were in Overthrow together. But I'd had enough of politics as a spectator sport.
Mort returned with a pitcher. "I just ran into Pilgrim at the bar," he said. "His AG spraypainted another draft billboard last night. We should drive by and see it later."
I saw an opening. "Did anyone see the anti-nuke billboard that the Freeze bought downtown? The top says 'Stop the Arms Race.' We could alter the lower part so it says 'Blockade Livermore' instead of 'Vote Yes on the Freeze.'"
"No, we've got to support the Freeze, whatever we think of it," Craig answered. The Nuclear Weapons Freeze referendum was on the California statewide ballot for November, and Livermore Lab had joined a multitude of defense corporations in lobbying heavily against it. "If it loses in California, Reagan will claim that people are behind his insane escalation of the arms race."
"Sure, I'll vote for the Freeze," I said. "It's still a powder-puff."
"It's not that simple," Mort said. He shifted in his chair, slinging his arm over the back, but didn't look any more comfortable. "It's about building alliances. Civil disobedience is a fringe tactic. It's easy for the government and media to dismiss us. But if LAG is working with the Freeze, it situates us on the political spectrum. It keeps us from being totally marginalized."
Clearly they'd done more thinking about it than I had. At least they had responded to my idea. I shifted to a lighter vein. "I had an idea for a ballot initiative. How about a Northern California secession referendum?" They laughed, but I pursued it. "It would probably pass. We could secede from the United States and start our own country. If it worked, other places would do it, and we could completely dismantle the U.S. government."
"Why couldn't they just blockade us?" Mort said. "The secession idea has been floated before. The problem is, if it's just the Bay Area, they could isolate us and starve us out. We have to build a national movement, not just focus on a few key centers."
"The government wouldn't need to blockade us," Hank put in. "They'd just cancel our military contracts, and our economy would collapse."
"We have all the farms in the Central Valley," I said as I filled my mug. "We could start our own economy."
"Think so?" Craig answered. "Take a look at Nicaragua. They had a socialist revolution in 1979. So what happens under Reagan? The CIA is spending millions of dollars funding right-wing guerrillas and terrorist attacks to destabilize the Nicaraguan economy. We have to restructure our entire society, not just secede."
"Besides," Hank said, "if the Bay Area secedes, the U.S. would become even more reactionary."
"An excellent point," I said, glad to have a graceful retreat from my proposal. "As long as there's Berkeley, there's still hope." Just then I noticed Holly and Daniel walking toward our table. Holly had a bounce in her step, and was talking over her shoulder to Daniel, leaning back to tell him something over the noise of the crowd.
I smiled to myself as they approached. Holly greeted us warmly, her eyes sparkling as they lighted on me. Her buoyancy re-animated our table, and a ripple of pride ran through me as she came over and gave me a hug.
She pulled up a chair next to me, and I noticed how the others immediately included her in their conversation. Holly's opinions mattered. I slid my arm around her, feeling myself drawn into the inner circle by her presence.
Holly and Daniel were coming from a meeting to start planning the International Day of Nuclear Disarmament, the most ambitious of the proposals we'd consensed to at the Congress.
"How did it go?" Craig asked.
"Great," Holly said. "There were over twenty people. We did a long visioning process led by Antonio, sharing our greatest dreams for International Day. Then we formed work groups and started to draft a Call to send out to peace groups all over the world."
"Inviting them all to come to Livermore?" Hank joked.
"No, groups will do local actions, wherever they are. Some will blockade, some will do vigils or teach-ins." Holly's eyes were open wide, her cheeks full of color. "Schoolkids will paint murals and have festivals, churches will have special services - in a few years, it could become an international holiday."
"Precisely." Daniel's professorial voice came from behind me. "We're issuing a Call for groups to do local, decentralized actions on or around June 20th next year. We'll do another blockade at Livermore, but we envision actions all over the world."
"Isn't it premature to start organizing internationally before we even have a local coalition that we can work with?" Mort asked with a scowl.
Some of the color drained from Holly's face. "I think we can do both."
"I agree," Daniel said dryly. "And I suspect that we'll find more kindred spirits in other cities and countries than among existing leftist groups in the Bay Area."
"Depends on your definition of kindred," Mort retorted.
Craig gestured toward Mort, as if signaling him to ease up. "The time may be right for national and international organizing," he said. "The key is to reach out to local groups, too. We can't expect to shut Livermore Lab single-handedly."
"We're planning to do a lot of local organizing," Holly said. "Melissa and I are going to join the Outreach collective."
"Well, I hope so," Mort said.
"You could work on International Day if you have so many ideas," Holly said with no enthusiasm.
"I'm thinking about it," Mort said. He fidgeted with his napkin. "Is anyone seriously asking how we're going to organize an international coordinated action plus three actions of our own in the next ten months? People were consensing to everything at the LAG Congress. It'll amaze me if we can sustain this level of involvement for a year."
Craig nodded slowly. No one else responded. I wasn't sure what to think. Mort was pretty sharp, but he struck me as pessimistic. Why couldn't we sustain our momentum - even grow - over the next year?
We finished up our beers. Mort pulled on his jacket. "Well, I've got to work in the morning. Anyone want a ride?"
Craig and Hank got up to join him. Craig put his hand on Holly's shoulder. "We'll talk some more about International Day next time you're at the office. I have some ideas about publicity."
"Great," she said, regaining some of her élan. "I'll be in tomorrow afternoon."
As the others took off, Holly and I stood together on the sidewalk outside La Pena. She yawned, and I put my arm around her shoulders. "Are you meeting'd out?" I asked her.
"Just about," she said. "Three nights in a row is pushing it. But the meeting tonight was so good, it was worth it."
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It had been a few nights since I'd seen Holly, and I was looking forward to walking home alone with her. But it turned out that she had invited Caroline, who was still over at the office, to walk with us.
Not that I didn't like Caroline. I remembered her signing me up for the nonviolence prep the first time I went into the office. Anyway, maybe she was only going a few blocks.
We jaywalked over to the LAG office, where Caroline was just emerging. Her shoulder-length brown hair was tangled on one side, and her glasses were slightly askew. Her forehead creased as she turned her key in the office door lock. "I finally got the books balanced," she told Holly. "It doesn't look very good."
"We need to get a mailing out right away," Holly said. "If we announce the actions, people will be excited about donating."
Caroline nodded, but her forehead didn't unfurrow.
"Don't think about it now," Holly said. "Leave your worries at the office."
We were all silent as we passed under a shadowy canopy of branches and leaves. As we emerged into the streetlight, Caroline looked at us beseechingly, as if to say, help me not obsess about LAG's finances!
Holly picked up the cue. "Let's talk about the actions," she said. "Are you going to do Vandenberg?"
Caroline twisted a strand of hair around her finger. "I think so," she said. "We could possibly stop the missile test, or at least delay it, if there are enough of us. So for me, well, I'm pretty sure I'll do it."
"Me, too," Holly said. "I want to do a backcountry occupation, to reclaim the land."
"The land" was Vandenberg Air Force Base, located on the central California coast near San Luis Obispo. A test launch of the new MX missile from Vandenberg was slated for late January 1983. Activists around the state were gearing up for it, and though it wasn't yet clear how LAG was going to relate to the Vandenberg Action Coalition that was taking shape, we had adopted the action as our Winter focus.
"Between that and International Day and Livermore, we're going to have our hands full," Caroline said. "Plus we consensed to start a regular newsletter."
The newsletter. I caught my breath. At the Congress, there was a proposal to expand LAG's periodic mailings into a newsletter that carried announcements and articles about our actions. There was even talk of doing a four-page tabloid newspaper.
Publishing a radical newspaper was a dream of mine since childhood, ever since I read about Ben Franklin and Tom Paine during the American Revolution. What better way to forge a new radical organization out of disparate elements? Give people a common publication, a meeting ground for all views, and let the truth emerge.
In college, some friends and I quit the stodgy student daily and started an "independent" tabloid. Alternative, yes. But radical, it was not. It mainly carried concert reviews, humor, poetry, and campus news, with only the occasional environmental or anti-nuke article.
This would be different. LAG had a vision not just of ecology and global peace, but of restructuring the world from the bottom up. Who better to launch a paper dedicated to nonviolent revolution?
After the Congress, Claudia had encouraged me to draw up a subscription proposal for LAG's September mailing. If enough subscriptions came in, we'd have the money to do a tabloid. I wrote a Dickens-esque spoof on the "ghosts of actions past, present, and future," helped stuff it into hundreds of envelopes, and crossed my fingers for a good enough response to pay for a real newspaper.
Caroline parted from us on Derby Street, where she was house-sitting, and finally I had Holly to myself. We stopped under a willowy tree and hugged. Holly gently kissed my face, then my lips. I sighed and held her close for a moment. Hand in hand we strolled the last couple of blocks to my apartment.
As we came into the lobby, the clutter of old newspapers and junk mail and litter distracted me. I had been neglecting my |