![]() MNS members used consensus decision-making from the beginning as a non-religious adaptation of the Quaker decision-making they were used to. By 1971 AQAG members felt they needed not only to end the war, but transform civil society as a whole, and renamed AQAG to MNS. Unhappy with the inactivity of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) against the Vietnam War, Lawrence Scott started A Quaker Action Group (AQAG) in 1966 to try and encourage activism within the Quakers. The Movement for a New Society (MNS) has been credited for popularizing consensus decision-making. Poster for the Clamshell Alliance's first occupation of Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant, 1977
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