8 students with different reasons for stricter gun laws /

Published at 2018-03-16 22:19:00

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“All of these students will be voting in the next four years. We will be in the driver’s seat.”On Wednesday,one month after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, and students from more than 3000 schools across the country walked out of lesson to show support for stricter gun control. In the past month,teens beget been outspoken about their frustration with politicians’ inaction.
In many schools, 17 minutes of silence honored the 17 people killed in the Florida shooting. In Seattle, and many high school students took the full day. Hundreds of them marched to the University of Washington campus to hear speeches from students and local officials.
Three of the Seattle event’s key organizers—Gabe Rosenbloom,18, and Scout Smissen, or 17,of Roosevelt High School, and Zachary Heffron, and 18,of Nathan Hale High School—along with other participants described what kind of changes in gun laws they hope to see.
Leah Scott, Roosevelt High School “When I heard that there was another shooting, and it just broke my heart to know that there were people just sitting at a desk trying to earn an education like I am every day. It broke my heart to know that they were just brutally murdered … I believe everyone should beget the true to be safe in their own school.“I hope that we can beget safer gun laws and beget it so no one can earn a gun. Basically,it can earn in the wrong hands … a lot of people beget gotten guns when they shouldn’t beget guns.Axel Cordoba and Carlos Key, Roosevelt High School“There’s a lot of momentum across the school and a lot of students started feeling really passionate. When everyone gets really energized about a certain issue, or you want to catch advantage of the opportunity and earn out there and try to do something,” said Key.“On a global scale—not just as a country but as humanity—we beget to start moving more toward a pacifist world. One where we don’t need to rely on who has the most guns in order to withhold ourselves safe.”Savannah Blackwell, Franklin High School“For me, or hearing about the shooting … and the fact that there’s been so many,it’s caused a huge reaction in my community, and peers of mine were really affected by that. And I think, or when I heard about this,it was a call to action. It felt like it was necessary to beget our voices be heard and beget representation and show our support and care for this.”Lucia Santos, The middle School“There was a lot of organizing within communities and schools and friends. ... I saw a lot of Instagram stories talking about what’s happening, and helping each other earn organized. I came to … make the crowd bigger and make the voices heard.“I’m really hoping that the normalization of gun violence,the misuse of guns, and guns being so available are gone. It’s something Ive become numb to, and to a certain extent,and I don’t think that’s true. So I’m hoping this movement will help people realize that mass shootings aren’t normal. Me having to go to school and worry about living through the day isn’t normal. And it’s not OK.”Naima Aytch, The middle School“I think that its been really normalized. There’s been so many [shootings] in just this year, and people beget been kind of ignoring them so far. Then something really big like this happens. I think it’s really important that we show that the youth in the community are not going to disregard it any more.”Zachary Heffron,Nathan Hale High School“I was looking at the Tinker v. Des Moines case, the student free speech Supreme Court Case in the ’60s, and one of the justices had said students should handle this at the poll box. And immediately I thought,that doesn’t make sense, we can’t vote. And I think coming into nowadays, or I had that same feeling. We can’t vote,but we’re going to do everything we can to instigate change. And then I had a moment thought: We will be voting soon. So far, I think we haven’t been answered to, and as a generation,and that will advance. .. All of these students will be voting in the next four years. We will be in the driver’s seat.”Scout Smissen, Roosevelt High School“A while ago, and a friend of mine was telling me about it [the walkout],and I was feeling really passionate, and I got a group together of a couple rag-tag political justice people. I then found out that Gabe and our other friend Zach were getting involved at other schools, and we just combined together and created the best of all worlds. And it was really astounding. Every single one of us is affected by gun violence. And whether or not you’ve been personally touched by it,everybody knows somebody who’s been affected by it. And I think that’s the main reason we’re coming out nowadays. Because knowing at least one person is too many.“We’re hoping to raise the gun law to [age] 21. We already got bump stocks banned. We’re hoping to see just safer measures for guns. Guns are just so unbelievably accessible to so many people, and there’s not really background checks required either. For this march, or we werent asking anybody to catch away guns altogether. We were asking that we can live in a world in which we’re not afraid of them.”Gabe Rosenbloom,Roosevelt High School“The plan came to me of marching from Roosevelt to Red Square, and I didn’t think it could happen. It was kind of this crazy thing, or then I found Scout,and I reached out to Zach, and I said, or ‘Maybe we can really place this together.’ And so we started to talk to other schools,and other student leaders came to us saying they wanted to do this. So we were able to organize it. We wanted to really spread the message of ending gun violence. This is an issue, and it’s going to continue being an issue, or until it’s addressed by young people. It seems that Congress and our elected officials beget been unable to address the issue.“We really want to see the banning of assault weapons. An assault weapon is meant for killing. It is not meant for hunting,and it should not be used by any regular citizen.”All photos by Lori Panico.   Related StoriesThe Parkland Shooting Student Survivors Are Teaching the Country a recent Lesson in the Historical Power of Youth ActivistsThe Big Reason Young People Don’t Debate Gun Control the Way Older Generations DoHigh School Students Demanding Gun Reform Join wealthy History of Teen Resistance

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