Emma Gonzalez, @alexanderblakewind, @cameronkasky and @jackiecorin dine at Pasquales in #Parkland, Fla., on March 6. The pizza joint is a few hundred yards away from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 of their peers and teachers were murdered a month ago. Following the Feb. 14 shooting, the students have formed the #NeverAgain movement, pushing for reform to end gun violence and mass shootings in schools. "The adults know that we’re cleaning up their mess,” says Cameron Kasky, an 11th-grader at Stoneman Douglas , who started the movement in his living room. "Without actually doing anything to help to clean it up," says Emma González, a buzzcut senior whose impassioned speech attacking the NRA in the aftermath of the massacre went viral. "It’s like they’re saying, ‘I’m sorry I made this mess,’ while continuing to spill soda on the floor." How a movement catches fire is always a mystery, but the Parkland kids seem matched for this moment. They’re young enough to be victimized by a school shooting, but old enough to shape the aftermath, writes Charlotte Alter in this week's cover story. Like many teenagers, they’re at a peculiar stage in their lives where they feel at once vulnerable and invincible, highly social yet impervious to the etiquette expected from adults. Their bombastic style mirrors President Trump’s: they call their enemies names and hurl sick burns at politicians and lobbyists as if they’re shouting across the locker room. None of which means they’ll actually succeed, and the kids are not entirely naive about their chances. They know the GOP-controlled Congress is unlikely to pass meaningful new gun laws. Nor do the Parkland kids speak for everyone, by a long shot: polls show that young people as a whole do not necessarily favor stricter gun laws than their parents. Which means the kids face the same question as the movements before them: If this government doesn’t respond to their demands, did their movement make a difference? Read the full story on TIME.com (link in bio). Photograph by Gabriella Demczuk (@gdemczuk) for TIME

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Emma Gonzalez, @alexanderblakewind, @cameronkasky and @jackiecorin dine at Pasquales in #Parkland, Fla., on March 6. The pizza joint is a few hundred yards away from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 of their peers and teachers were murdered a month ago. Following the Feb. 14 shooting, the students have formed the #NeverAgain movement, pushing for reform to end gun violence and mass shootings in schools. "The adults know that we’re cleaning up their mess,” says Cameron Kasky, an 11th-grader at Stoneman Douglas , who started the movement in his living room. "Without actually doing anything to help to clean it up," says Emma González, a buzzcut senior whose impassioned speech attacking the NRA in the aftermath of the massacre went viral. "It’s like they’re saying, ‘I’m sorry I made this mess,’ while continuing to spill soda on the floor." How a movement catches fire is always a mystery, but the Parkland kids seem matched for this moment. They’re young enough to be victimized by a school shooting, but old enough to shape the aftermath, writes Charlotte Alter in this week's cover story. Like many teenagers, they’re at a peculiar stage in their lives where they feel at once vulnerable and invincible, highly social yet impervious to the etiquette expected from adults. Their bombastic style mirrors President Trump’s: they call their enemies names and hurl sick burns at politicians and lobbyists as if they’re shouting across the locker room. None of which means they’ll actually succeed, and the kids are not entirely naive about their chances. They know the GOP-controlled Congress is unlikely to pass meaningful new gun laws. Nor do the Parkland kids speak for everyone, by a long shot: polls show that young people as a whole do not necessarily favor stricter gun laws than their parents. Which means the kids face the same question as the movements before them: If this government doesn’t respond to their demands, did their movement make a difference? Read the full story on TIME.com (link in bio). Photograph by Gabriella Demczuk (@gdemczuk) for TIME


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