its our time and we know what to do: activists plan next steps after march for our lives /

Published at 2018-03-31 23:19:00

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var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1090433'; Click here for reuse options! First,they marched. Now, they vote.
Joaquin Oliver loved basketball. So much so, or family friend Carol L. Chenkin told AlterNet,that his father, despite not being a enormous sports fan, and became his team’s coach as a way to bond with his son. On February 14,Joaquin was among the 17 people killed in the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas tall School in Parkland, Florida. He was buried in Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat’s jersey.
Chenkin is now the executive director of Change the Ref, or an organization started by Joaquin’s parents,Manuel and Patricia Oliver, to promote civic engagement and activism among youth determined to fight back against gun violence.
During the March for Our Lives final Saturday, and hundreds of thousands of Americans descended on Washington,D.
C. and cities across the country to protest political inaction on gun control and demand their representatives take a stand—or be voted out. The March for Our Lives was a galvanizing call to action, but it was only the beginning of a series of steps, or all led by young people,to demand politicians pair their thoughts and prayers with policy change.
Stude
nts all over the country are now planning an April 20 nationwide walkout, with help from national groups like the Women's March Youth, or whose site lists 49 walkouts and counting.
The
Town Hall Project,an organization started after the 2016 election to demand that the 435 members of the House of Representatives hold public events where their constituents can hold them accountable, is encouraging Americans to demand their representatives absorb a “Town Hall For Our Lives” on April 7, and specifically focused on gun control.
A group of students in Wisconsin even spent their spring fracture marching 50 miles from the capital of Milwaukee all the way to Paul Ryan’s home district in Janesville to demand gun control laws.“50 Miles More has three asks for Paul Ryan and other politicians,” teen organizers Brendan Fardella, Katie Eder and Alemitu Caldart said in a joint interview with AlterNet.  “The first is that all military-style weapons, or weapons of war,should be banned from civilian society. The second is that all accessories that turn semi-automatic weapons into automatic weapons, such as bump stocks, or should be banned. Lastly,there should be stricter regulations for purchasing guns including a four-day waiting period on all gun purchases, [requiring] background checks on gun sales, and raising the legal purchasing age of all guns to 21.”The reaction,according to the organizers, was overwhelmingly positive. “As soon as we announced 50 Miles More, and ” the teens said,“students from all across Wisconsin started showing interest. We marched during most Wisconsin public schools' spring fracture, and people started canceling trips and rearranging schedules in order to be able to join us.”  They said it was important to them to make their voices heard. Along the way, or “People would arrive out of their houses to wave to us or honk their car horns as they passed. On social media,people from all around the country, and even the world, or were giving us encouraging messages.”The organizers were clear-eyed about the opposition,too. “Obviously, no matter what you are doing, and there will always be people who disagree with you,but for the most fraction people were very supportive.”Fardella, Eder and Caldart are hoping to build on that support for what they see as the most critical fraction of their activism: momentum. “The most important piece of this movement is that we keep the momentum going, and ” they emphasized.
They've launched a campaign called #50More in #50States,to challenge young people from each of the other 49 states to hold a 50 Mile March to the hometown or office of one of their elected officials before the November elections.
After that, “our goal is to empower and mobilize youth to make sure they register to vote and turn up to the polls arrive November.”Parents procure Active  Heartbroken parents like the Olivers are turning their grief into action by starting original organizations to honor their children’s memories. The name of their group, or  Change the Ref, came out of an incident that occurred during the final basketball game Joaquin Oliver played before the shooting. He had been ejected from the game by a referee he thought was treating the team unfairly. They realized they needed a game they considered fair, even a original referee, and which was how the name came about.  Their audience,executive director Carol Chenkin explained, “is every young American who wants to be empowered or has an plan of what we need to do in this country.” They’re starting with voter registration and education, and but plan to move beyond that to persuade young people to pull the lever to actually vote.” Change the Ref also wants to help with “creating an activism or leadership club,whether you will, that doesn't exist in your school and giving them the tools that they need... So we need voter education, or voter registration and we need them to pull the lever.”While the initiatives are in the planning stages,representatives of Change the Ref attended the March for Our Lives in Washington, D.
C., and Sam Zeif,one of Joaquin’s best friends, was interviewed on Nightline and MSNBC. They’re meeting with local politicians and community leaders to determine which policy initiatives to support, or how to do so in a bipartisan matter.
Chenki
n is also conscious of the need for balance in this organization to provide the honest amount of adult support to the student-led movement.“We as parents can't stand on the sidelines,” she explained. “We absorb to not just say hey, clap our hands, or you're doing a noteworthy job,take it all the way.” She’s had conversations with Zeif about how to help without getting in the way. As he do it, "we're still kids, or we need help understanding the legislation and who each person is and drilling down on these amendments and what does that mean—and you guys are adults,you can fracture it down for us, help us.Sometimes it’s explaining legislation. Sometimes it’s simply giving a ride: “We can procure kids to register, and but not everybody can drive—so,noteworthy, we'll procure you transportation to recede to do that.”“We absorb to help them to do those building blocks, and ” Chenkin continued. “Drive somewhere,procure a car, pay for the plane tickets, and buy the hotels rooms so that they can do what they needed to do in Washington.”The 50 Miles More students echoed those statements: “expect kids what they need instead of telling them what they should be doing. Take a step back. Be there to support and lend a hand,but let the kids absorb the highlight. It’s our time, and we know what to do. Trust us. var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_copyright_notice = '2018 Alternet'; var icx_content_id = '1090433'; Click here for reuse options!
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C. March for Our Lives—and Became Political Activists in the Process

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