File:Oct 15, 1969, Vietnam Moratorium Day in memory.jpg
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Exposition Park, Los Angeles, Moratorium for Peace, October 15, 1969. Photo by Harvey Smythe.
University of Southern California student activism in 1969-1970 held a key role in starting up the first Earth Day ...
* https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/Earth_Day_Memories_on_the_50th_Anniversary
Senator Gaylord Nelson, who proposed the first 'Earth Day' Teach-in, credited the nationwide student-led Vietnam Moratorium peace movement for inspiring him to believe in the potential of a nationwide student-led environmental movement.
GreenPolicy360 Founder/Siterunner: Our student activists lobbied the good Senator often, with Congressman George Brown, from 1968 through April 1970 and first Earth Day to build on our Moratorium work.
"If we could tap into the environmental concerns of the general public and infuse student energy into the environmental cause, we could generate a demonstration that would force the issue onto the national political agenda," Senator Bill Nelson (D-WI) said after one of his 1969 trips to California.
Senator Nelson at USC, Earth Day 1970
The foundation of the "Decade of the Environment" came about as a result of students proposing, planning and organizing the Moratorium teach-ins, peace marches, then Earth Day. USC students were out in front in this history-making era. A 16 mm USC film school documentary by Robert Carroll follows students who organized the Moratorium, beginning with the committee's DC founding in the summer of '69...
Back in the day --
- Steven Schmidt, 1969
- University of Southern California
Steve Schmidt, Moratorium Coordinator, and Rep. George Brown
Vietnam Moratorium Committee - Organizing California 'Peace Movement'
Vietnam Moratorium for Peace
Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam
1969-1970 | Millions across the U.S. Demonstrate, March, Organize, Teach-in and Rally for Peace
Daniel Ellsberg: Nixon Almost Took Vietnam War Nuclear In November 1969
Revelations: the Vietnam Moratorium may have prevented use of nuclear weapons
“Nuclear targets were picked.”
- The Moratorium stops use of Nukes
Ellsberg and National Security staff speculate that the plans would have gone ahead in November 1969.
Instead, a huge demonstration on Oct. 15, 1969, the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam, combined a general strike with nationwide protests and teach-ins.
About 2 million people came out to protest across the country, even “little towns that had never protested before,” Ellsberg recalled.
“Without the Moratorium, there would have been an escalation, possibly the use of nuclear weapons in November 1969.”
Excerpts from Doomsday Machine / Published 2017:
PBS
The Movement and the 'Madman'
PBS PREMIERE MARCH 28, 2023 ON AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
The documentary film tells the little-known story of a dramatic showdown between a protest movement and a president.
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- The Movement and the Madman - PBS - March 2023
- Vietnam Moratorium for Peace 1969-1970
- Green Policy:About
- File:Dan Ellsberg - 2017.png
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- File:Doomsday Machine-Daniel Ellsberg-Recalling the Vietnam Moratorium Oct-Nov 1969.jpg
- File:Moratorium October 15 1969.jpg
- File:Moratorium memory, Dan-Steve, Doomsday Machine inscription.jpg
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- File:The Movement and the Madman - 2.jpg
- File:The Movement and the Madman - PBS - March 2023.png
- File:Vietnam Moratorium Committee-Documentary Intro.jpg
- Category:Nuclear Weapons