Randall Forsberg, remembered.

PositionEditor's Note - In memoriam

I opened up my New York Times one day in late October to find out that Randall Forsberg had died. Forsberg was the leader of the nuclear freeze movement in the early eighties, and she played a big role in halting the arms race.

At a time when the Cold War was raging, and Ronald Reagan was joking about launching nuclear weapons against Moscow in ten seconds, Forsberg, then a graduate student at MIT, not only came up with the idea of a nuclear freeze but threw herself into a campaign to attain it.

With her inspiration, hundreds of towns and cities passed nuclear freeze resolutions, as did several states. She understood that by starting with a modest goal, she could galvanize opposition to the entire nuclear project.

And modest it was. As Sidney Lens pointed out in The Progressive back in May 1982, the freeze "would leave in place some 30,000 U.S. warheads and some 20,000 Soviet warheads, equal in aggregate power to more than a million bombs like the one that devastated Hiroshima in 1945." But even Sid's jaundiced eye twinkled at the positive energy that Forsberg harnessed, and the potential it held in store.

I felt that energy and sensed that potential when I attended the nuclear freeze rally she organized in New York in June of 1982. Almost a million Americans filled the streets and then gathered in Central Park to say no to nuclear war (and to listen to Linda Ronstadt oddly choosing to sing "Blue Bayou").

Randy Forsberg never gave up on peace--or on activism. I interviewed her for an editorial I was writing about the Pentagon budget in our March 1999 issue. Clinton had increased the budget to $267 billion (compare that to Bush's $700 billion!). Forsberg, who was then the executive director of the Institute for...

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