Los Angeles Times

Balancing homework and changing the world

Students’ march aims to ‘wake up’ Congress

- By Jenny Jarvie

PARKLAND, Fla. — A self-confessed “secret huge nerd,” Jaclyn Corin admits she is freaking out on the inside as she tries to balance political activism with schoolwork.

The 17-year-old junior class president has six essays to write for her advanced-placement language and compositio­n class. But after a gunman rampaged through her high school, killing 14 students and three staff members, she is mostly focused on Saturday’s March for Our Lives.

“It’s very hard to juggle,” Jaclyn said one evening last week as she slipped into a booth at Panera with fellow activists David Hogg and Sarah Chadwick and sipped a strawberry banana smoothie.

“We’re teenagers and we’re leading a national movement,” said David, also 17, a wiry, intense senior who has put on the back burner

memorizing his 50 psychology vocab words and his environmen­tal science project on mammals. “That’s a lot of stress.”

The goal of the studentled march in Washington is simple: to demand that Congress pass a comprehens­ive bill to address gun violence.

While the House last week passed the STOP School Violence Act, which authorizes $50 million a year to bolster school security, students say it does nothing to restrict gun access. It does not even mention the word “gun.”

“We need a mass mobilizati­on of the American public on a huge scale,” said David, a budding filmmaker who became a key voice of the movement after recording video of his classmates huddling in a small dark closet during the Feb. 14 shooting.

About 1,000 students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland — and hundreds of thousands of supporters from across the country — plan to march on the nation’s Capitol. More than 800 marches are planned worldwide — in Los Angeles and Paris; Buenos Aires and Tokyo; Sydney, Australia, and Mumbai, India.

“In the period of one month, we have shaken up the world,” said Jaclyn, a small blonde with a chirpy, singsong voice. “But I feel like the adults keep pressing the snooze button. At some point they’re going to have to wake up.”

Trying to persuade politician­s to enact gun legislatio­n, David said, is about as frustratin­g as instructin­g adults how to use smartphone­s.

“You know, when they’re like, ‘I can’t figure out how to take a selfie,’” he said dryly. “And then five minutes later, you finally take the phone and you just press the button.… You just need to go into the settings!”

“That’s perfect,” Jaclyn said, giggling.

“That’s what we’re doing with our government,” David continued. “‘Goddammit, just give it to me!’”

Already, the students have raised more than $3.3 million via GoFundMe to stage the event, bringing in major donations from celebritie­s such as Oprah Winfrey, Steven Spielberg and George and Amal Clooney. A string of pop stars — Ariana Grande, Miley Cyrus, Jennifer Hudson and Demi Lovato — agreed to perform at their rally.

For the organizers, the march is a way to channel their grief and anger as well as send a strong message to President Trump and Congress.

“We know this is what’s going to help us heal,” said Delaney Tarr, a 17-year-old senior. “But it’s also bigger than us.… I think everybody, they want to make the world a different place, and that’s what we’re working on right now — we have an opportunit­y to do something.”

The students feel a sense of urgency in getting their message out, a fear that the public will lose interest.

Sarah, a wry 16-year-old junior who has become celebrated for her adept use of social media, went on Twitter hours after the shooting with a raw, pointed message for Trump.

“I don’t want your condolence­s you ...,” she wrote, adding an obscenity for emphasis. “My friends and teachers were shot.”

Around the same time, Jaclyn, who lost her friend Joaquin Oliver, made a plea on Instagram: “PLEASE contact your local and state representa­tives, as we must have stricter gun laws IMMEDIATEL­Y.”

As Jaclyn urged students to join her in Tallahasse­e, the state capital, to lobby for new gun laws in Florida, her friend Cameron Kasky, a 17year-old junior and theater kid, pulled the activists together by creating the #NeverAgain hashtag and coming up with the idea of a march.

In a matter of days, the teenagers had created a national movement with a goal of tighter background checks for gun buyers. After delivering a powerful “We call BS” speech at a rally in Fort Lauderdale, Emma Gonzalez, 18, amassed 1.25 million Twitter followers.

Within just three weeks, they pushed Florida’s largely Republican Legislatur­e to pass, and Republican Gov. Rick Scott to sign, a landmark $400-million school safety bill. It didn’t go as far as students wanted, but included provisions long opposed by the National Rifle Assn., such as increasing the minimum age to purchase a firearm from 18 to 21.

Some critics dismiss the teenagers as telegenic, overly emotional mouthpiece­s for adults, yet the students are quick to reject the idea that anyone is steering them.

“Nobody is setting our agenda for us,” said David, who adds that he has worried from the start that adults would try to take over. “If they try to, Cameron, Emma and I verbally eviscerate them.”

Still, the students have happily left much of the dayto-day planning of the march to sympatheti­c parents, teachers, alumni, legislator­s and nonprofit groups.

Deena Katz, co-executive producer of “Dancing With the Stars” and co-executive director of the Women’s March Los Angeles Foundation, is working on permits and organizing the route, Jumbotrons, generators, porta-potties and security. A public relations firm is coordinati­ng the students’ speaking engagement­s and fielding media requests.

A batch of 200 students and faculty will travel to the capital for a four-day trip sponsored by Giffords, the gun violence prevention organizati­on founded by Gabrielle Giffords, the Democratic former Arizona congresswo­man who survived a 2011 assassinat­ion attempt. An additional 550 students will fly up for the day, boarding predawn flights provided compliment­ary by Delta Air Lines.

The teens accept that they are having an impact partly because they have resources that other shooting victims do not; Parkland is an affluent, predominan­tly white community, with a median household income of around $128,000.

“If we can use our white privilege to amplify the voice of minorities, we have to,” Sarah said. “It’s not just us experienci­ng violence. We experience­d it once, and it was horrible and traumatizi­ng. But people in neighborho­ods in inner-city communitie­s experience shootings every single day.”

As activists, the students are not in lockstep on every policy issue. They differ on whether teachers should be armed or whether to push for an outright ban on assault weapons. When prosecutor­s announced last week they would seek the death penalty for the shooter, Nikolas Cruz, Emma indicated on CBS’ “60 Minutes” she would be happy to see him put to death, while Cameron and David said they would prefer he spend life in prison.

Some, like Jaclyn, admit they were not politicall­y active before the shooting. Many of the others, however, say they have long followed politics and news.

After last year’s Las Vegas shooting that left 58 people dead, Sarah tweeted messages calling for more gun control.

“I’ve always been opinionate­d, but now people are listening,” she said, noting her parents set up Twitter accounts after the shooting at her school to check up on her.

“Every day, politics is used to suppress you,” said David, who says he learned most of what he knows about the NRA and specialint­erest groups from watching comedian John Oliver on HBO’s “Last Week Tonight.” “I always felt this way. Now I have the platform to speak out.”

As if on cue, a man waves at David — one of a string of starstruck adults who approach the teens every few minutes to give high-fives, thank them and wish them luck.

Already, the teenagers worry about how they will keep up momentum after the March for Our Lives is over.

“I’m going to be Bo Jack Horseman,” David deadpanned, referring to the jaded, washed-up, alcoholic horse and eponymous hero of Netflix’s animated adult comedy. “What we really need to figure out is what the hell is going to happen on March 25 and the day after that and the day after that.”

“We don’t want people to forget about us,” Sarah agreed. “But I think that’s going to be hard to do. We now have a massive following, especially Emma.”

Considerin­g how to push their agenda forward, David referred to German novelist Gustav Freytag ’s pyramid of storytelli­ng.

“We have the exciting incident, we have the buildup, and we have the climax, but there’s no resolution,” he said. “The resolution is the thing that we’re fighting for, and that’s our lives.”

 ?? Susan Stocker Sun-Sentinel ?? JACLYN CORIN, 17, with Florida state Sen. Lauren Book, is among the Parkland students planning Saturday’s march in Washington for tougher gun laws.
Susan Stocker Sun-Sentinel JACLYN CORIN, 17, with Florida state Sen. Lauren Book, is among the Parkland students planning Saturday’s march in Washington for tougher gun laws.
 ?? Susan Stocker Sun-Sentinel ?? CAMERON KASKY and Jaclyn Corin address fellow Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students and journalist­s last month.
Susan Stocker Sun-Sentinel CAMERON KASKY and Jaclyn Corin address fellow Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students and journalist­s last month.

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