Santa Fe New Mexican

Outraged youth send defiant message.

Demonstrat­ors around world rally in support of Fla. shooting survivors

- By Michael D. Shear

WASHINGTON — Standing before vast crowds from Washington to Los Angeles to Parkland, Fla., the speakers — nearly all of them students, some still in elementary school — delivered an anguished and defiant message: They are “done hiding” from gun violence, and will “stop at nothing” to get politician­s to finally prevent it.

The students, as they seized the nation’s attention Saturday with raised fists and tear-streaked faces, vowed that their grief about school shootings and their frustratio­n with adults’ inaction would power a new generation of political activism.

“If they continue to ignore us, to only pretend to listen, then we will take action where it counts,” Delaney Tarr, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where a gunman killed 17 people last month, told tens of thousands rallying in Washington. “We will take action every day in every way until they simply cannot ignore us anymore.”

For many of the young people, the Washington rally, called March for Our Lives, was their first act of protest and the beginning of a political awakening. But that awakening may be a rude one — lawmakers in Congress have largely disregarde­d their pleas for action on television and social media in the five weeks since the Parkland shooting.

That reality helped drive the Parkland survivors in Washington, as they led a crowd that filled blocks of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue between the White House and Capitol Hill. Thousands more rallied at about 800 “sibling” marches around the country and abroad, where students, like those in the capital, made eloquent calls for gun control and pledged to exercise their newfound political power in the midterm elections this fall.

Aerial video captured seas of people — in front of Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in New York; in a central square in Tokyo; along the streets of Boston; at a rally in downtown Fort Worth, Texas; and crammed into a park less than a mile from Stoneman Douglas High.

Delivered in soaring speeches, emotional chants and handpainte­d signs, the protesters’ messages offered angry rebukes to the National Rifle Associatio­n and politician­s who have left gun laws largely intact for decades. A sign in Washington declared “Graduation­s, not funerals!” while another in New York said: “I should be learning, not protesting.” Crowds in Chicago chanted “Fear has no place in our schools” as they marched.

Celebritie­s, including Lin Manuel Miranda, the Hamilton star, and pop singers Ariana Grande and Miley Cyrus, performed in Washington, where politician­s and adult activists were largely sidelined in favor of the freshfaced students offering stories of fear and frustratio­n, but also hope for change.

The most powerful, and impassione­d, moments came from the surviving students of the Parkland shooting, who declared themselves angry, impatient and determined to stop the slaughter.

“Today, we march,” Tarr said. “We fight. We roar. We prepare our signs. We raise them high. We know what we want, we know how to get it, and we are not waiting any more.”

An 11-year-old girl from Virginia, Naomi Wadler, captivated her audience as she declared “Never again!” on behalf of black women and girls who have been the victims of gun violence.

Calls like Naomi’s stood in stark contrast to action on Capitol Hill and at the White House in the hours before the rallies. President Donald Trump signed a $1.3 trillion spending bill that took no significan­t new steps on gun control: It did nothing to expand background checks, impose additional limits on assault weapons, require a higher age for rifle purchases, or curb the sale of highcapaci­ty ammunition magazines.

The spending legislatio­n, which was viewed as the last opportunit­y this year for Congress to enact major new gun restrictio­ns before the midterm elections in November, included only some school safety measures and modest improvemen­ts to the background check system.

Organizers at national gun control groups, who provided logistical support and public relations advice as the students planned the Washington rally, said they believed that the students would not become disillusio­ned by the lack of immediate action in Congress. They noted that rallies took place in 390 of the country’s 435 congressio­nal districts.

“The mass shooting generation is nearing voting age,” said John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, a national group that advocates tougher gun laws. “They know the midterms are six months away, and they plan to make sure that they vote and they get others to register to vote. They are absolutely poised to turn this moment into a movement.”

Gun rights organizati­ons largely stayed silent Saturday, after vigorous efforts since the Parkland shooting to squash any movement toward significan­t gun control legislatio­n. A spokesman for the NRA declined repeated requests for comment.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Demonstrat­ors hold signs during a March for Our Lives rally in Chicago on Saturday. Students and activists across the country planned events in conjunctio­n with a Washington march spearheade­d by teens from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in...
NAM Y. HUH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Demonstrat­ors hold signs during a March for Our Lives rally in Chicago on Saturday. Students and activists across the country planned events in conjunctio­n with a Washington march spearheade­d by teens from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in...

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