{"id":774,"date":"2025-07-15T16:49:55","date_gmt":"2025-07-15T16:49:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.agencywebdesigners.com\/?p=774"},"modified":"2025-07-17T14:32:45","modified_gmt":"2025-07-17T14:32:45","slug":"from-no-nukes-to-nuclear-now-the-progressive-energy-flip","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.agencywebdesigners.com\/index.php\/2025\/07\/15\/from-no-nukes-to-nuclear-now-the-progressive-energy-flip\/","title":{"rendered":"From \u2018No Nukes\u2019 to Nuclear Now: The progressive energy flip"},"content":{"rendered":"
A partial meltdown at Three Mile Island nearly 50 years ago pushed Gene Stilp into a life of activism, starting with a 1979 march on the Capitol he helped organize that drew 65,000 demonstrators and appearances by Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne and Graham Nash.<\/p>\n
At 75, Stilp is still at it \u2014 now protesting Baltimore-based Constellation\u2019s plans to restart a reactor at the Harrisburg-area power plant, one not involved in the accident, in a deal with Microsoft. Stilp, who has lived nearby for decades, started Stop TMI Restart last fall. The group has about 32 members.<\/p>\n
\u201cWe are two generations away from the accident that happened at Three Mile Island,\u201d said Stilp, who accused Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, officials in an April lawsuit of failing to safeguard residents\u2019 health and safety. \u201cPeople have forgotten that nuclear power stands for dedicated dead zones with nuclear waste\u2026People who are environmentalists have forgotten about all these things that their parents and their grandparents used to know. The new generations are not up to speed on nuclear power.\u201d<\/p>\n
But as Bob Dylan once sang, \u201cthe times they are a-changin.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n
As Maryland and other states push for clean air amid rising power demand, advocates increasingly see nuclear energy as a key, cost-effective climate solution. Leading the push in Maryland is Democratic Governor Wes Moore, who is backing policies to support new technologies touted as safer, more efficient, and more versatile than traditional reactors.<\/p>\n
Valerie Gardner, a California environmentalist, argued that anti-nuclear stalwarts are refusing to focus on the goals of reducing carbon emissions. She said that too many focus on renewables such as wind and solar while rejecting nuclear. The founder of the nearly 10-year-old Climate Coalition said she has come around, now taking on fights to keep nuclear plants open, including Diablo Canyon, California\u2019s last nuclear power plant.<\/p>\n
\u201cIt was just complete insanity and stupidity to try to close a large, reliable source of clean energy,\u201d said Gardner, who called out anti-nuclear activists holding \u201c30-year-old gripes\u201d stemming from \u201cfearmongering promulgated by groups to make the public afraid.\u201d<\/p>\n
\u201cThey lost the fight and the plants were built, but they continued to carry the flag all this time,\u201d she said. \u201cIn its 68-year-old history, it\u2019s the safest known energy we\u2019ve ever had, with no pollution and fewer deaths\u201d than those caused by fossil fuels.<\/p>\n
The \u201cNo Nukes\u201d movement that grew out of anti-war protests in the late 1960s has ebbed and flowed, expanding from weapons to energy and gaining followers after nuclear disasters such as Fukushima.<\/a> Shortly after Stilp helped organizers of 1979\u2019s Coalition Anti-Nuclear Rally in Washington, said to be the largest anti-nuclear protest at the time, Bruce Springsteen joined<\/a> Musicians United for Safe Energy in the fall of 1979 for Madison Square Garden\u2019s No Nukes concerts<\/a>. <\/strong>By the mid-2000s, natural gas had gained favor as a cleaner, more plentiful energy source, causing investment in nuclear plants to decline.<\/p>\n In Maryland, bipartisan lawmakers have focused on rising energy costs and want to encourage new power generation in the state. Moore, who backs expanding nuclear, has said the state has not gone far enough to generate energy to hit its targets.<\/p>\n